THREE TIME-DOMAIN COMPUTATIONAL MODELS FOR QUASI-STANDING NONLINEAR ACOUSTIC WAVES, INCLUDING HEAT PRODUCTION

2006 ◽  
Vol 14 (02) ◽  
pp. 143-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTIAN VANHILLE ◽  
CLEOFÉ CAMPOS-POZUELO

Applications of high-amplitude acoustic or ultrasonic waves in industrial processing require a good knowledge of the nonlinear pressure field, as well as the heat produced by the wave. In this article a new time-domain algorithm solving a second-order nonlinear wave equation written in Lagrangian coordinates and valid for any fluid is presented. The new model is compared with two others which were previously developed, corresponding to the two other possible physical approaches. This paper discusses the limits of application of every approach and the suitability of every one to model nonlinear acoustic waves in resonators. Conclusions about the applicability of the physical models are given. The time-domain character of the models allows the development of a new algorithm to calculate the temperature evolution inside a resonator due to acoustic losses. This algorithm is presented here and applied to strongly nonlinear waves for which the nonlinear attenuation is dominant. Several kinds of time functions for excitation can be considered in the models. The strongly nonlinear resonator response to a short pulsed signal is analyzed to show the efficiency of the time-domain numerical model.

1988 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Cummings ◽  
I.-J. Chang

A quasi one-dimensional analysis of sound transmission in a flow duct lined with an array of nonlinear resonators is described. The solution to the equations describing the sound field and the hydrodynamic flow in the neighborhood of the resonator orifices is performed numerically in the time domain, with the object of properly accounting for the nonlinear interaction between the acoustic field and the resonators. Experimental data are compared to numerical computations in the time domain and generally very good agreement is noted. The method described here may readily be extended for use in the design of exhaust mufflers for internal combustion engines.


2019 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 790-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyu Wang ◽  
Xun Gong ◽  
Chuanxi Qin ◽  
De Zhang ◽  
Haodong Wu ◽  
...  

10.14311/340 ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bednařík ◽  
P. Koníček ◽  
M. Červenka

This paper deals with a theoretical description of the propagation of a finite amplitude acoustic waves. The theory based on the homogeneous Burgers equation of the second order of accuracy is presented here. This equation takes into account both nonlinear effects and dissipation. The method for solving this equation, using the well-known Cole-Hopf transformation, is presented. Two methods for numerical solution of these equations in the time domain are presented. The first is based on the simple Simpson method, which is suitable for smaller Goldberg numbers. The second uses the more advanced saddle point method, and is appropriate for large Goldberg numbers.


