Experimental Study on Damping Acoustic Pressure Pulsations in Pipeline Systems Using Helmholtz Resonators

2019 ◽  
Vol 142 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Karim Sachedina ◽  
Atef Mohany ◽  
Marwan Hassan

Abstract Acoustic pressure pulsations can be problematic in industrial pipelines, especially when the excitation frequency matches an acoustic resonance frequency of the pipeline. The objective of this paper is to investigate the effectiveness of Helmholtz resonators (HRs) in multiple arrangements on the attenuation of acoustic pressure pulsations in piping systems. In a resonant pipeline (i.e., an acoustic standing wave scenario), maximal attenuation is achieved when the HR is inserted at the acoustic pressure antinode. The insertion loss (IL) in an off-resonant system is found to be relatively consistent, unless there is a coupling between the HR and the downstream end termination in which case there is a decrease in attenuation. Multiple, small-volume HRs in various configurations can achieve the same level of damping as that of a single HR with the same total volume. Moreover, it is shown that the use of multiple HRs placed at strategic spacing intervals along the length of a pipeline can yield significant acoustic damping, without the need for characterizing the acoustic waves in the pipeline system. An axial spacing of a quarter wavelength of the frequency of interest between multiple HRs is shown to increase the peak attenuation, which is indicative of a favorable coupling between HRs. The effect of flow velocity and its directionality with respect to the sound source is also investigated. The results presented in this paper provide practical techniques that can be used for the implementation of HR in pipeline systems.

Author(s):  
Hiromitsu Hamakawa ◽  
Eiichi Nishida ◽  
Kenta Asakura

In the present paper the attention is focused on vortex shedding synchronization on acoustic resonance in in-line tube banks which occurred in the two-dimensional model of boiler. And we have examined the verification of proposed modeling method. We measured the characteristics of acoustic resonance, acoustic damping, the pressure fluctuation on the surface of tubes at the nodes of acoustic pressure and the acoustic pressure fluctuation on the side wall of the duct. As the acoustic mode number increased, the acoustic damping ratio decreased. As the tube pitch ratio in the flow direction decreased, the acoustic damping increased for all acoustic modes and the vortex shedding frequency became broad-band. The multiple resonance modes of lower acoustic damping were generated within the broad-band vortex shedding frequency. If the acoustic resonance occurred, the peak level of spectrum of surface pressure fluctuation and the coherence between vortex shedding and wall acoustic pressure in the tube banks also increased. The features of experimental results agree well with those obtained by using the proposed modeling method. We have discussed the characteristics of vortex shedding synchronization by using proposed the modeling method.


Proceedings ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 40
Author(s):  
Marc Röthlisberger ◽  
Marcel Schuck ◽  
Laurenz Kulmer ◽  
Johann W. Kolar

Acoustic levitation forces can be used to manipulate small objects and liquid without mechanical contact or contamination. To use acoustic levitation for contactless robotic grippers, automated insertion of objects into the acoustic pressure field is necessary. This work presents analytical models based on which concepts for the controlled insertion of objects are developed. Two prototypes of acoustic grippers are implemented and used to experimentally verify the lifting of objects into the acoustic field. Using standing acoustic waves and by dynamically adjusting the acoustic power, the lifting of high-density objects (>7 g/cm3) from acoustically transparent surfaces is demonstrated. Moreover, a combination of different acoustic traps is used to lift lower-density objects from acoustically reflective surfaces. The provided results open up new possibilities for the implementation of acoustic levitation in robotic grippers, which have the potential to be used in a variety of industrial applications.


Author(s):  
D. Ebi ◽  
A. Denisov ◽  
G. Bonciolini ◽  
E. Boujo ◽  
N. Noiray

We report experimental evidence of thermoacoustic bi-stability in a lab-scale turbulent combustor over a well-defined range of fuel-air equivalence ratios. Pressure oscillations are characterized by an intermittent behavior with “bursts”, i.e. sudden jumps between low and high amplitudes occurring at random time instants. The corresponding probability density functions of the acoustic pressure signal show clearly separated maxima when the burner is operated in the bi-stable region. A flame describing function, which links acoustic pressure to heat release rate fluctuations, is estimated at the modal frequency from simultaneously recorded flame chemiluminescence and acoustic pressure. The representation of its statistics is new and particularly informative. It shows that this describing function is characterized, in average, by a nearly constant gain and by a significant drift of the phase as function of the oscillation amplitude. This finding suggests that the bi-stability does not result from an amplitude-dependent balance between flame gain and acoustic damping, but rather from the non-constant phase difference between the acoustic pressure and the coherent fluctuations of heat release rate.


2011 ◽  
Vol 254 ◽  
pp. 195-198
Author(s):  
Nan Wang ◽  
Fu Li Hsiao ◽  
Moorthi Palaniapan ◽  
Ming Lin Julius Tsai ◽  
Jeffrey B.W. Soon ◽  
...  

Two-dimensional (2-D) Silicon phononic crystal (PnC) slab of a square array of cylindrical air holes in a 10μm thick free-standing silicon plate with line defects is characterized as a cavity-mode PnC resonator. Piezoelectric aluminum nitride (AlN) film is deployed as the inter-digital transducers (IDT) to transmit and detect acoustic waves, thus making the whole microfabrication process CMOS-compatible. Both the band structure of the PnC and the transmission spectrum of the proposed PnC resonator are analyzed and optimized using finite element method (FEM). The measured quality factor (Q factor) of the microfabricated PnC resonator is over 1,000 at its resonant frequency of 152.46MHz. The proposed PnC resonator shows promising acoustic resonance characteristics for RF communications and sensing applications.


