[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/

US20140014437A1 - One look acoustical ceiling tile - Google Patents

One look acoustical ceiling tile Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20140014437A1
US20140014437A1 US13/933,678 US201313933678A US2014014437A1 US 20140014437 A1 US20140014437 A1 US 20140014437A1 US 201313933678 A US201313933678 A US 201313933678A US 2014014437 A1 US2014014437 A1 US 2014014437A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
group
nrc
texture
cac
acoustical
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US13/933,678
Inventor
Sandra J. Wilson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Chicago Metallic Co LLC
Original Assignee
Chicago Metallic Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Chicago Metallic Corp filed Critical Chicago Metallic Corp
Priority to US13/933,678 priority Critical patent/US20140014437A1/en
Publication of US20140014437A1 publication Critical patent/US20140014437A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B1/00Constructions in general; Structures which are not restricted either to walls, e.g. partitions, or floors or ceilings or roofs
    • E04B1/62Insulation or other protection; Elements or use of specified material therefor
    • E04B1/74Heat, sound or noise insulation, absorption, or reflection; Other building methods affording favourable thermal or acoustical conditions, e.g. accumulating of heat within walls
    • E04B1/82Heat, sound or noise insulation, absorption, or reflection; Other building methods affording favourable thermal or acoustical conditions, e.g. accumulating of heat within walls specifically with respect to sound only
    • E04B1/84Sound-absorbing elements
    • E04B1/8409Sound-absorbing elements sheet-shaped
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B9/00Ceilings; Construction of ceilings, e.g. false ceilings; Ceiling construction with regard to insulation
    • E04B9/04Ceilings; Construction of ceilings, e.g. false ceilings; Ceiling construction with regard to insulation comprising slabs, panels, sheets or the like
    • E04B9/045Ceilings; Construction of ceilings, e.g. false ceilings; Ceiling construction with regard to insulation comprising slabs, panels, sheets or the like being laminated

