|
|
Tech Topic: Horizontal Loudspeaker Arrays
Ideas, data and solutions in solving horizontal
coverage problems
By Pat Brown

A loudspeaker array is a collection of loudspeakers that is assembled
to achieve a coverage pattern that cannot be achieved with a single device.
Arrays are most commonly implemented to achieve a wide horizontal coverage
pattern from a position on or above the stage. The “perfect” array would
be a collection of loudspeakers whose radiation pattern was indistinguishable
from a single (hypothetical) device that provided the needed pattern for
the audience area.
Many attempts have been made to solve the horizontal coverage problem.
These include:
|

Figure 1: The tight-pack array.
|
 |
• The “tight-pack” array a collection of loudspeakers packed
tightly together to emulate a single loudspeaker (Figure 1).
|
|

Figure 2: The exploded array.
|
 |
• The “exploded” array technically not an array, but a group
of devices that are separated by a sufficient physical distance
large enough to reduce the acoustic coupling between the devices
(Figure 2). Devices can be tilted at a downward angle.
|
|

Figure 3: The spherical array.
|
 |
• The “spherical” array a group of devices with a common mouth
distance to a virtual point of origin, placing them on the surface
of a virtual sphere (Figure 3).
|
All of these side-by-side array topologies have merits if implemented
properly. Let’s take a look at some facts and myths regarding the tight-pack
and spherical arrays, and (hopefully!) provoke some thought about the
horizontal coverage problem.
The balloon plots in this article were generated using EASE 4.0. They
represent the approximate response of an array generated using the manufacturer-supplied
EASE loudspeaker data. Since real-world loudspeakers are inherently more
complex than the EASE data representation, the simulations are “best case.”
|

Figure 4: Idealized radiation pattern.
|
 |
The best-case response of any horizontal array could be described
with the balloon plot of Figure 4. The plot is of three 60-degree
horizontal devices arrayed side-by-side to provide a 180 degree
horizontal radiation pattern.
|
|

Figure 5: Optimum audience plane for a side-by-side array.
|
 |
NEED AN ARRAY?
Because a horizontal array attempts to achieve a wider coverage
pattern than can be achieved with a single device, it makes sense
to consider what such a coverage pattern would be useful for. If
the array is radiating equal sound energy to all points within its
horizontal pattern, then even coverage is achieved only if all listeners
in the horizontal plane are at a similar distance from the array.
|
|

Figure 6: Another optimum audience plane for a side-by-side array.
|
 |
Figures 5-7 show the audience planes that can be covered
evenly with a side-by-side array. We will proceed with the assumption
that the goal of the array is to evenly cover one of these audience
area shapes.
Note that if the array were tilted (i.e. above the stage), the
audience plane would need to have the same tilt. Such an audience
plane is unlikely, so the “exploded” array is normally used this
application.
|
|

Figure 7: Yet another optimum audience plane for a side-by-side
array.
|
 |
Figure 8 shows the physical conflicts that occur when a
tight-pack configuration is attempted. If the acoustic centers could
be reconciled physically, then a coherent wavefront could be achieved
without the requirement of the sum of the individual radiation patterns
being 180 degrees (Figure 9).
Unfortunately, such a localized acoustic center is not possible
for much of the spectrum in practice due to the required physical
size of transducers that can radiate significant acoustic power.
It is necessary to de-centralize the components to a degree that
doesn’t require the devices to occupy the same position in space.
This process also moves the acoustic centers, and our “ideal” array
is no longer ideal (Figure 10).
|
|

Figure 8: Ideal versus physically realizable devices.
|
 |
The performance of a tight-packed array will depend on the degree
to which the designer is able to reconcile the acoustic centers
to a common point. Because a physical solution bec-omes more difficult
with increasing frequency (shorter wave-lengths), the performance
of tight-pack arrays will transition to that of a spherical array
at some frequency.
|
|

Table 1: Maximum physical distance between acoustic centers of adjacent
devices.
|
 |
Table 1 shows the maximum physical distance bet-ween acoustic
centers of adjacent devices that allow in-phase energy summation
(less than one-quarter wavelength).
|
|

Figure 9: In a dream world...
|
 |
The spherical array moves the acoustic centers out from a common
origin and uses a radiation pattern that minimizes the overlap bet-ween
adjacent devices.
|
|

