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A 2.5D acoustic finite element method applied to railway acoustics

A 2.5D acoustic finite element method applied to railway acoustics
A 2.5D acoustic finite element method applied to railway acoustics
Railway acoustic problems commonly have a constant cross-section and uniform properties in the longitudinal direction. To solve such 3D acoustic problems with reduced effort, a wavenumber domain acoustic finite element (2.5D acoustic FE) method is introduced in which the cross-section of the domain is meshed and the third dimension is represented by a wavenumber transform. The acoustic wavenumber is thereby decomposed into a combination of wavenumbers in the x direction and in the y-z plane. The method is extended to exterior noise problems by including a perfectly matched layer (PML) with bespoke absorption to prevent reflection of the sound waves at the boundary of the domain. The method as presented can be used with 2D finite element solutions from commercial software. To verify the application of the 2.5D acoustic FE method for interior acoustic problems, sound attenuation in a tunnel is predicted and compared with existing measurements. To verify the implementation for exterior acoustic problems, an example is given of the sound distribution on the side surface of a train due to a compact source below it. The comparison of the solutions obtained from the 2.5D acoustic FE models with measurements shows good agreement in the both validation cases. The method is then used to investigate the effect of the tunnel walls on the sound distribution on the train external surface by comparing the results with the case in the open field. A highly reverberant sound field is found in tunnels, which increases the sound pressure level on the train side-surface above 250 Hz by about 10 dB for a tunnel with a ballasted track and by about a further 6 dB for a slab track.
wavenumber domain, 2.5D, finite element method, perfectly matched layer, railway acoustics
0003-682X
Li, Hui
cd351a7f-09cb-4e44-9ea4-e77594f4d4f5
Thompson, David
bca37fd3-d692-4779-b663-5916b01edae5
Squicciarini, Giacomo
c1bdd1f6-a2e8-435c-a924-3e052d3d191e
Li, Hui
cd351a7f-09cb-4e44-9ea4-e77594f4d4f5
Thompson, David
bca37fd3-d692-4779-b663-5916b01edae5
Squicciarini, Giacomo
c1bdd1f6-a2e8-435c-a924-3e052d3d191e

Li, Hui, Thompson, David and Squicciarini, Giacomo (2021) A 2.5D acoustic finite element method applied to railway acoustics. Applied Acoustics, 182, [108270]. (doi:10.1016/j.apacoust.2021.108270).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Railway acoustic problems commonly have a constant cross-section and uniform properties in the longitudinal direction. To solve such 3D acoustic problems with reduced effort, a wavenumber domain acoustic finite element (2.5D acoustic FE) method is introduced in which the cross-section of the domain is meshed and the third dimension is represented by a wavenumber transform. The acoustic wavenumber is thereby decomposed into a combination of wavenumbers in the x direction and in the y-z plane. The method is extended to exterior noise problems by including a perfectly matched layer (PML) with bespoke absorption to prevent reflection of the sound waves at the boundary of the domain. The method as presented can be used with 2D finite element solutions from commercial software. To verify the application of the 2.5D acoustic FE method for interior acoustic problems, sound attenuation in a tunnel is predicted and compared with existing measurements. To verify the implementation for exterior acoustic problems, an example is given of the sound distribution on the side surface of a train due to a compact source below it. The comparison of the solutions obtained from the 2.5D acoustic FE models with measurements shows good agreement in the both validation cases. The method is then used to investigate the effect of the tunnel walls on the sound distribution on the train external surface by comparing the results with the case in the open field. A highly reverberant sound field is found in tunnels, which increases the sound pressure level on the train side-surface above 250 Hz by about 10 dB for a tunnel with a ballasted track and by about a further 6 dB for a slab track.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 June 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 July 2021
Keywords: wavenumber domain, 2.5D, finite element method, perfectly matched layer, railway acoustics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469896
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469896
ISSN: 0003-682X
PURE UUID: 217e75d6-9346-475a-b125-3583e9fc34e8
ORCID for David Thompson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7964-5906
ORCID for Giacomo Squicciarini: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2437-6398

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Date deposited: 28 Sep 2022 16:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:29

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Contributors

Author: Hui Li
Author: David Thompson ORCID iD

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