Sound waves carry energy and we humans have sound sensors attached to our heads (ears). Our ears can only pick up some of the possible frequencies of sound. If the frequency is too low (sub-sonic) or too high (ultra-sonic) our ears won’t pick it up.
So ultrasonic technologies are effectively silent not because they aren’t transmitting energy using sound waves. It’s just that we can’t pick up the sounds being produced with our ears.
Shall we get nerdier? Yes, let’s.
UPAS products use ultrasonic pumps and they have this neat trick baked in that we don’t hear them because they are working at frequencies (or pitch) above what we can hear. Why bother? It turns out one of the most frequent objections to wearing sampling pumps is the noise and vibration (often called pulsation) of the pumps. This neat little ultrasonic pumping trick creates two key benefits: virtually no noise during operation and no detectable pulsation. People wearing our pumps can’t tell they're on. Folks often need to put the exhaust right up to their ear to hear the soft sound of white noise of exiting the pumps.
Can we visualize this a little bit more? You betcha! Let’s use some low-cost sensors and an oscilloscope from our lab to make some of these invisible things visible.
First up is the classic electret microphone. You can buy these fun little items for a couple bucks off your favorite electronics hobby site. Provide some low voltage power and send the output signal into our oscilloscope to visualize the sounds it picks up.
Check out this video of moving a classic diaphragm pump closer and closer to the microphone. You’ll see the amplitude of the sound being detected creep up and up until it’s off the scale.
Now check out the next video showing the same activity using our UPAS v2.1 PLUS instrument. We get closer and closer but can’t seem to get our baseline to budge. That’s because these pumps are so much quieter across the whole sound spectrum our microphone doesn’t ‘hear it.’
First up the diaphragm tech. If we lay the corner of the pump on top of the accelerometer and watch what happens we see a periodic pattern. The pulsation of the diaphragm pump shows up as that wave pattern on the oscilloscope.
Now let’s look at the UPAS v2.1 PLUS.
Well, we can’t really see much, can we? That’s because the UPAS does not pulsate (or at least not enough to detect with this quick test).
One of our favorite moments is seeing the look on someone’s face as they experience UPAS technology for the first time. “It’s so quiet.” “I can’t even tell it’s on.”
We’ve gone through some of the core explanations of how the UPAS accomplishes some of its key benefits.
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