Definitions

  • Sound waves can travel through any media, which includes air, water, wood, masonry or metal.
  • the type of media through which sound travels determines whether the sound is either airborne or structureborne. Airborne sound is directly transmitted from a source into the air. All sound that reaches your ear is airborne. Some examples of airborne sound are passing traffic, music or voices from an adjacent room, or the noise from machinery and aircraft.
  • Structureborne sound travels through solid materials, either from direct contact with the sound source or from an impact on the material. All structureborne sound must eventually become airborne sound in order for people hear it, otherwise, the disturbance is felt as a vibration. Examples of structureborne noise are footsteps, door slams, plumbing vibrations, mechanical vibrations and rain impact. Most noise control situations require that both airborne and structureborne sound be considered. Effective sound control addresses both sound paths by controlling, or reducing, noise at the source, reducing paths or blocking noise along its path, or shielding the receiver from the noise.
  • Sound transmission loss is the decrease in sound energy—expressed in decibels of airborne sound—as it passes through a building construction.
  • the metric used to quantify that reduction is the sound transmission classification, STC.
  • STC sound transmission classification
  • ASTM E 90 is the standard covering airborne sound transmission class or STC. This is a single number rating that evaluates the efficiency of systems in reducing the transmission of airborne noise. In this class the higher the STC rating the better. The rule of thumb is that a 10 point increase in STC means a decrease in the perceived noise by one-half.
  • ASTM E 1414 is the standard covering ceiling attenuation class or CAC.
  • the rating is similar to STC but in this case measures the efficiency of a suspended ceiling connected by a common air plenum at reducing airborne noise between two rooms. The higher the CAC number the better.
  • Impact sound transmission loss is expressed in decibels of airborne sound. This decrease in sound energy is measured after the impact noise that's generated above transfers through the floor-ceiling assembly and is transmitted into the air below. Imagine someone hopping around upstairs, over your head. That's impact sound transmission. It's rated using an impact insulation class number, an IIC number.
  • the standard for measurement is ASTM E 492.
  • the impact insulation class number, the IIC number is a single number rating that estimates the impact sound insulation performance of floor/ceiling systems. The number is an estimate of how much the sound energy is reduced. The higher the number, the better the system.
  • Sound absorption is the ability of a material to absorb sound waves rather than reflect sound waves.
  • building materials are measured for their noise reduction coefficient, or NRC.
  • NRC noise reduction coefficient
  • SAA Sound absorption average
  • NRC Sound absorption of a building material is measured using ASTM C 423.
  • NRC is an arithmetic average (rounded off to the nearest 0.05) of the sound absorption capability of a product at only four frequencies: 250, 500, 1000, and 2000 hertz. These frequencies are representative of the center range of human speech.
  • NRC is a single decimal rating between 0 and 1, used to express the absorption properties of materials. Generally speaking, an NRC of 0.55 is average performance and anything above an NRC of 0.70 is considered good for acoustical ceiling tile systems. The higher the NRC the better the material is at absorbing sound energy.
  • a LR value is the number designation indicating the percentage of light reflected from a ceiling panel surface in accordance with ASTM E 1477.
  • Articulation Class or AC is a means of rating the relative acoustical performance of products, such as ceilings, used in open plan office environments.
  • the primary source of distracting noise is human speech and a major concern, therefore, is how to prevent intruding speech from distracting coworkers. If there is a general hum or murmur in the space, but no clearly understood words, we can generally “tune this out” as background noise. Speech sounds only become intrusive if the words can be understood. In this type of situation it is difficult not to “listen in” and be distracted (whether you want to listen in or not!).
  • consonant sounds are the only difference in the words ball, fall, fawn and malt. If a product can absorb most of the consonant sounds, then you cannot tell what the person in the cubicle across the room is saying into their telephone. Again, if you cannot understand the words, the noise is not as distracting.
  • Ceilings best suited for use in the open office have AC values of 170 or greater.
  • a standard acoustical ceiling (NRC 0.55) will normally have an AC of 150.
  • Non-absorptive materials such as gypsum board, will have an AC of 120.
  • the highest AC that can be achieved by a ceiling is between 220 and 230.
  • HIPAA and FGI requirements open plan offices lobbies/reception areas
  • FGI requirements neonatal intensive care units
  • High CAC spaces from which sound should not transfer to adjacent rooms.
  • HIPAA and FGI requirements HIPAA and FGI requirements
  • Some of the known ceiling panels available are from Armstrong Commercial Ceilings and Walls of Lancaster, Pa.; USG Corporation of Chicago, Ill.; and Certain Teed Corporation of Valley Forge, Pa. They include:
