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Mitigation of under-expanded supersonic jet noise through stepped nozzles

Mitigation of under-expanded supersonic jet noise through stepped nozzles
Mitigation of under-expanded supersonic jet noise through stepped nozzles
An experimental investigation into noise reduction of supersonic jets through nozzle trailing-edge modifications was conducted, whereby far-field acoustic measurements were captured for two different stepped nozzles under two distinct under-expanded conditions. When compared to a baseline nozzle, results show that stepped nozzles lead to significant noise reductions at certain polar and azimuthal angles. In particular, a maximum noise reduction of 6 dB is observed for the longest stepped nozzle at a nozzle-pressure-ratio of 4 and 0° azimuthal angle. Spectral analysis shows that the noise reduction is mainly due to reduction in broadband shock associated noise and elimination of jet screech phenomenon. Abrupt changes in nozzle lip lengths of the stepped nozzles appear to disrupt acoustic feedback loop, thus resulting in screech cessation. Qualitative schlieren imaging and quantitative schlieren measurements were subsequently performed to correlate the shock structures and density gradient fields with the resulting noise components. Unlike those produced by the baseline nozzle, shock structures generated by the stepped nozzles are highly irregular and the jet plumes undergo discernible deflections. Lastly, the reduction in broadband shock associated noise is related to the lower shock strengths, as demonstrated by the density gradient profiles.
0022-460X
Wei, X F
6c22970d-629f-47a9-8501-369e746a67fc
Mariani, R
d7dc30ee-83ae-46d9-8ee8-a9370f7f00af
Chua, L P
ed4f220c-71c3-44db-9479-eb42d3c56d79
Lim, Desmond
82a7e7e8-2ade-44f8-a342-a99c2b9339c4
Lu, Z B
c173a631-7999-4b2a-b93d-4fd5e90bba5b
Cui, Y D
eed2f6b6-0ac8-4e15-bd8e-1064a93713f4
New, T.H.
f35405df-ad65-4b96-9d6b-06afebdd43a8
Wei, X F
6c22970d-629f-47a9-8501-369e746a67fc
Mariani, R
d7dc30ee-83ae-46d9-8ee8-a9370f7f00af
Chua, L P
ed4f220c-71c3-44db-9479-eb42d3c56d79
Lim, Desmond
82a7e7e8-2ade-44f8-a342-a99c2b9339c4
Lu, Z B
c173a631-7999-4b2a-b93d-4fd5e90bba5b
Cui, Y D
eed2f6b6-0ac8-4e15-bd8e-1064a93713f4
New, T.H.
f35405df-ad65-4b96-9d6b-06afebdd43a8

Wei, X F, Mariani, R, Chua, L P, Lim, Desmond, Lu, Z B, Cui, Y D and New, T.H. (2019) Mitigation of under-expanded supersonic jet noise through stepped nozzles. Journal of Sound and Vibration, 459, [114875]. (doi:10.1016/j.jsv.2019.114875).

Record type: Article

Abstract

An experimental investigation into noise reduction of supersonic jets through nozzle trailing-edge modifications was conducted, whereby far-field acoustic measurements were captured for two different stepped nozzles under two distinct under-expanded conditions. When compared to a baseline nozzle, results show that stepped nozzles lead to significant noise reductions at certain polar and azimuthal angles. In particular, a maximum noise reduction of 6 dB is observed for the longest stepped nozzle at a nozzle-pressure-ratio of 4 and 0° azimuthal angle. Spectral analysis shows that the noise reduction is mainly due to reduction in broadband shock associated noise and elimination of jet screech phenomenon. Abrupt changes in nozzle lip lengths of the stepped nozzles appear to disrupt acoustic feedback loop, thus resulting in screech cessation. Qualitative schlieren imaging and quantitative schlieren measurements were subsequently performed to correlate the shock structures and density gradient fields with the resulting noise components. Unlike those produced by the baseline nozzle, shock structures generated by the stepped nozzles are highly irregular and the jet plumes undergo discernible deflections. Lastly, the reduction in broadband shock associated noise is related to the lower shock strengths, as demonstrated by the density gradient profiles.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 30 July 2019
Published date: 27 October 2019
Additional Information: © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469321
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469321
ISSN: 0022-460X
PURE UUID: 1d729f90-1532-46c0-96dd-072b81003a2a
ORCID for Desmond Lim: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6191-6803

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Date deposited: 13 Sep 2022 16:42
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 21:04

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Contributors

Author: X F Wei
Author: R Mariani
Author: L P Chua
Author: Desmond Lim ORCID iD
Author: Z B Lu
Author: Y D Cui
Author: T.H. New

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