Affiliation:
1. Mercedes-Benz AG, Germany
2. German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
Abstract
<div>The broadband aeroacoustics of a side mirror is investigated with a stochastic
noise source method and compared to scale-resolving simulations. The setup based
on an already existing work includes two geometrical variants with a plain
series side mirror and a modified mirror with a forward-facing step mounted on
the inner side. The aeroacoustic near- and farfield is computed by a
hydrodynamic–acoustic splitting approach by means of a perturbed convective wave
equation. Aeroacoustic source terms are computed by the Fast Random
Particle-Mesh method, a stochastic noise source method modeling velocity
fluctuations in time domain based on time-averaged turbulence statistics. Three
RANS models are used to provide input data for the Fast Random Particle-Mesh
method with fundamental differences in local flow phenomena. Results of
aeroacoustics simulations excited by the Fast Random Particle-Mesh method based
on well-matching RANS data are in good agreement to the scale-resolving
simulations in the integral acoustic Delta on the side window induced by the
different side mirror geometries. For relative levels in between the variations,
the robustness of the Fast Random Particle-Mesh method can be shown with
secondary influences on the choice of the integral length scale. Absolute levels
are only achieved with an adaptation of the length scale from literature. Two
different RANS models with a missing separation bubble on the mirror or an
overestimated wake flow show a good agreement with the plain series side mirror.
However, they fail at computing the Delta to the step variant due to the missing
amplification of the local turbulent kinetic energy interacting with the step
and downstream mirror surfaces. Computational aeroacoustics simulations excited
by the Fast Random Particle-Mesh method method based on RANS data only needs 14%
of the computational effort compared to the conventional hybrid RANS-LES
approach. This reveals its enormous potential for aeroacoustic broadband noise
optimization purposes.</div>
Subject
Modeling and Simulation,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Mechanical Engineering,Automotive Engineering