  • Cirrus family fine textured surface (wet-felted mineral fiber)
  • Fine Fissured family medium textured surface (wet-felted mineral fiber)
  • Fine Fissured available in 5 ⁇ 8′′ only; NRC 0.55; CAC 35; LR 0.85
  • Optima Open Plan (glass fiber)—available in 1′′ and 1-1 ⁇ 2′′; NRC 0.90, 0.95, and 1.00; CAC 26 and not disclosed; LR 0.90
  • Optima Open Plan glass fiber with plant-based binder—available in 1′′ only; NRC 0.95; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.90
  • Optima TechZone glass fiber—available in 3 ⁇ 4′′ and 1′′; NRC 0.90 and 0.95; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.90
  • Optima Health Zone (glass fiber)—available in 1′′ only; NRC 0.95; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.86
  • Ecophon Focus F glass fiber—available in 20 mm only; NRC 0.80; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.85
  • Fine Fissured family non-directional fissured surface (wet-felted mineral fiber)
  • Fine Fissured available in 5 ⁇ 8′′ only; NRC 0.55 and 0.60; CAC 33, 35, and 40; LR 0.84
  • All of these current non-metallic acoustical panel substrates or mats may generally be described as (1) wet-felted or cast mineral fibers with an organic binder, usually starch-based; may also contain wood pulp/paper fibers and/or inorganic components such as perlite (volcanic glass beads); (2) dry-felted glass fibers with a thermally activated organic binder, usually a formaldehyde compound; (3) ceramic-like inorganic composite consisting of clay, and either mineral fibers or perlite, or a combination of mineral fibers and perlite; (4) gypsum panels (plasterboard or drywall), sometimes reinforced with glass fibers; and (5) composite substrates consisting of two or more of the above substrates laminated together—for example, a layer of glass fiber laminated to a gypsum backer.
  • an organic binder usually starch-based
  • inorganic components such as perlite (volcanic glass beads)
  • dry-felted glass fibers with a thermally activated organic binder usually a
  • a family of acoustical ceiling panels for schools, offices, hospitals and other public buildings provides for one consistent look throughout the building while yet provide a range of desired acoustical performances.
  • the family includes a group of substrate mats of a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers. Each mat is chosen from a group including a thickness of 3 ⁇ 4′′, 7 ⁇ 8′′ and 1′′ depending upon acoustical performance.
  • the group of substrate mats all have an exposed surface chosen from a group including fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture.
  • the group of mats all have an edge chosen from a group including square, tegular and narrow tegular.
  • a principal object and advantage of the present invention is that the architect or building owner simply chooses exposed surface finish, then an acoustical value for the particular building area and lastly an edge treatment throughout the building.
  • tile substrate composition and thickness provides for a higher acoustical performances than the competition and prior art in the general NRC ranges of 0.65 to 0.95 while are quite economical to manufacture.
  • tile substrate composition is able to achieve a combination of better acoustical properties at comparable panel thicknesses than those available from similarly priced or more expensive than competitive panels, along with favorable mechanical properties.
  • tile substrate composition is able to be “tuned” anywhere within the NRC range of 0.65 to 0.95 by varying the density and thickness.
  • Mineral fiber panels typically obtain an NRC rating of 0.55; but they can range from 0.35 to 0.75.
  • Glass fiber panels typically obtain an NRC rating of 0.90; but they can range from 0.80 to 1.00.
  • Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the tiles or panels of the present invention obtain a typical CAC rating of 30; but range from 25 to 31 without huge increases in panel thicknesses.
  • Mineral fiber panels typically obtain a CAC rating of 35; but they range from 33 to 40.
  • Glass fiber panels typically obtain a CAC rating in the lower 20s—if the rating is disclosed at all.
  • the panels are lightweight, flexible, easy to cut and install; more durable than plain mineral fiber; inherently mold-resistant; more rigid than glass fiber panels—less prone to sagging; less costly than glass fiber panels for comparable performance; and have no formaldehyde, unlike glass fiber panels.
  • FIG. 1 is a Flow Chart of the production line of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a Matrix for the selection of particular acoustical performance, finish and edge detail.
  • the ceiling panel of the present invention is comprised of mat or substrate with a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers.
  • FIG. 1 shows the manufacturing assembly of the mat or substrate.
  • FIG. 2 shows a Matrix by which the architect or building owner selects his ceiling panels to be used throughout his entire building.
  • surface finish fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture
  • the architect considers the different areas within the building and then chooses the standard performance, mid-range performance or high end performance for each particular building area.
  • edge finish square, tegular or narrow tegular. In short, the architect simply picks a finish, acoustical value and an edge detail to create his high performance ceilings.

