ÄûÃʵ¼º½

News

The quietest place in Finland - Acoustics Lab renovation is complete

The laboratory and its office facilities were thoroughly refurbished.
Aalto Acoustics Lab, image: Mikko Raskinen
More than 150 members of staff, alumni, and corporate guests attended the opening of the Acoustics Lab.

The Acoustics Lab at Aalto University marked its opening in December after a renovation that took more than two years. In the project the laboratory and its office facilities were thoroughly refurbished.

The research facilities at the Acoustics Lab include three anechoic chambers which were originally built back in 1970, as well as a listening room and three soundproofed listening booths. The facilities are used, for example, to study sound, human hearing, speaker technology, and musical instruments.

‘The renovation gave us modern research facilities whose acoustic features are better than before. Now we can study sounds with lower frequencies than we could before’, says Professor Vesa Välimäki of the Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics.

The Acoustics Lab has Finland's largest anechoic chamber - a space whose surfaces do not reflect sound. Now it also probably has Finland's quietest space - the background noise in the renovated anechoic chambers is -2 decibels, which is below the human ability of hearing.

A person sitting at aalto acoustics lab's multichannel anechoic chamber photo benoit alary
A new research space was built in one of the smaller anechoic chambers, with a frame structure containing about 40 speakers.

Full renovation

In the renovation the wall materials of the anechoic chambers were replaced, and the floor nets with their fasteners were switched for sturdier ones. The wedges on the walls which dampen sound were replaced with smaller and more durable ones and low-frequency echoes are prevented by using muted plate resonators.

The wedges now take up less space, making the rooms more spacious than before.

The rooms also got a new vibration dampening system. To achieve this, the entire concrete chamber weighing 500 tons had to be lifted in order to allow the old insulation plates to be replaced with steel springs. The anechoic chambers were built separately from the rest of the building to keep vibrations from traffic, for example, from getting inside through the structures.

A new research space was built in one of the smaller anechoic chambers, with a frame structure containing about 40 speakers. It can be used in the research of, for example, surround sound, or multichannel sound.

Acoustics research and education at Aalto University focuses on digital sound processing, such as sound manipulation, sound modelling, and spatial sound. There are currently five professors of acoustics. In addition to acoustics researchers, the facilities of the Lab are used by researchers in information technology and speech processing, as well as by companies.

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Orcid
Research & Art Published:

Aalto University is introducing ORCID’s Researcher Connect service

Aalto University is introducing ORCID's Researcher Connect service, which facilitates information transfer between researchers' ORCID profiles and the university's research information management system, ACRIS.
Two wooden sculptures with pointed ends facing each other on a white surface.
Research & Art Published:

Nature of Process: Exhibition by the students of the ‘Personal Exploration’ Course

Nature of Process is a multi-material exhibition of 14 Master´s students of Aalto ARTS
Eden Telila pictured at a ski slope
Cooperation, Studies Published:

Eden Telila's master's thesis contributed to Ramboll's geotechnical toolkit

Geoengineering alum Eden Telila helped Ramboll automate manual tasks.
A group of people giving thumbs up in front of screens displaying 'Doc+ Dialogues'. Chairs and wooden walls are in the background.
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Doc+ connects research impact with career direction - join the events!

Doc+ panels have brought together wide audiences in February and continue in March with two events to discuss doctoral careers and their diversity.