Author:
NASH EMMA C.,LOWSON MARTIN V.,McALPINE ALAN
Abstract
An experimental and theoretical investigation has been carried
out to understand the
tonal noise generation mechanism on aerofoils at moderate Reynolds number.
Experiments
were conducted on a NACA0012 aerofoil section in a low-turbulence closed
working section wind tunnel. Narrow band acoustic tones were observed up
to 40 dB
above background noise. The ladder structure of these tones was eliminated
by modifying
the tunnel to approximate to anechoic conditions. High-resolution flow
velocity
measurements have been made with a three-component laser-Doppler anemometer
(LDA) which have revealed the presence of strongly amplified boundary-layer
instabilities
in a region of separated shear flow just upstream of the pressure surface
trailing edge, which match the frequency of the acoustic tones. Flow visualization
experiments have shown these instabilities to roll up to form a regular
Kármán-type vortex street.A new mechanism for tonal noise generation has been proposed, based
on the
growth of Tollmien–Schlichting (T–S) instability
waves strongly amplified by inflectional
profiles in the separating laminar shear layer on the pressure surface
of the
aerofoil. The growth of fixed frequency, spatially growing boundary-layer
instability
waves propagating over the aerofoil pressure surface has been calculated
using
experimentally obtained boundary-layer characteristics. The effect of boundary-layer
separation has been incorporated into the model. Frequency selection and
prediction
of T–S waves are in remarkably good agreement with experimental data.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
215 articles.
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