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Building Environments (AREA)

Abstract

A family of acoustical ceiling panels for schools, offices, hospitals and other public buildings provides for one consistent look throughout the building while yet provide a range of desired acoustical performances. The family includes a group of substrate mats of a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers. Each mat is chosen from a group including a thickness of ¾″, ⅞″ and 1″ depending upon acoustical performance. The group of substrate mats all have an exposed surface chosen from a group including fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture. The group of mats all have an edge chosen from a group including square, tegular and narrow tegular.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • When sound becomes noise, people get irritated and stressed. This is not only true in schools, but also in offices, hospitals, and other public buildings. Many scientific and empirical studies have described the impact of poor acoustics. In schools, up to 70% of the consonants spoken by teachers cannot be heard by pupils. In open plan offices, 60% of employees say that noise is the single most disturbing factor. In offices, 70% of employees believed that their productivity would be higher if their environment was less noisy. In offices, normal noise reduces the effectiveness in cognitive tests by 66% compared to the level in quiet surroundings. Sales in a retail shop can increase by 5-10% as a rule of thumb through acoustic improvement measures. In hospital environments, noise control is very important to the recovery of patients as “unwanted sound” can increase heart rate, blood pressure and respiration rate.
  • Sound waves can travel through any media, which includes air, water, wood, masonry or metal. The type of media through which sound travels determines whether the sound is either airborne or structureborne. Airborne sound is directly transmitted from a source into the air. All sound that reaches your ear is airborne. Some examples of airborne sound are passing traffic, music or voices from an adjacent room, or the noise from machinery and aircraft.
  • Structureborne sound travels through solid materials, either from direct contact with the sound source or from an impact on the material. All structureborne sound must eventually become airborne sound in order for people hear it, otherwise, the disturbance is felt as a vibration. Examples of structureborne noise are footsteps, door slams, plumbing vibrations, mechanical vibrations and rain impact. Most noise control situations require that both airborne and structureborne sound be considered. Effective sound control addresses both sound paths by controlling, or reducing, noise at the source, reducing paths or blocking noise along its path, or shielding the receiver from the noise.
  • Sound transmission loss is the decrease in sound energy—expressed in decibels of airborne sound—as it passes through a building construction. The metric used to quantify that reduction is the sound transmission classification, STC. The STC value indicates how well sound is controlled room-to-room, including through walls or through floor/ceiling assemblies.
  • ASTM E 90 is the standard covering airborne sound transmission class or STC. This is a single number rating that evaluates the efficiency of systems in reducing the transmission of airborne noise. In this class the higher the STC rating the better. The rule of thumb is that a 10 point increase in STC means a decrease in the perceived noise by one-half.
  • ASTM E 1414 is the standard covering ceiling attenuation class or CAC. The rating is similar to STC but in this case measures the efficiency of a suspended ceiling connected by a common air plenum at reducing airborne noise between two rooms. The higher the CAC number the better.
  • Impact sound transmission loss is expressed in decibels of airborne sound. This decrease in sound energy is measured after the impact noise that's generated above transfers through the floor-ceiling assembly and is transmitted into the air below. Imagine someone hopping around upstairs, over your head. That's impact sound transmission. It's rated using an impact insulation class number, an IIC number.
  • The standard for measurement is ASTM E 492. The impact insulation class number, the IIC number, is a single number rating that estimates the impact sound insulation performance of floor/ceiling systems. The number is an estimate of how much the sound energy is reduced. The higher the number, the better the system.
  • Sound absorption, is the ability of a material to absorb sound waves rather than reflect sound waves. When we talk about absorption, building materials are measured for their noise reduction coefficient, or NRC. There's also a second measurement method to calculate absorption, the sound absorption average, SAA. Fundamentally, sound absorption, or the lack of it, is concerned with controlling sound energy within rooms and enclosed spaces.
  • Sound absorption of a building material is measured using ASTM C 423. NRC is an arithmetic average (rounded off to the nearest 0.05) of the sound absorption capability of a product at only four frequencies: 250, 500, 1000, and 2000 hertz. These frequencies are representative of the center range of human speech. NRC is a single decimal rating between 0 and 1, used to express the absorption properties of materials. Generally speaking, an NRC of 0.55 is average performance and anything above an NRC of 0.70 is considered good for acoustical ceiling tile systems. The higher the NRC the better the material is at absorbing sound energy.
  • Also Light Reflectance or LR is of consideration. A LR value is the number designation indicating the percentage of light reflected from a ceiling panel surface in accordance with ASTM E 1477.
  • Articulation Class or AC is a means of rating the relative acoustical performance of products, such as ceilings, used in open plan office environments. In the open office, the primary source of distracting noise is human speech and a major concern, therefore, is how to prevent intruding speech from distracting coworkers. If there is a general hum or murmur in the space, but no clearly understood words, we can generally “tune this out” as background noise. Speech sounds only become intrusive if the words can be understood. In this type of situation it is difficult not to “listen in” and be distracted (whether you want to listen in or not!).
