An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II: Experimental verification

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/Sammelwerk/KonferenzbandAufsatz in KonferenzbandForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • C. Mandanna Hurfar
  • Christian Keller
  • Akif Mumcu
  • Joerg R. Seume
Forschungs-netzwerk anzeigen

Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Titel des SammelwerksTurbomachinery
Herausgeber (Verlag)American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME)
ISBN (elektronisch)9780791849699
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 20 Sept. 2016
VeranstaltungASME Turbo Expo 2016: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition, GT 2016 - Seoul, Südkorea
Dauer: 13 Juni 201617 Juni 2016

Publikationsreihe

NameProceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo
Band2A-2016

Abstract

A detailed understanding of the sound propagation and transmission within the engine and adjacent ducts is mandatory for the development of efficient noise reduction techniques for the tonal sound field produced by the turbomachinery components of aircraft engines. For this purpose, experimental acoustic investigations are needed. In the first part of this paper, an acoustic excitation system for the generation of acoustic spinning modes with circumferential mode order one and varying radial mode order, as well as a microphone array optimized for a radial decomposition of the sound field have been systematically designed. To verify the excitation method and the design of the excitation system, corresponding experimental measurements are carried out in an acoustic wind tunnel. Amongst others, the sound power of the specific excited acoustic modes of order (1,0) and (1,1) are compared with the respective powers achieved with a non-specific sound field excitation. To test the range of flexible use of the sound generator, measurements are carried out over a wide frequency range. It is shown that the intended modes can be controlled at the design frequency of the sound generator as well as off-design frequencies. However, the dominance of the excited modes strongly depends on the number of cut-on modes and the excitation frequency as non-linear resonance effects may interfere. Furthermore, the benefit of an increased number of loudspeaker rows for stable mode excitation is discussed. The experimental results are supported by numerical simulations.

ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete

Zitieren

An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II: Experimental verification. / Hurfar, C. Mandanna; Keller, Christian; Mumcu, Akif et al.
Turbomachinery. American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME), 2016. (Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo; Band 2A-2016).

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/Sammelwerk/KonferenzbandAufsatz in KonferenzbandForschungPeer-Review

Hurfar, CM, Keller, C, Mumcu, A & Seume, JR 2016, An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II: Experimental verification. in Turbomachinery. Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo, Bd. 2A-2016, American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME), ASME Turbo Expo 2016: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition, GT 2016, Seoul, Südkorea, 13 Juni 2016. https://doi.org/10.1115/gt2016-56969
Hurfar, C. M., Keller, C., Mumcu, A., & Seume, J. R. (2016). An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II: Experimental verification. In Turbomachinery (Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo; Band 2A-2016). American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME). https://doi.org/10.1115/gt2016-56969
Hurfar CM, Keller C, Mumcu A, Seume JR. An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II: Experimental verification. in Turbomachinery. American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME). 2016. (Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo). doi: 10.1115/gt2016-56969
Hurfar, C. Mandanna ; Keller, Christian ; Mumcu, Akif et al. / An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II : Experimental verification. Turbomachinery. American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME), 2016. (Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo).
Download
@inproceedings{c77a40ca7afe4c468013151d27101a23,
title = "An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II: Experimental verification",
abstract = "A detailed understanding of the sound propagation and transmission within the engine and adjacent ducts is mandatory for the development of efficient noise reduction techniques for the tonal sound field produced by the turbomachinery components of aircraft engines. For this purpose, experimental acoustic investigations are needed. In the first part of this paper, an acoustic excitation system for the generation of acoustic spinning modes with circumferential mode order one and varying radial mode order, as well as a microphone array optimized for a radial decomposition of the sound field have been systematically designed. To verify the excitation method and the design of the excitation system, corresponding experimental measurements are carried out in an acoustic wind tunnel. Amongst others, the sound power of the specific excited acoustic modes of order (1,0) and (1,1) are compared with the respective powers achieved with a non-specific sound field excitation. To test the range of flexible use of the sound generator, measurements are carried out over a wide frequency range. It is shown that the intended modes can be controlled at the design frequency of the sound generator as well as off-design frequencies. However, the dominance of the excited modes strongly depends on the number of cut-on modes and the excitation frequency as non-linear resonance effects may interfere. Furthermore, the benefit of an increased number of loudspeaker rows for stable mode excitation is discussed. The experimental results are supported by numerical simulations.",
author = "Hurfar, {C. Mandanna} and Christian Keller and Akif Mumcu and Seume, {Joerg R.}",
year = "2016",
month = sep,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1115/gt2016-56969",
language = "English",
series = "Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo",
publisher = "American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME)",
booktitle = "Turbomachinery",
address = "United States",
note = "ASME Turbo Expo 2016: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition, GT 2016 ; Conference date: 13-06-2016 Through 17-06-2016",

