Testing 1-2: New Laser-Based Microphone Calibration Measures Up

Testing 1-2: New Laser-Based Microphone Calibration Measures Up


A laboratory standard microphone (three-banded gold and silver cylinder, top) sits on a base. During a laser measurement, applying an electrical signal causes the microphone’s diaphragm to vibrate.



Credit: NIST



Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have conducted the first demonstration of a faster and more accurate way to calibrate certain kinds of microphones.


The technique, which uses lasers to measure the velocity at which a microphone’s diaphragm vibrates, performs well enough to overtake one of the main calibration methods used at NIST and throughout industry. Someday, a laser-based method could be commercialized to become a completely new way to do extremely sensitive, low-uncertainty calibrations of microphones in the field, in places such as factories and power plants. Potential users of such a commercial system could include organizations that monitor workplace or community noise levels or the condition of machinery via sound.


“There’s nothing like this on the market now, not that I’m aware of,” said NIST scientist Randall Wagner. “It would be far in the future — a pie-in-the-sky kind of thing — but I see this work as opening the door to commercial applications.”



How It Works: Laser-Based Microphone Calibration




A microphone works by converting pressure waves, or sound, into an electrical signal. NIST researchers have recently made what may be the first successful demonstration of a technique for performing this calibration with laser light. Laser light is bounced off the membrane surface. When the membrane is moving inwards, the frequency of the reflected light will be lower. Conversely, when the membrane is moving outwards, the frequency of the reflected light will be higher. The measurem ..

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