  • When evaluating the AC performance, sound is generated by a speaker on one side of a 60″ high partition. Data is collected on the attenuation of sound (how much quieter it is) on the other side of the portion at frequencies from 100 to 5000 Hz (very low pitch to very high pitch). The noise reduction data is then used to calculate the AC value of the product being tested. In calculating AC, the sound reduction that occurs at higher frequencies (>1000 Hz) are treated as more important than those that occur at low frequencies. Why? AC allows us to evaluate how well a product will absorb the noise generated by people talking. Voices generate sound at a wide range of frequencies; vowel sounds occur at low frequency and consonant sounds occur at higher frequency. Vowel sounds only carry loudness. It is the consonant sounds that are most important in speech comprehension. For example, the consonant sounds are the only difference in the words ball, fall, fawn and malt. If a product can absorb most of the consonant sounds, then you cannot tell what the person in the cubicle across the room is saying into their telephone. Again, if you cannot understand the words, the noise is not as distracting.
  • Ceilings best suited for use in the open office have AC values of 170 or greater. A standard acoustical ceiling (NRC 0.55) will normally have an AC of 150. Non-absorptive materials, such as gypsum board, will have an AC of 120. The highest AC that can be achieved by a ceiling is between 220 and 230.
  • Examples of acoustic considerations within a building environment are as follows:
  • High NRC—spaces which sound levels must be kept at a minimum.
  • open plan offices lobbies/reception areas (HIPAA and FGI requirements)
  • libraries and classrooms
  • waiting rooms, nurses' stations (HIPAA and FGI requirements)
  • neonatal intensive care units (FGI requirements)
  • any large public space
  • High CAC—spaces from which sound should not transfer to adjacent rooms.
  • conference rooms
  • examination rooms
  • private offices
  • classrooms
  • lobbies
  • corridors
  • any large public space
  • High AC—spaces which require high speech privacy
  • open plan offices
  • lobbies/reception areas (HIPAA and FGI requirements)
  • waiting rooms, nurses' stations (HIPAA and FGI requirements)
  • restaurants
  • any large public space
  • Low AC—spaces that require high sound transmission
  • front/speakers' area of classrooms or large conference rooms
  • speakers' podium or orchestral space in an auditorium
  • Some of the known ceiling panels available are from Armstrong Commercial Ceilings and Walls of Lancaster, Pa.; USG Corporation of Chicago, Ill.; and Certain Teed Corporation of Valley Forge, Pa. They include:
  • Armstrong (AWI) Panels
  • Cirrus family—fine textured surface (wet-felted mineral fiber)
  • Cirrus—available in ¾″; NRC 0.35 and 0.70; CAC 35; LR 0.86
  • Cirrus High CAC available in ⅞″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 38 and 40: LR 0.86
  • Cirrus Open Plan—available in ⅞″ only; NRC 0.75; CAC 35; LR 0.85
  • Fine Fissured family—medium textured surface (wet-felted mineral fiber)
  • Fine Fissured—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.55; CAC 35; LR 0.85
  • Fine Fissured High Acoustics—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35 and 40; LR 0.85
  • Fine Fissured Open Plan—available in ⅞″ only; NRC 0.75; CAC 35; LR 0.86
  • Fine Fissured Ceramaguard—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.55; CAC 38 and 40; LR 0.82
  • Fine Fissured School Zone High Durability—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.55; CAC 35; LR 0.85
  • Fine Fissured School Zone High Acoustics—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35 and 40; LR 0.85
  • Durabrite family—fine textured surface
  • Optima Open Plan (glass fiber)—available in 1″ and 1-½″; NRC 0.90, 0.95, and 1.00; CAC 26 and not disclosed; LR 0.90
  • Optima Open Plan (glass fiber with plant-based binder)—available in 1″ only; NRC 0.95; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.90
  • Optima TechZone (glass fiber)—available in ¾″ and 1″; NRC 0.90 and 0.95; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.90
  • Ultima (wet-felted mineral fiber)—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35; LR 0.86 and 0.90
  • Ultima High CAC—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.60; CAC 40; LR 0.90
  • Ultima Open Plan—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.75; CAC 35; LR 0.89
  • Ultima TechZone—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35; LR 0.90
  • Durabrite Washable family
  • Optima Health Zone (glass fiber)—available in 1″ only; NRC 0.95; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.86
  • Ultima Health Zone (wet-felted mineral fiber)—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35; LR 0.86
  • USG Panels
  • Frost family—fine textured surface (cast mineral fiber)
  • Frost—available in ¾″ and ⅞″; NRC 0.55 and 0.70; CAC 35, 38, and 40; LR 0.83
  • Frost ClimaPlus—available in ¾″ and ⅞″; NRC 0.70; CAC 36, 38, and 40; LR 0.83
  • Frost ClimaPlus High NRC/High CAC—available in ⅞″ only; NRC 0.75; CAC 38 and 40; LR 0.88
  • Mars family—fine textured surface (“X-technology” mineral fiber)
  • Mars ClimaPlus—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35; LR 0.89
  • Mars ClimaPlus High NRC—available in ⅞″ only; NRC 0.80; CAC 35; LR 0.89
  • Mars Healthcare—available in ¾″ and ⅞″; NRC 0.70 and 0.80; CAC 35; LR 0.89
  • Radar family—non-directional fissured surface (water-felted mineral fiber)
  • Radar—available in ⅝″ and ¾″; NRC 0.55 and 0.60; CAC 33 and 35; LR 0.84 and 0.85
  • Radar ClimaPlus—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.50; CAC 40; LR 0.82
  • Radar Ceramic ClimaPlus—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.55; CAC 33 and 35; LR 0.84 and 0.85
  • Radar ClimaPlus High NRC/High CAC—available in ⅝″, ¾″, and ⅞; NRC 0.55 and 0.70; CAC 35 and 40; LR 0.84
  • Radar ClimaPlus High Durability—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.55; CAC 35; LR 0.84
  • Radar ClimaPlus Open Plan—available in ⅞″ only; NRC 0.75; CAC 35; LR 0.84
  • CertainTeed (CT) Panels
  • Akutex FT family—fine textured
  • Ecophon Focus A & A XL (glass fiber)—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.95; CAC 21; LR 0.85
  • Ecophon Focus E/24, E/24 XL, E/15, E/15 XL (glass fiber)—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.90; CAC 23; LR 0.85
  • Ecophon Focus Dg & Dg XL (glass fiber)—available in ¾″ and 1″; NRC 0.90; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.85