Author(s):  
Simon R. Stow ◽  
Ann P. Dowling

Lean premixed prevaporised (LPP) combustion can reduce NOx emissions from gas turbines, but often leads to combustion instability. Acoustic waves produce fluctuations in heat release, for instance by perturbing the fuel-air ratio. These heat fluctuations will in turn generate more acoustic waves and in some situations linear oscillations grow into large amplitude self-sustained oscillations. The resulting limit cycles can cause structural damage. Thermoacoustic oscillations will have a low amplitude initially. Thus linear models can describe the initial growth and hence give stability predictions. An unstable linear mode will grow in amplitude until nonlinear effects become sufficiently important to achieve a limit cycle. While the frequency of the linear mode can often provide a good approximation to that of the resulting limit cycle, linear theories give no prediction of its resulting amplitude. In previous work, we developed a low-order frequency-domain method to model thermoacoustic limit cycles in LPP combustors. This was based on a ‘describing function’ approach and is only applicable when there is a dominant mode and the main nonlinearity is in the combustion response to flow perturbations. In this paper that method is extended into the time domain. The main advantage of the time-domain approach is that limit-cycle stability, the influence of harmonics, and the interaction between different modes can be simulated. In LPP combustion, fluctuations in the inlet fuel-air ratio have been shown to be the dominant cause of unsteady combustion: these occur because velocity perturbations in the premix ducts cause a time-varying fuel-air ratio, which then convects downstream. If the velocity perturbation becomes comparable to the mean flow, there will be an amplitude-dependent effect on the equivalence ratio fluctuations entering the combustor and hence on the rate of heat release. Since the Mach number is low, the velocity perturbation can be comparable to the mean flow, with even reverse flow occurring, while the disturbances are still acoustically linear in that the pressure perturbation is still much smaller than the mean. Hence while the combustion response to flow velocity and equivalence ratio fluctuations must be modelled nonlinearly, the flow perturbations generated as a result of the unsteady combustion can be treated as linear. In developing a time-domain network model for nonlinear thermoacoustic oscillations an initial frequency-domain calculation is performed. The linear network model, LOTAN, is used to categorise the combustor geometry by finding the transfer function for the response of flow perturbations (at the fuel injectors, say) to heat-release oscillations. This transfer function is then converted into the time domain through an inverse Fourier transform to obtain the Green’s function, which thus relates unsteady flow to heat release at previous times. By combining this with a nonlinear flame model (relating heat release to unsteady flow at previous times) a complete time-domain solution can be found by stepping forward in time. If an unstable mode is present, its amplitude will initially grow exponentially (in accordance with linear theory) until saturation effects in the flame model become significant, and eventually a stable limit cycle will be attained. The time-domain approach enables determination of the limit-cycle. In addition, the influence of harmonics and the interaction and exchange of energy between different modes can be simulated. These effects are investigated for longitudinal and circumferential instabilities in an example combustor system and results are compared to frequency-domain limit-cycle predictions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco G. Beghi

Materials at the nanoscale often have properties which differ from those they have in the bulk form. These properties significantly depend on the production process, and their measurement is not trivial. The elastic properties characterize the ability of materials to deform in a reversible way; they are of interest by themselves, and as indicators of the type of nanostructure. As for larger scale samples, the measurement of the elastic properties is more straightforward, and generally more precise, when it is performed by a deformation process which involves exclusively reversible strains. Vibrational and ultrasonic processes fulfill this requirement. Several measurement techniques have been developed, based on these processes. Some of them are suitable for an extension towards nanometric scales. Until truly supramolecular scales are reached, the elastic continuum paradigm remains appropriate for the description and the analysis of ultrasonic regimes. Some techniques are based on the oscillations of purpose-built testing structures, mechanically actuated. Other techniques are based on optical excitation and/or detection of ultrasonic waves, and operate either in the time domain or in the frequency domain. A comparative overview is given of these various techniques.


2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 114-120
Author(s):  
K. Webb ◽  
H. Song

A compensation scheme that reduces the impact of the excess reactance of bond wires is introduced. From the 3D finite element code and the time domain reflectometry (TDR), physical models were evaluated and the excess reactance of the signal path was determined to optimize the compensation structure. The presented method can be employed to reduce the negative impact caused by the excess reactances in bond wires for high signal integrity integrated circuit (IC) packaging applications.


1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 250-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florence O. Vanel ◽  
Oktay Baysal

Important characteristics of acoustic wave propagation are encoded in their dispersion relations. Hence, a computational algorithm, which attempts to preserve these relations, was investigated. Considering the linearized, 2-D Euler equations, simulations were performed to validate this scheme and its boundary conditions. The results were found to agree favorably with the exact solutions. The boundary conditions were transparent to the outgoing waves, except when the disturbance source was close to a corner boundary. The time-domain data generated by such computations were often intractable until their spectra was analyzed. For this purpose, the relative merits of three spectral analysis methods were considered. For simple, periodic waves with steep-sloped spectra, the periodogram method produced better estimates than the Blackman-Tukey method, and the Hanning window was more effective when used with the former. For chaotic waves, however, the weighted-overlapped-segment-averaging and Blackman-Tukey methods were better than the periodogram method. Therefore, it was observed that the spectral representation of time-domain data was significantly dependent on the particular method employed.


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