4.7 Article

Ten questions concerning active noise control in the built environment

Journal

BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 200, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2021.107928

Keywords

Natural ventilation; Active and passive noise control; Noise control applications; Noise barrier; Building facade; Soundscape

Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of National Development
  2. National Research Foundation, Prime Minister's Office under the Cities of Tomorrow (CoT) Research Programme (CoT Award) [COT-V4-2019-1]
  3. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) DigiTwin project [EP/R006768/1]

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Urban noise pollution poses a significant threat to public health that has been often overlooked. Despite the benefits seen in applications like automobiles, active noise control in the built environment remains uncommon. The development of active noise control solutions for buildings is gaining traction, but there are still challenges to widespread adoption.
Urban noise pollution is an omnipresent but often neglected threat to public health that must be addressed urgently. Passive noise control measures, which are less effective at reducing low-frequency noise and are often bulky and may impede airflow. As evidenced in automobiles, active control of cabin noise has resulted in lighter cars due to reduced passive insulation. Despite its long history and recent popularisation by consumer headphones, the implementation of active noise control in the built environment is still rare. To date, active noise control (ANC) has been demonstrated, at source, in construction machines and, in the transmission path, in noise barriers. Recent demand for naturally-ventilated buildings has also spurred the development of active control solutions at the receiving end, such as on windows. The ten questions aim to demystify the principles of ANC and highlight areas in which environmental noise can be actively mitigated. Since the implementation of active control in the built environment usually involves multiple stakeholders, operational concerns are addressed. To conclude, research gaps are identified that would enable increased adoption of ANC in the built environment. There is also renewed interest in applying intelligent ANC to tackle environmentally complex applications, such as varying noise levels in the earcup of ANC headphones, particularly with the advent of the low-cost, low-power, highly-efficient embedded electronics; advancing speaker technology; and new impetus from digital signal processing and artificial intelligence Algorithms.

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