Impact of Cement Dust Pollution on the Surface of Sound-Absorbing Panels on Their Acoustic Properties.
Artur NowoświatLeszek DulakPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
The publication presents a comparison of the sound absorption test results of a perforated wall cassette filled with mineral wool for various degree of cement dust pollution. Cement dust should be understood here as dust created during the production of cement and during the milling and dispatch of finished products. If the partitions in production plants are made of sound-absorbing cassettes or additional sound-absorbing elements made of perforated cassettes are applied, we must know how dust can change sound-absorbing properties of the cassettes. Thus, one has to consider whether the use of sound-absorbing perforated cassettes is appropriate if sound-absorbing parameters change over time due to dust. To determine the impact of dust-covered perforation on sound-absorbing parameters, tests were performed for four variants having different level of pollution. The tests involved 'clean' and then dust-covered cassettes, each time increasing the amount of cement dust on the perforations. Sound absorption parameters of the cassettes were tested in the reverberation chamber for individual variants. Test results indicate the loss of sound absorption of the cassettes only when they are heavily polluted. Then the reduction of the single-number sound absorption index αw is 50%. Using computer simulation, we analyzed how the change of sound-absorbing parameters of the cassettes would influence the change of noise reduction in the production hall. The results of the analysis demonstrate a very effective reduction of noise level of 14 dB by the application of clean cassettes. The reduction value for the dirtiest cassettes was 6 dB.