Abstract

This paper studies the problem of frequency-invariant beamforming with concentric circular microphone arrays (CCMAs) and presents an approach to the design of frequency-invariant and symmetric beampatterns. We first apply the Jacobi-Anger expansion to each ring of the CCMA to approximate the beampattern. The beamformer is then designed by using all the expansions from different rings. In comparison with the existing work in the literature where a Jacobi-Anger expansion of the same order is applied to different rings, here in this contribution the order of the Jacobi-Anger expansion at a ring is related to its number of sensors and, as a result, the expansion order at different rings may be different. The developed approach is rather general. It is not only able to mitigate the deep nulls problem in the directivity factor and the white noise gain, that is common to circular microphone arrays (CMAs), and improve the steering flexibility, but is also flexible to use in practice where a smaller ring can have less microphones than a larger one. We discuss the conditions for the design of $N$ th-order symmetric beampatterns and examples of frequency-invariant beampatterns with commonly used array geometries such as CMAs, CMAs with a sensor at the center, and CCMAs. We show the advantage of adding one microphone at the center of either a CMA or a CCMA, i.e., circumventing the deep nulls problem caused by the 0th-order Bessel function.

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