Author(s):  
Anne-Lise Fiquet ◽  
Agathe Vercoutter ◽  
Nicolas Buffaz ◽  
Stéphane Aubert ◽  
Christoph Brandstetter

Abstract Significant non-synchronous blade vibrations (NSV) have been observed in an experimental three-stage high-speed compressor at part-speed conditions. High amplitude acoustic modes, propagating around the circumference and originating in the highly loaded Stage-3 have been observed in coherence with the structural vibration mode. In order to understand the occurring phenomena, a detailed numerical study has been carried out to reproduce the mechanism. Unsteady full annulus RANS simulations of the whole setup have been performed using the solver elsA. The results revealed the development of propagating acoustic modes which are partially trapped in the annulus and are in resonance with an aerodynamic disturbance in Rotor-3. The aerodynamic disturbance is identified as an unsteady separation of the blade boundary layer in Rotor-3. The results indicate that the frequency and phase of the separation adapt to match those of the acoustic wave, and are therefore governed by acoustic propagation conditions. Furthermore, the simulations clearly show the modulation of the propagating wave with the rotor blades, leading to a change of circumferential wave numbers while passing the blade row. To analyze if the effect is self-induced by the blade vibration, a noncoherent structural mode has been imposed in the simulations. Even at high vibration amplitude the formerly observed acoustic mode did not change its circumferential wave number. This phenomenon is highly relevant to modern compressor designs, since the appearance of the axially propagating acoustic waves can excite blade vibrations if they coincide with a structural eigenmode, as observed in the presented experiments.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Peixin Gao ◽  
Hongquan Qu ◽  
Yuanlin Zhang ◽  
Tao Yu ◽  
Jingyu Zhai

Pipeline systems in aircraft are subjected to both hydraulic pump pressure fluctuations and base excitation from the engine. This can cause fatigue failures due to excessive vibrations. Therefore, it is essential to investigate the vibration behavior of the pipeline system under multiexcitations. In this paper, experiments have been conducted to describe the hydraulic pipeline systems, in which fluid pressure excitation in pipeline is driven by the throttle valve, and the base excitation is produced by the shaker driven by a vibration controller. An improved model which includes fluid motion and base excitation is proposed. A numerical MOC-FEM approach which combined the coupling method of characteristics (MOC) and finite element method (FEM) is proposed to solve the equations. The results show that the current MOC-FEM method could predict the vibration characteristics of the pipeline with sufficient accuracy. Moreover, the pipeline under multiexcitations could produce an interesting beat phenomenon, and this dangerous phenomenon is investigated for its consequences from engineering point of view.


Author(s):  
Xudong Liu ◽  
Wei Sun ◽  
Ye Gao ◽  
Hui Ma

In the dynamics design of aero-engine pipeline systems, it is necessary to avoid the excitation frequency of the engine (mainly including the rotational frequencies of high pressure and low pressure rotor systems) to improve the operational reliability of the pipeline system. In this study, a single-pipe system with multi-hoop supports was chosen as the research object, and a method based on the particle swarm algorithm was developed to optimize the layout of the hoops for effectively avoiding vibration of the pipeline system. A finite element model (FEM) of the pipeline system was created and the group of spring elements with non-uniform distribution of stiffness values was used to simulate the hoop support for improving the analysis accuracy of the model in the modeling process. Taking the hoop position as design variable, an optimization model of the pipe hoop layout was established, which aims at avoiding one or two excitation frequencies at the same time. Furthermore, the calculation procedure of optimizing pipe hoop layout using the particle swarm algorithm was given. Finally, a case study was carried out, the rationality of the created FEM was validated by experiments, and the optimal layout of hoops was obtained using the proposed optimization method.


Micromachines ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Chen Hsu ◽  
Chih-Hsun Hsu ◽  
Yeo-Wei Huang

We present a numerical and experimental study of acoustophoretic manipulation in a microfluidic channel using dual-wavelength standing surface acoustic waves (SSAWs) to transport microparticles into different outlets. The SSAW fields were excited by interdigital transducers (IDTs) composed of two different pitches connected in parallel and series on a lithium niobate substrate such that it yielded spatially superimposed and separated dual-wavelength SSAWs, respectively. SSAWs of a singltablee target wavelength can be efficiently excited by giving an RF voltage of frequency determined by the ratio of the velocity of the SAW to the target IDT pitch (i.e., f = cSAW/p). However, the two-pitch IDTs with similar pitches excite, less efficiently, non-target SSAWs with the wavelength associated with the non-target pitch in addition to target SSAWs by giving the target single-frequency RF voltage. As a result, dual-wavelength SSAWs can be formed. Simulated results revealed variations of acoustic pressure fields induced by the dual-wavelength SSAWs and corresponding influences on the particle motion. The acoustic radiation force in the acoustic pressure field was calculated to pinpoint zero-force positions and simulate particle motion trajectories. Then, dual-wavelength SSAW acoustofluidic devices were fabricated in accordance with the simulation results to experimentally demonstrate switching of SSAW fields as a means of transporting particles. The effects of non-target SSAWs on pre-actuating particles were predicted and observed. The study provides the design considerations needed for the fabrication of acoustofluidic devices with IDT-excited multi-wavelength SSAWs for acoustophoresis of microparticles.


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