  • Ecophon Focus Ds & Ds XL (glass fiber)—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.85; CAC 25; LR 0.85
  • Ecophon Focus F (glass fiber)—available in 20 mm only; NRC 0.80; CAC not disclosed; LR 0.85
  • Fine Fissured family—non-directional fissured surface (wet-felted mineral fiber)
  • Fine Fissured—available in ⅝″ only; NRC 0.55 and 0.60; CAC 33, 35, and 40; LR 0.84
  • Fine Fissured High NRC—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 35; LR 0.83
  • Symphony Reinforced Mat Face (scrim) family—fine textured surface
  • Symphony f (glass fiber)—available in ¾″, 1″, and 1-½″; NRC 0.80 and 0.95; CAC 22, 24, and 25; LR 0.90
  • Symphony g (gypsum board)—available in ½″ only; NRC not disclosed; CAC 40 and 42; LR 0.90
  • Symphony m (wet-felted mineral fiber)—available in ¾″ only; NRC 0.70; CAC 33 and 35; LR 0.90
  • All of these current non-metallic acoustical panel substrates or mats may generally be described as (1) wet-felted or cast mineral fibers with an organic binder, usually starch-based; may also contain wood pulp/paper fibers and/or inorganic components such as perlite (volcanic glass beads); (2) dry-felted glass fibers with a thermally activated organic binder, usually a formaldehyde compound; (3) ceramic-like inorganic composite consisting of clay, and either mineral fibers or perlite, or a combination of mineral fibers and perlite; (4) gypsum panels (plasterboard or drywall), sometimes reinforced with glass fibers; and (5) composite substrates consisting of two or more of the above substrates laminated together—for example, a layer of glass fiber laminated to a gypsum backer.
  • Some of the performance features of current non-metallic panel substrates are as follows:
  • 1. wet-felted or cast mineral fibers
  • advantages—high CAC, high flame resistance, low cost, easy to cut/install
  • disadvantages—low NRC, low-medium AC, low durability, naturally absorbs moisture, food source for mold
  • 2. dry-felted glass fibers
  • advantages—high NRC, high AC, inherently mold resistant, lightweight, flexible, durable
  • disadvantages—low CAC, non-rigid—prone to sagging, high cost
  • 3. ceramic-like inorganic composite
  • advantages—high CAC, high flame resistance, high durability, moisture resistant—washable, inherently mold-resistant
  • disadvantages—low NRC, low AC, high cost, difficult to cut/install, heavy, brittle
  • 4. gypsum panels
  • advantages—high CAC, high flame resistance, low cost, inherently mold-resistant, easy to cut/install
  • disadvantages—low NRC, low AC, low-medium durability, naturally absorbs moisture
  • 5. composite substrates
  • advantages—can mix and match substrates to obtain needed performance
  • disadvantages—high cost and other single substrate non-acoustical problems
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • A family of acoustical ceiling panels for schools, offices, hospitals and other public buildings provides for one consistent look throughout the building while yet provide a range of desired acoustical performances. The family includes a group of substrate mats of a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers. Each mat is chosen from a group including a thickness of ¾″, ⅞″ and 1″ depending upon acoustical performance. The group of substrate mats all have an exposed surface chosen from a group including fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture. The group of mats all have an edge chosen from a group including square, tegular and narrow tegular.
  • A principal object and advantage of the present invention is that the architect or building owner simply chooses exposed surface finish, then an acoustical value for the particular building area and lastly an edge treatment throughout the building.
  • Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the tile substrate composition and thickness provides for a higher acoustical performances than the competition and prior art in the general NRC ranges of 0.65 to 0.95 while are quite economical to manufacture.
  • Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the tile substrate composition is able to achieve a combination of better acoustical properties at comparable panel thicknesses than those available from similarly priced or more expensive than competitive panels, along with favorable mechanical properties.
  • Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the tile substrate composition is able to be “tuned” anywhere within the NRC range of 0.65 to 0.95 by varying the density and thickness. Mineral fiber panels typically obtain an NRC rating of 0.55; but they can range from 0.35 to 0.75. Glass fiber panels typically obtain an NRC rating of 0.90; but they can range from 0.80 to 1.00.
  • Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the tiles or panels of the present invention obtain a typical CAC rating of 30; but range from 25 to 31 without huge increases in panel thicknesses. Mineral fiber panels typically obtain a CAC rating of 35; but they range from 33 to 40. Glass fiber panels typically obtain a CAC rating in the lower 20s—if the rating is disclosed at all.
  • Other objects and advantages include that the panels are lightweight, flexible, easy to cut and install; more durable than plain mineral fiber; inherently mold-resistant; more rigid than glass fiber panels—less prone to sagging; less costly than glass fiber panels for comparable performance; and have no formaldehyde, unlike glass fiber panels.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
  • FIG. 1 is a Flow Chart of the production line of the present invention; and
  • FIG. 2 is a Matrix for the selection of particular acoustical performance, finish and edge detail.
  • DETAILED SPECIFICATION
  • The ceiling panel of the present invention is comprised of mat or substrate with a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers. FIG. 1 shows the manufacturing assembly of the mat or substrate.
  • FIG. 2 shows a Matrix by which the architect or building owner selects his ceiling panels to be used throughout his entire building. First the architect chooses surface finish (fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture) of the panels to be used throughout his building. Next the architect considers the different areas within the building and then chooses the standard performance, mid-range performance or high end performance for each particular building area. Lastly the architect choose edge finish (square, tegular or narrow tegular). In short, the architect simply picks a finish, acoustical value and an edge detail to create his high performance ceilings.

