Crackle Noise in Heated Supersonic Jets

Author:

Nichols Joseph W.1,Lele Sanjiva K.2,Ham Frank E.3,Martens Steve4,Spyropoulos John T.5

Affiliation:

1. e-mail:

2. Center for Turbulence Research, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

3. Cascade Technologies, Inc., Palo Alto, CA 94303

4. GE Aviation, Cincinnati, OH 45215

5. Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, MD 20670

Abstract

Crackle noise from heated supersonic jets is characterized by the presence of strong positive pressure impulses resulting in a strongly skewed far-field pressure signal. These strong positive pressure impulses are associated with N-shaped waveforms involving a shocklike compression and, thus, is very annoying to observers when it occurs. Unlike broadband shock-associated noise which dominates at upstream angles, crackle reaches a maximum at downstream angles associated with the peak jet noise directivity. Recent experiments (Martens et al., 2011, “The Effect of Chevrons on Crackle—Engine and Scale Model Results,” Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo, Paper No. GT2011-46417) have shown that the addition of chevrons to the nozzle lip can significantly reduce crackle, especially in full-scale high-power tests. Because of these observations, it was conjectured that crackle is associated with coherent large scale flow structures produced by the baseline nozzle and that the formation of these structures are interrupted by the presence of the chevrons, which leads to noise reduction. In particular, shocklets attached to large eddies are postulated as a possible aerodynamic mechanism for the formation of crackle. In this paper, we test this hypothesis through a high-fidelity large-eddy simulation (LES) of a hot supersonic jet of Mach number 1.56 and a total temperature ratio of 3.65. We use the LES solver CHARLES developed by Cascade Technologies, Inc., to capture the turbulent jet plume on fully-unstructured meshes.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Aerospace Engineering,Fuel Technology,Nuclear Energy and Engineering

Reference13 articles.

1. Crackle: An Annoying Component of Jet Noise;J. Fluid Mech.,1975

2. Crackle: A Dominant Component of Supersonic Jet Mixing Noise,2000

3. Mach Wave Radiation: A Review and an Extension,2003

4. Martens, S., and Spyropoulos, J. T., 2010, “Practical Jet Noise Reduction for Tactical Aircraft,” Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo, Glasgow, UK, June 14–18, ASME Paper No. GT2010-23699.10.1115/GT2010-23699

5. On the Perception of Crackle in High-Amplitude Jet Noise;AIAA J.,2007

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