Figure 10: The real world: our ideal array is no longer ideal.
|
 |
|
|

Figure 11: Spherical arrays move the acoustic centers out from a
common origin.
|
 |
Figure 11 shows the ideal case, which would yield a “dead”
zone in the overlap area. In practice, the opposite happens, since
all loudspeakers spill some acoustic energy outside of their rated
coverage patterns. The result is a “lobing” three-dimensional radiation
pattern and an acoustic response riddled with comb filters at any
single listener position.
It is interesting to note that the number of lobes in the radiation
pattern is determined by the separation of the acoustic centers,
not by the coverage angles of the devices that form the array. Tighter
patterns can reduce the level differences between the peaks and
nulls, but they don’t reduce the number of peaks and nulls. Array
performance is not judged by the absence of lobes, but by the relative
level difference between the peaks and the nulls.
|
DIRECTIVTY DEVICES
|

Figure 12: Low-Q arrayed on a sphere.
|
 |
Figures 12 - 16 show the 3-D directivity balloons for several
“real world” array configurations for frequencies in the voice range.
The geometric origin is 1 meter for each array, a distance that
is great enough to remove the physical conflicts between the devices.
Figure 12 shows an array of small sound columns that have
the typical broad horizontal pattern and controlled vertical pattern.
The lack of pattern control produces significant lobing at all but
the highest frequency considered. At this frequency, the lobing
becomes so dense that the response actually becomes smoother. Dense
interference is a common technique used by sound system designers.
As the lobe density is reduced (lower frequencies) the coverage
becomes more uneven.
|
|

Figure 13: Arrayed on a sphere.
|
 |
Figure 13 shows the resultant radiation patterns when the
column loudspeakers are replaced with medium-format horns having
a 60-degree nominal horizontal coverage pattern in the 2 kHz octave
band. The coverage is much more even than in the previous example.
As with the previous array, these devices are positioned on the
surface of a sphere by using a common distance back to a “virtual”
physical origin. This arraying technique produces physically appealing
arrays, but unfortunately does not compensate for the fact that
the acoustic centers are not reconciled. As such, significant lobing
is present in the radiation pattern at the lower octave centers
where the radiated pattern is wider than the nominal coverage.
|
|

Figure 14: Center loudspeaker advanced by one foot.
|
 |
Figure 14 shows the same configuration, but with the center
loudspeaker advanced physically by one foot. This makes the array
non-spherical, which (ironically) produces an improvement in the
evenness of coverage in the 500 Hz and 2 kHz balloons.
|
|

Figure 15: Center loudspeaker advanced one foot and delayed .88
milliseconds.
|
 |
Figure 15 shows the same configuration, but with the center
device delayed electronically in an attempt to “compensate” for
the
1-foot advance. This demonstrates that the acoustic center of a
device is a physical characteristic and cannot be moved electronically.
While a delay can certainly alter the radiation pattern of the array,
it is not a direct substitution for the repositioning of a device.
|
IMPROVING PERFORMANCE
|

Figure 16: Large-format horn array with coaxial high-frequency section.
|
 |
Array performance can be improved by using devices whose directivity
holds up to a lower frequency. This means a physically larger device.
Figure 16 shows the result of substituting large-format 60-degree
horns for the medium format devices in the previous figures. The
increased pattern control in the 1 kHz and 2 kHz balloons is apparent.
The bandwidths of these devices do not extend to 2 kHz, so the high
frequency response was achieved with additional devices, coaxially
mounted within the large-format horns.
Since using a larger format produces improved behavior, it is reasonable
to expect that this improvement could be extended to lower frequencies
if devices of sufficient physical size were used. Since the acoustic
wavelength doubles when frequency is halved, the required size at
500 Hz would be twice that required at 1 kHz (8-foot mouth size!).
|
The wide horizontal coverage problem is one of the greatest challenges
for the system designer. There currently exists no ideal solution, but
there are certainly methods that work better than others. Some conclusions
of this and other studies are:
• Pattern control is essential if the goal of the array is to emulate
a single device.
• Arrays of low-directivity devices should be avoided.
• Arrayability is frequency-dependent. What works at one frequency may
not work at another.
• Spherical arrays are esthetically pleasing, but do not produce a common
acoustic center.
• Misaligning devices (either physically or electronically) may yield
a frequency-dependent improvement in response.
• Moving a loudspeaker produces a different result than delaying it.
• Different array techniques should be used at low frequencies than
at high frequencies (i.e. vertical line arrays).
Because architects and their clients insist on building rooms that are
too wide to be covered with a single loudspeaker, the wide horizontal
coverage problem will be an ongoing one. This article should alert the
designer and buyer alike to the caveats of the horizontal array, and help
them identify designs that provide an adequate level of performance for
a given application.
Pat Brown, with his wife Brenda, heads up Syn-Aud-Con, leading audio
training sessions around the world. For more info, go to www.synaudcon.com
June2003 Live Sound International
|