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Theoretical model for sound radiation from annular jet pipes: far- and near-field solutions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2006
Abstract
An analytical model is presented for sound radiation from a semi-infinite unflanged annular duct. The duct carries a jet which issues into a uniform mean flow while an inner cylindrical centre body extends downstream from the duct exit. This geometrical arrangement forms an idealized representation of a turbofan exhaust where noise propagates along the annular bypass duct, refracts through the external bypass stream and radiates to the far field. The instability wave of the vortex sheet and its interaction with the acoustic field are accounted for in an exact way in the current solution. Efficient numerical procedures are presented for evaluating near-field and far-field solutions, and these are used as the basis for a parametric study to illustrate the effect of varying the hub–tip ratio, and the ratio of jet velocity to external flow velocity. Since the ‘Kutta’ condition can be turned on and off in the current solution, this capability is used to assess the effect of vortex shedding on noise radiation. Far-field directivity patterns are presented for single modes and also for a multi-mode ‘broadband’ source model in which all cut-on modes are assumed to be present with equal modal power. Good agreement is found between analytical solutions and experimental data. Near-field pressure maps of the acoustic and instability portions of the solution are generated for selected tones.
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- © 2006 Cambridge University Press
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