Claims (2)

What is claimed:
1. A family of acoustical ceiling panels for schools, offices, hospitals and other public buildings that provide for one consistent look throughout the building while yet provide a range of desired acoustical performance, comprising:
a) a group of substrate mats comprised of a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers each mat chosen from a group comprising a thickness of ¾″, ⅞″ and 1″ depending upon acoustical performance;
b) wherein the group of substrate mats all have an exposed surface chosen from a group comprising fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture; and
c) wherein the group of substrate mats all have an edge chosen from a group comprising square, tegular and narrow tegular.
2. A method of choosing a family of acoustical ceiling panels for schools, offices, hospitals and other public buildings that provide for one consistent look throughout the building while yet provide a range of desired acoustical performance, comprising:
a) choosing a group of substrate mats comprising of a bonded mixture of mineral fiber, glass fiber, and bi-component fibers each mat chosen from a group comprising a , ⅞″ and 1″ depending upon acoustical performance;
b) choosing for all the group of substrate mats all having an exposed surface chosen from a group comprising fine texture, heavy texture, medium texture and light texture; and
c) choosing for the group of substrate mats all having an edge chosen from a group comprising square, tegular and narrow tegular.
US13/933,678 2012-07-13 2013-07-02 One look acoustical ceiling tile Abandoned US20140014437A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13/933,678 US20140014437A1 (en) 2012-07-13 2013-07-02 One look acoustical ceiling tile

