Engineering Vibroacoustic Analysis 2016
DOI: 10.1002/9781118693988.ch9
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Structural–Acoustic Optimization

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…In particular in the automotive industry, there is a considerable interest to optimize and tailor the sound amplitudes within cars by changing the shape of parts of the elastic structure. For examples of structural optimization with acoustic applications in the engineering community, we refer to Marburg (2002), Marburg et al (2016) and the references therein. The existence and uniqueness for the acoustic–structure interaction problem were proved first for unbounded (fluid) domains in Barucq et al (2014) based on the Fredholm theory and in bounded domains in Stammberger and Voss (2014) based on the theory of self-adjoint operators, where it is restricted to the case without absorption.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular in the automotive industry, there is a considerable interest to optimize and tailor the sound amplitudes within cars by changing the shape of parts of the elastic structure. For examples of structural optimization with acoustic applications in the engineering community, we refer to Marburg (2002), Marburg et al (2016) and the references therein. The existence and uniqueness for the acoustic–structure interaction problem were proved first for unbounded (fluid) domains in Barucq et al (2014) based on the Fredholm theory and in bounded domains in Stammberger and Voss (2014) based on the theory of self-adjoint operators, where it is restricted to the case without absorption.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, such structures are susceptible to vibrate and radiate noise into the surrounding medium when they are excited by a dynamic force and/or an incident wave, particularly when the excitation frequency is close to the natural structural frequencies. In addition, both material properties and structural topology are known to have a significant impact on their sound radiation/insulation capabilities (D’Alessandro et al, 2013; Marburg et al, 2016). Accordingly, it is important to suppress and/or optimize sound radiation from (transmission through) these structures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%