Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials

From a circular economy perspective, the acoustic characterization of steelwork by-products is a topic worth investigating, especially because little or no literature can be found on this subject. The possibility to reuse and add value to a large amount of this kind of waste material can lead to sig...

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Main Authors: Elisa Levi, Simona Sgarbi, Edoardo Alessio Piana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/13/5924
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spelling doaj-f537704e725741c29a5aff0eb78ae47f2021-07-15T15:29:55ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-06-01115924592410.3390/app11135924Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste MaterialsElisa Levi0Simona Sgarbi1Edoardo Alessio Piana2Department of Industrial and Mechanical Engineering, University of Brescia, via Branze 38, 25123 Brescia, ItalyDepartment of Industrial and Mechanical Engineering, University of Brescia, via Branze 38, 25123 Brescia, ItalyDepartment of Industrial and Mechanical Engineering, University of Brescia, via Branze 38, 25123 Brescia, ItalyFrom a circular economy perspective, the acoustic characterization of steelwork by-products is a topic worth investigating, especially because little or no literature can be found on this subject. The possibility to reuse and add value to a large amount of this kind of waste material can lead to significant economic and environmental benefits. Once properly analyzed and optimized, these by-products can become a valuable alternative to conventional materials for noise control applications. The main acoustic properties of these materials can be investigated by means of a four-microphone impedance tube. Through an inverse technique, it is then possible to derive some non-acoustic properties of interest, useful to physically characterize the structure of the materials. The inverse method adopted in this paper is founded on the Johnson–Champoux–Allard model and uses a standard minimization procedure based on the difference between the sound absorption coefficients obtained experimentally and predicted by the Johnson–Champoux–Allard model. The results obtained are consistent with other literature data for similar materials. The knowledge of the physical parameters retrieved applying this technique (porosity, airflow resistivity, tortuosity, viscous and thermal characteristic length) is fundamental for the acoustic optimization of the porous materials in the case of future applications.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/13/5924steel industry by-productscircular economysound absorptionsound reduction indexgranular materialsinverse method
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisa Levi
Simona Sgarbi
Edoardo Alessio Piana
spellingShingle Elisa Levi
Simona Sgarbi
Edoardo Alessio Piana
Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials
Applied Sciences
steel industry by-products
circular economy
sound absorption
sound reduction index
granular materials
inverse method
author_facet Elisa Levi
Simona Sgarbi
Edoardo Alessio Piana
author_sort Elisa Levi
title Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials
title_short Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials
title_full Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials
title_fullStr Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic Characterization of Some Steel Industry Waste Materials
title_sort acoustic characterization of some steel industry waste materials
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-06-01
description From a circular economy perspective, the acoustic characterization of steelwork by-products is a topic worth investigating, especially because little or no literature can be found on this subject. The possibility to reuse and add value to a large amount of this kind of waste material can lead to significant economic and environmental benefits. Once properly analyzed and optimized, these by-products can become a valuable alternative to conventional materials for noise control applications. The main acoustic properties of these materials can be investigated by means of a four-microphone impedance tube. Through an inverse technique, it is then possible to derive some non-acoustic properties of interest, useful to physically characterize the structure of the materials. The inverse method adopted in this paper is founded on the Johnson–Champoux–Allard model and uses a standard minimization procedure based on the difference between the sound absorption coefficients obtained experimentally and predicted by the Johnson–Champoux–Allard model. The results obtained are consistent with other literature data for similar materials. The knowledge of the physical parameters retrieved applying this technique (porosity, airflow resistivity, tortuosity, viscous and thermal characteristic length) is fundamental for the acoustic optimization of the porous materials in the case of future applications.
topic steel industry by-products
circular economy
sound absorption
sound reduction index
granular materials
inverse method
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/13/5924
work_keys_str_mv AT elisalevi acousticcharacterizationofsomesteelindustrywastematerials
AT simonasgarbi acousticcharacterizationofsomesteelindustrywastematerials
AT edoardoalessiopiana acousticcharacterizationofsomesteelindustrywastematerials
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