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201261671372P 2012-07-13 2012-07-13
US13/933,678 US20140014437A1 (en) 2012-07-13 2013-07-02 One look acoustical ceiling tile

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20140014437A1 true US20140014437A1 (en) 2014-01-16

Family

ID=49912999

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/933,678 Abandoned US20140014437A1 (en) 2012-07-13 2013-07-02 One look acoustical ceiling tile

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US20140014437A1 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8734613B1 (en) * 2013-07-05 2014-05-27 Usg Interiors, Llc Glass fiber enhanced mineral wool based acoustical tile
WO2016144504A1 (en) * 2015-03-10 2016-09-15 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Laminate acoustic panel and method for installing a ceiling system
US9725898B2 (en) 2015-03-10 2017-08-08 Awi Licensing Llc Laminate acoustic panel
US20200173172A1 (en) * 2018-12-03 2020-06-04 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Acoustical building panel, monolithic surface covering system incorporating an acoustical building panel, and methods of forming and installing the same

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8734613B1 (en) * 2013-07-05 2014-05-27 Usg Interiors, Llc Glass fiber enhanced mineral wool based acoustical tile
WO2016144504A1 (en) * 2015-03-10 2016-09-15 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Laminate acoustic panel and method for installing a ceiling system
US9725898B2 (en) 2015-03-10 2017-08-08 Awi Licensing Llc Laminate acoustic panel
CN107429515A (en) * 2015-03-10 2017-12-01 阿姆斯特郎世界工业公司 It is laminated Suond-absorbing panel and the method for installing ceiling system
AU2016229427B2 (en) * 2015-03-10 2020-10-29 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Laminate acoustic panel and method for installing a ceiling system
US20200173172A1 (en) * 2018-12-03 2020-06-04 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Acoustical building panel, monolithic surface covering system incorporating an acoustical building panel, and methods of forming and installing the same
US11668091B2 (en) * 2018-12-03 2023-06-06 Awi Licensing Llc Acoustical building panel, monolithic surface covering system incorporating an acoustical building panel, and methods of forming and installing the same

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Cavanaugh et al. Architectural acoustics: Principles and practice
Ermann Architectural acoustics illustrated
US7745005B2 (en) Acoustical sound proofing material
Мавлонов et al. Sound-insulating materials
US20140014437A1 (en) One look acoustical ceiling tile
Fuchs et al. Covered broadband absorbers improving functional acoustics in communication rooms
Mommertz Acoustics and sound insulation: principles, planning, examples
Eldakdoky et al. Acoustic improvement on two lecture auditoria: Simulation and experiment
Drotleff et al. Attractive room acoustic design for multi-purpose halls
Sakagami et al. Some considerations on the use of space sound absorbers with next-generation materials reflecting COVID situations in Japan: additional sound absorption for post-pandemic challenges in indoor acoustic environments
Gupta An analysis of acoustic treatment on recording studio
Alibaba et al. A comparative analysis of acoustic material and effects on church auditoriums: Old and new churches in Nigeria
KR20170095575A (en) Noise Absorbing Panel
KR102133435B1 (en) The Ceiling and wall panels for floor impact sound reduction and its construction method
US10087624B2 (en) Drywall construction for resonance sound absorption
Cavanaugh Introduction to architectural acoustics and basic principles
Bolt et al. Architectural Acoustics
Michaud Silence is Golden: Optimizing the Acoustic Environment
Sakagami et al. Space sound absorbers with next-generation materials: Additional sound absorption for post-pandemic challenges in indoor acoustic environments
US20230368764A1 (en) Acoustic laminate
JP5775404B2 (en) Soundproof structure of building and building
Jensen et al. A proposed LEED standard for indoor acoustical quality
Pensiek Technological solutions applied in the control of acoustics in open office interiors
Nepomuceno The Need of Silence in Concert Halls and The Impact on Building Design.
Patel Workplace

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION