Publication | Closed Access
Experimental investigation of the influence of a posterior gap on glottal flow and sound
16
Citations
14
References
2008
Year
AeroacousticsPsychoacousticsEngineeringGlottal FlowDriven Synthetic ModelEngineering AcousticPosterior GapNoiseAcoustical EngineeringSound PropagationAcoustic AnalysisHealth SciencesExperimental InvestigationPropulsionUltrasoundOrifice WallAerospace EngineeringAerodynamicsSpeech Perception
The influence of a posterior gap on the airflow through the human glottis was investigated using a driven synthetic model. Instantaneous orifice discharge coefficient of a glottal shaped orifice was obtained from the time-varying orifice area and the velocity distribution of the pulsated jet measured on the axial plane using a single hot-wire probe. Instantaneous orifice discharge coefficient values were found to undergo a cyclic hysteresis loop when plotted versus Reynolds number and time, indicating a pressure head increase and a net energy transfer from the air flow to the orifice wall. The net energy transferred was estimated to be around 10% of the value presumably required to achieve self-sustained oscillation. The radiated sound pressure was measured to characterize the influence of the minimum flow through the posterior gap on the broadband component of the radiated sound. The presence of a posterior gap was found to significantly increase the broadband sound level produced over the frequency range in which human hearing is most sensitive.
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