}

Download

TY - GEN

T1 - An Acoustic Excitation System for the Generation of Turbomachinery Specific Sound Fields - Part II

T2 - ASME Turbo Expo 2016: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition, GT 2016

AU - Hurfar, C. Mandanna

AU - Keller, Christian

AU - Mumcu, Akif

AU - Seume, Joerg R.

PY - 2016/9/20

Y1 - 2016/9/20

N2 - A detailed understanding of the sound propagation and transmission within the engine and adjacent ducts is mandatory for the development of efficient noise reduction techniques for the tonal sound field produced by the turbomachinery components of aircraft engines. For this purpose, experimental acoustic investigations are needed. In the first part of this paper, an acoustic excitation system for the generation of acoustic spinning modes with circumferential mode order one and varying radial mode order, as well as a microphone array optimized for a radial decomposition of the sound field have been systematically designed. To verify the excitation method and the design of the excitation system, corresponding experimental measurements are carried out in an acoustic wind tunnel. Amongst others, the sound power of the specific excited acoustic modes of order (1,0) and (1,1) are compared with the respective powers achieved with a non-specific sound field excitation. To test the range of flexible use of the sound generator, measurements are carried out over a wide frequency range. It is shown that the intended modes can be controlled at the design frequency of the sound generator as well as off-design frequencies. However, the dominance of the excited modes strongly depends on the number of cut-on modes and the excitation frequency as non-linear resonance effects may interfere. Furthermore, the benefit of an increased number of loudspeaker rows for stable mode excitation is discussed. The experimental results are supported by numerical simulations.

AB - A detailed understanding of the sound propagation and transmission within the engine and adjacent ducts is mandatory for the development of efficient noise reduction techniques for the tonal sound field produced by the turbomachinery components of aircraft engines. For this purpose, experimental acoustic investigations are needed. In the first part of this paper, an acoustic excitation system for the generation of acoustic spinning modes with circumferential mode order one and varying radial mode order, as well as a microphone array optimized for a radial decomposition of the sound field have been systematically designed. To verify the excitation method and the design of the excitation system, corresponding experimental measurements are carried out in an acoustic wind tunnel. Amongst others, the sound power of the specific excited acoustic modes of order (1,0) and (1,1) are compared with the respective powers achieved with a non-specific sound field excitation. To test the range of flexible use of the sound generator, measurements are carried out over a wide frequency range. It is shown that the intended modes can be controlled at the design frequency of the sound generator as well as off-design frequencies. However, the dominance of the excited modes strongly depends on the number of cut-on modes and the excitation frequency as non-linear resonance effects may interfere. Furthermore, the benefit of an increased number of loudspeaker rows for stable mode excitation is discussed. The experimental results are supported by numerical simulations.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84991660819&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1115/gt2016-56969

DO - 10.1115/gt2016-56969

M3 - Conference contribution

AN - SCOPUS:84991660819

T3 - Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo

BT - Turbomachinery

PB - American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME)

Y2 - 13 June 2016 through 17 June 2016

ER -