Acoustic Panels & Sound Diffusers: The Dual Wings of Acoustic Optimization
Acoustic Panels: The Source of Quietness
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Porous structure
Acoustic panels are usually made of porous materials such as grooved wood, perforated wood, fabric-wrapped panels, or fiber composites. These materials are filled with tiny voids. When sound waves enter, they refract, reflect, and rub repeatedly inside the pores, converting sound energy into heat and achieving high-efficiency sound absorption.
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Reverberation reduction
By absorbing sound energy, acoustic panels effectively shorten the sound decay time in a space and reduce reverberation, ensuring clear sound and avoiding echo interference. They are especially ideal for conference rooms, recording studios, cinemas, and other places requiring high speech clarity and listening comfort.
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Noise control
In areas needing external noise isolation or internal sound containment—such as residences, offices, and hotel rooms—acoustic panels work with sound-insulating materials to reduce sound transmission and create a quiet environment.
Sound Diffusers: The Magician of Uniform Sound Field
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Sound wave scattering
Diffusers feature special geometric shapes or textures (such as QRD, pyramid, cylindrical array, etc.). When sound waves hit these surfaces, straight-traveling waves are scattered in multiple directions, avoiding sound shadows and uneven sound pressure buildup.
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Spatial acoustic balance
By diffusing sound waves, diffusers help eliminate unevenness in the indoor sound field, delivering relatively consistent listening experience no matter where the listener stands. This is critical for concert halls, studios, home theaters, and other environments pursuing high-quality stereo effects.
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Sound quality enhancement
Diffusers restore the natural texture of sound sources, reduce interference from early reflections, strengthen stereo positioning, and provide listeners with a more realistic and rich listening experience.