US3896274A - Electret earphone - Google Patents

Electret earphone Download PDF

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Publication number
US3896274A
US3896274A US403573A US40357373A US3896274A US 3896274 A US3896274 A US 3896274A US 403573 A US403573 A US 403573A US 40357373 A US40357373 A US 40357373A US 3896274 A US3896274 A US 3896274A
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Prior art keywords
diaphragm
electret
electrets
backplate
imperforate
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Expired - Lifetime
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US403573A
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Freeman W Fraim
Preston V Murphy
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Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc
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Thermo Electron Corp
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R19/00Electrostatic transducers
    • H04R19/01Electrostatic transducers characterised by the use of electrets
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R25/00Deaf-aid sets, i.e. electro-acoustic or electro-mechanical hearing aids; Electric tinnitus maskers providing an auditory perception
    • H04R25/60Mounting or interconnection of hearing aid parts, e.g. inside tips, housings or to ossicles
    • H04R25/604Mounting or interconnection of hearing aid parts, e.g. inside tips, housings or to ossicles of acoustic or vibrational transducers

Definitions

  • An earphone includes a casing 11 which forms acoustic chambers 12. An acoustic port 13 is provided for sound output. A sound absorbing material 15 fills a portion of the acoustic chambers 12 to provide acoustic damping and protection against dust intrusion.
  • a conductive diaphragm 14 is tautly suspended by elements 16.
  • an electrically conductive backplate 18 is mounted and isolated from the casing 11 by elements 20.
  • a film electret element 22 is affixed to the inner surface 24 of backplate l8.
  • the output is connected to the earphone l embodying the invention.

Abstract

A push-pull electrostatic transducer employs imperforate electret elements affixed to the surface of rigid vented backplates mounted on opposite sides of a conductive diaphragm.

Description

United States Patent Fraim et a1.
1451 July 22,1975
[ ELECTRET EARPHONE 3,612,778 10/1971 Murphy 307/88 ET 3,646,280 2/1972 Tamura 179/111 E 1 lnventorsi Freeman Fra'm, Lexmgton 3,772,133 11/1973 Schmitt 307/88 ET Mass; Preston Murphy, 3,812,575 5/1974 Hedman 179/111 E Barcekna Spam OTHER PUBLICATIONS [73] Assignee: Therm) Electron Corporatmn, Application of Electrets to Electro-Acoustic Transwaltham, Massducers by R. E. Collins; AWA Technical Review Dec. 22 Filed: Oct. 4, 1973 1973- [21] Appl' N05 4039573 Primary ExaminerKathleen H. Claffy Assistant ExaminerThomas DAmico 52 U.S. c1. 179/111 E; 307/88 ET n 8 m Firm1ames Neal [51] Int. Cl H04r 19/00 [58] Field of Search 179/111 E, 111 R, 106; ABSTRACT 307/88 ET A push-pull electrostatic transducer employs imperforate electret elements affixed to the surface of rigid [56] References Cited vented backplates mounted on opposite sides of a con- UNITED STATES PATENTS ductive diaphragm- 3,118,022 l/l964 Sessler 179/111 E 11 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures 2o 16 23 16 2o 11 15 A r W I l A ELECTRET EARPHONE BACKGROUND .OF THE INVENTION The bias necessary to obtain satisfactory linearity in an electroacoustic transducer can be provided by an electret, either as a diaphragm or as part of a fixed electrode. When the displacement of the diaphragm is substantial, linearity of operation is further enhanced by the push-pull mode of operation.
One problem encountered with electrets is that they degrade, or lose their charge with time, under the stresses of manufacturing processes or during normal operation. Polarization stability of electrets may be controlled by the choice of manufacturing process, materials, structure, or a combination thereof.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The invention pertains to electroacoustic electret transducers and particularly to a combination of fixed and vibrating elements as employed in earphones and the like. The general object of this invention is by structural improvement to extend the useful life-of the electret elements and to simplify the construction of acoustic devices employing electret elements.
The invention incorporates imperforate electret elements attached to the surface of rigid vented backplates mounted on opposite sides of a conductive diaphragm. The invention has the following specific objects:
1. To maximize electrical discharge pathlengths on the exposed dielectric surface of the electret elements;
2. To simplify assembly procedure; and
3. To eliminate degradation of the electret elements due to perforation during the manufacturing process.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a sectional plane view of a preferred embodiment of the electret earphone of this invention.
FIGS. 2a) through 20) show a plane view of a number of preferred embodiments of electret elements on suitable backplates.
FIG. 3 is a schematic of the earphone of FIG. 1 embodied in a hearing aid.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The invention will be described in detail referring to FIG. 1. An earphone includes a casing 11 which forms acoustic chambers 12. An acoustic port 13 is provided for sound output. A sound absorbing material 15 fills a portion of the acoustic chambers 12 to provide acoustic damping and protection against dust intrusion. Within the casing 11, a conductive diaphragm 14 is tautly suspended by elements 16. On each side of the diaphragm 14, an electrically conductive backplate 18 is mounted and isolated from the casing 11 by elements 20. A film electret element 22 is affixed to the inner surface 24 of backplate l8. Acoustic passages 25 in the backplates 18 are provided at locations not obstructed by electret elements 22. A capillary 23 equalizes pressure between acoustic chambers 12. A surface 26 of the electret 22 faces the diaphragm 14. The diaphragm 14 and electrets 22 are electrically-insulated from one another by elements 16 and 20. Conductors 28 connect the backplates 18 and the diaphragm 14 to a representative push-pull network 30, shown schematically. The network 30 is connectedto a signal source 32.
Operation of the apparatus of FIG. 1 will now be described. A signal from the source 32 is received through the push-pull network 30 via conductors 28 connected to the diaphragm 14 and the electrodes 18.
At the electrets 22, the signal is biased by the persisting field in the electrets 22. The signal causes a timevarying electric field to develop between the electrets 22 and the diaphragm 14 which induces the diaphragm 14 to vibrate. The vibration induces sound waves in the acoustic cavity 12. The resultant sound passes through the acoustic port 13.
In a preferred embodiment, the dimensions of the earphone 10 are approximately 10 mm in length by 10 mm in width by 5 mm in depth. The earphone 10 as shown has a metal casing 11. The casing 11 may be plastic if no electrostatic shielding is required or size is not a constraint.
The diaphragm 14 is the sole vibratile element. It is typically 6 microns in thickness and is a plastic film 17 with metallized surfaces 31. Other materials may be used so long as the diaphragm 14 is electrically conductive and sufficiently flexible.
The electret elements 22 aredielectric films typically I the electrets 22 and the diaphragm 14 may vary depending on the desired acoustic and electrical characteristics. The electret 22 is characterized by a persistent electrostatic charge. The dominant component of the charge, called the homocharge, resides on or near surface of the electret 22. Since the planar electret 22 has no perforations, the ratio of surface area to perimeter length is relatively high, and the electrical discharge path along the surface to any edge is maximized. Severa] preferred shapes of electrets 22 are shown in FIGS. 2a through 20. The acoustic air passages 25 in the backplates 18 may be of various shapes and sizes as shown in FIGS. 2a through 2c. More than one electret 22 may be bonded to each backplate 18 as shown in FIG. 20 in order to permit the central location of the air vents 25 and to shape the vibration characteristics of the diaphragm l4. I
An electrically conductive backplate having thermal expansion characteristics closely matching those of the electret element affixed thereto is desirable in order to inhibit deterioration of the electret element caused by thermally induced stress. This is accomplished in the backplates 18 by providing a plastic base 19, which has thermal expansion characteristics matching those of the electrets 22, with an electrically conductive coating 21 less than one micron in thickness. A gold coating of 0.06 microns is suitable. Such a coated backplate has essentially the thermal expansion characteristics of the uncoated plastic. Likewise an electrically conductive backing 27 less than 0.15 microns thick on the electret elements 22 does not have an substantial adverse effect on the thermal expansion characteristics of the electret elements 22. If the backplates 18 are not electrically conductive or do not have electrically conductive surfaces 21, electrical connections 28 must be made di- '.rectly to the electret elements 22.
appropriate amplifying means 38. The output is connected to the earphone l embodying the invention.
The' invention herein described has the following advantages:
1. the electrical discharge pathlengths along the surface of the electrets are maximized so that deterioration of the electret is impeded;
2. the assembly procedure has been simplified by avoiding the necessity of critical alignment of elements with holes or the formation of holes in the electret during or subsequent to assembly, and correspondingly 3. deterioration of electrets induced by the manufacturing process is eliminated.
While the invention has been described with respect to the details of a specific embodiment thereof, many changes and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art, and such can obviously be made without departing from the scope of the invention.
Having thus described the invention, whatis claimed is: a
1. An electroacoustic transducer comprising:
a thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm;
a pair of rigid backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm;
a separate imperforate electret bonded to each said backplate along the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm, each said electret being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area of perimeter length;
each said backplate being vented at locations not obstructed by the electret bonded thereto;
said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another;
means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate; and t means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
2. An electroacoustic transducer as defined in claim 1, wherein said electrets are substantially circular.
3. An electroacoustic transducer as defined in claim 1, wherein said device is a receiver.
4. An electroacoustic receiver as defined in claim 3, wherein said device is an earphone.
5. An electroacoustic receiver comprising:
a'thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm;
a pair of rigid electrode backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm;
a separate imperforate electret bonded to and covering a portion of each of said electrode backplates along the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm, each said electret being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area to perimeter length;
each of said imperforate electrets being substantially planar and having a ratio of the longest line along the surface which would pass through the center of gravity to the shortest line along the surface which would pass through the center of gravity not exceeding three;
each said electrode backplate being vented for acoustic airflow at locations not obstructed by the electret bonded thereto;
said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another;
means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance. for said diaphragm to vibrate; and
means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
6. An electroacoustic receiver as defined in claim 5,
wherein said electrets are substantially circular.
7. An electroacoustic receiver as defined in claim 5,
wherein said device is an earphone.
8. A hearing aid comprising:
microphone means;
amplifier means;
push-pull driving means;
an electrostatic receiver comprising:
a casing;
acoustic ports;
a thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm;
a pair of rigid backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm;
a separate imperforate electret, each said electret being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area to perimeter length;
said backplates being vented at locations not obstructed by said electrets;
said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another;
means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate; and
means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
9. An electroacoustic transducer comprising:
an electrically conductive vibratile diaphragm;
a pair of rigid backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm, said backplates having plastic bases with an electrically conductive coating thereon, said coating not exceeding one micron in thickness; 1
a separate imperforate electret bonded to each said backplate along the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm, each electret comprising an electrically non-conductive member having thermal expansion characteristics similar to the thermal expansion characteristics of said base and being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area to perimeter length, an obverse surface of said member confronting said diaphragm, an electrically conductive backing on the reverse surface of said member, said backing bonding said member to said backplate in surface to surface contact, each said electret and its associated backplate having similar thermal expansion char-' each said backplate together with the walls of said container forming an acoustic chamber;
7 a separate imperforate electret bonded to each said backplate along the central portion of the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm;
said backplate having holes through it at locations.
surrounding said electret for providing acoustic passageways between said diaphragm and said acousticchambers; and an opening in said container for providing an acoustic port communicating with at least one of said acoustic chambers.

Claims (11)

1. An electroacoustic transducer comprising: a thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm; a pair of rigid backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm; a separate imperforate electret bonded to each said backplate along the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm, each said electret being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area of perimeter length; each said backplate being vented at locations not obstructed by the electret bonded thereto; said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another; means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate; and means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
2. An electroacoustic transducer as defined in claim 1, wherein said electrets are substantially circular.
3. An electroacoustic transducer as defined in claim 1, wherein said device is a receiver.
4. An electroacoustic receiver as defined in claim 3, wherein said device is an earphone.
5. An electroacoustic receiver comprising: a thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm; a pair of rigid electrode backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm; a separate imperforate electret bonded to and covering a portion of each of said electrode backplates along the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm, each said electret being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area to perimeter length; each of said imperforate electrets being substantially planar and having a ratio of the longest line along the surface which would pass through the center of gravity to the shortest line along the surface which would pass through the center of gravity not exceeding three; each said electrode backplate being vented for acoustic airflow at locations not obstructed by the electret bonded thereto; said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another; means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate; and means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
6. An electroacoustic receiver as defined in claim 5, wherein said electrets are substantially circular.
7. An electroacoustic receiver as defined in claim 5, wherein said device is an earphone.
8. A hearing aid comprising: microphone means; amplifier means; push-pull driving means; an electrostatic receiver comprising: a casing; acoustic ports; a thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm; a pair of rigid backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm; a separate imperforate electret, each said electret being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area to perimeter length; said backplates being vented at locations not obstructed by said electrets; said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another; means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate; and means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
9. An electroacoustic transducer comprising: an electrically conductive vibratile diaphragm; a pair of rigid backplates positioned on opposite sides of said diaphragm, said backplates having plastic bases with an electrically conductive coating thereon, said coating not exceeding one micron in thickness; a separate imperforate electret bonded to each said backplate along the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm, each electret comprising an electrically non-conductive member having thermal expansion characteristics similar to the thermal expansion characteristics of said base and being imperforate to provide a single continuous surface uninterrupted by perforations, thereby to maximize the ratio of surface area to perimeter length, an obverse surface of said member confronting said diaphragm, an electrically conductive backing on the reverse surface of said member, said backing bonding said member to said backplate in surface to surface contact, each said electret and its associated backplate having similar thermal expansion characteristics; each said backplate being vented at locations not obstructed by the electret bonded thereto; said diaphragm and each of said electrets being electrically insulated from one another; means for supporting said diaphragm between said electrets with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate; and means for electrically connecting individually to said diaphragm and to each of said electrets.
10. An electroacoustic transducer as defined in claim 9 wherein said electrically conductive surface of said electret does not exceed 0.15 microns in thickness.
11. An electroacoustic transducer comprising: a closed container; a thin, substantially flexible electrically conductive diaphragm mounted at its perimeter inside said container, thereby dividing said container into two sections; a pair of rigid backplates mounted inside said container on opposite sides of said diaphragm with sufficient clearance for said diaphragm to vibrate, each said backplate together with the walls of said container forming an acoustic chamber; a separate imperforate electret bonded to each said backplate along the central portion of the surface thereof confronting said diaphragm; said backplate having holes through it at locations surrounding said electret for providing acoustic passageways between said diaphragm and said acoustic chambers; and an opening in said container for providing an acoustic port communicating with at least one of said acoustic chambers.
US403573A 1973-10-04 1973-10-04 Electret earphone Expired - Lifetime US3896274A (en)

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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3980838A (en) * 1974-02-20 1976-09-14 Tokyo Shibaura Electric Co., Ltd. Plural electret electroacoustic transducer
US4163162A (en) * 1977-01-04 1979-07-31 Thomson-Csf Bistable electret system
US4236051A (en) * 1978-02-20 1980-11-25 Hoshidenki-Seizo Kabushiki Kaisha Electret microphone
EP0065746A2 (en) * 1981-05-22 1982-12-01 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Condenser microphone
US5099856A (en) * 1989-11-08 1992-03-31 Etymotic Research, Inc. Electrode isolation amplifier
US6483924B1 (en) * 1996-02-26 2002-11-19 Panphonics Oy Acoustic elements and method for sound processing
US6757399B1 (en) * 1998-07-22 2004-06-29 Ziyi Cheng Anti-noise-electret pick-up with an electret
US20060072770A1 (en) * 2004-09-22 2006-04-06 Shinichi Miyazaki Electrostatic ultrasonic transducer and ultrasonic speaker
US20090016551A1 (en) * 2007-07-12 2009-01-15 Industrial Technology Research Institute Electrostatic electroacoustic transducers
US20120002826A1 (en) * 2010-06-30 2012-01-05 Tsung-Hung Wu Electret electroacoustic transducer
US20150023529A1 (en) * 2013-07-18 2015-01-22 Infineon Technologies Ag MEMS Devices, Interface Circuits, and Methods of Making Thereof
US20160165356A1 (en) * 2014-12-04 2016-06-09 Kabushiki Kaisha Audio-Technica Condenser type electroacoustic transducer
US9813802B2 (en) 2012-10-18 2017-11-07 Nokia Technologies Oy Resonance damping for audio transducer systems
US11228844B2 (en) 2017-05-18 2022-01-18 The Johns Hopkins University Push-pull electret transducer with controlled restoring force for low frequency microphones and energy harvesting

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3118022A (en) * 1961-08-07 1964-01-14 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Electroacoustic transducer
US3612778A (en) * 1967-05-15 1971-10-12 Thermo Electron Corp Electret acoustic transducer and method of making
US3646280A (en) * 1969-08-28 1972-02-29 Pioneer Electronic Corp Backplate for electret loudspeaker
US3772133A (en) * 1971-11-08 1973-11-13 Industrial Research Prod Inc Backplate construction for electret transducer
US3812575A (en) * 1971-12-02 1974-05-28 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Electret microphone

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3118022A (en) * 1961-08-07 1964-01-14 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Electroacoustic transducer
US3612778A (en) * 1967-05-15 1971-10-12 Thermo Electron Corp Electret acoustic transducer and method of making
US3646280A (en) * 1969-08-28 1972-02-29 Pioneer Electronic Corp Backplate for electret loudspeaker
US3772133A (en) * 1971-11-08 1973-11-13 Industrial Research Prod Inc Backplate construction for electret transducer
US3812575A (en) * 1971-12-02 1974-05-28 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Electret microphone

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3980838A (en) * 1974-02-20 1976-09-14 Tokyo Shibaura Electric Co., Ltd. Plural electret electroacoustic transducer
US4163162A (en) * 1977-01-04 1979-07-31 Thomson-Csf Bistable electret system
US4236051A (en) * 1978-02-20 1980-11-25 Hoshidenki-Seizo Kabushiki Kaisha Electret microphone
EP0065746A2 (en) * 1981-05-22 1982-12-01 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Condenser microphone
EP0065746A3 (en) * 1981-05-22 1983-02-16 Tokyo Shibaura Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Condenser microphone
US4491697A (en) * 1981-05-22 1985-01-01 Tokyo Shibaura Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Condenser microphone
US5099856A (en) * 1989-11-08 1992-03-31 Etymotic Research, Inc. Electrode isolation amplifier
US6483924B1 (en) * 1996-02-26 2002-11-19 Panphonics Oy Acoustic elements and method for sound processing
US6757399B1 (en) * 1998-07-22 2004-06-29 Ziyi Cheng Anti-noise-electret pick-up with an electret
US7668323B2 (en) * 2004-09-22 2010-02-23 Seiko Epson Corporation Electrostatic ultrasonic transducer and ultrasonic speaker
US20060072770A1 (en) * 2004-09-22 2006-04-06 Shinichi Miyazaki Electrostatic ultrasonic transducer and ultrasonic speaker
US20090016551A1 (en) * 2007-07-12 2009-01-15 Industrial Technology Research Institute Electrostatic electroacoustic transducers
US8559660B2 (en) 2007-07-12 2013-10-15 Industrial Technology Research Institute Electrostatic electroacoustic transducers
US20120002826A1 (en) * 2010-06-30 2012-01-05 Tsung-Hung Wu Electret electroacoustic transducer
US9813802B2 (en) 2012-10-18 2017-11-07 Nokia Technologies Oy Resonance damping for audio transducer systems
US10085086B2 (en) 2012-10-18 2018-09-25 Nokia Technologies Oy Resonance damping for audio transducer systems
US20150023529A1 (en) * 2013-07-18 2015-01-22 Infineon Technologies Ag MEMS Devices, Interface Circuits, and Methods of Making Thereof
US9179221B2 (en) * 2013-07-18 2015-11-03 Infineon Technologies Ag MEMS devices, interface circuits, and methods of making thereof
US20160165356A1 (en) * 2014-12-04 2016-06-09 Kabushiki Kaisha Audio-Technica Condenser type electroacoustic transducer
US9668062B2 (en) * 2014-12-04 2017-05-30 Kabushiki Kaisha Audio-Technica Condenser type electroacoustic transducer
US11228844B2 (en) 2017-05-18 2022-01-18 The Johns Hopkins University Push-pull electret transducer with controlled restoring force for low frequency microphones and energy harvesting

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