scholarly journals Numerical Analysis of Indirect Combustion Noise Generation Within a Subsonic Nozzle

AIAA Journal ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 52 (10) ◽  
pp. 2114-2126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Michel Lourier ◽  
Andreas Huber ◽  
Berthold Noll ◽  
Manfred Aigner
Author(s):  
Alexis Giauque ◽  
Maxime Huet ◽  
Franck Clero ◽  
Sébastien Ducruix ◽  
Franck Richecoeur

Indirect combustion noise originates from the acceleration of nonuniform temperature or high vorticity regions when convected through a nozzle or a turbine. In a recent contribution (Giauque et al., 2012, “Analytical Analysis of Indirect Combustion Noise in Subcritical Nozzles,” ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbies Power, 134(11), p. 111202) the authors have presented an analytical thermoacoustic model providing the indirect combustion noise generated by a subcritical nozzle when forced with entropy waves. This model explicitly takes into account the effect of the local changes in the cross-section area along the configuration of interest. In this article, the authors introduce this model into an optimization procedure in order to minimize or maximize the thermoacoustic noise emitted by arbitrarily shaped nozzles operating under subsonic conditions. Each component of the complete algorithm is described in detail. The evolution of the cross-section changes are introduced using Bezier's splines, which provide the necessary freedom to actually achieve arbitrary shapes. Bezier's polar coordinates constitute the parameters defining the geometry of a given individual nozzle. Starting from a population of nozzles of random shapes, it is shown that a specifically designed genetic optimization algorithm coupled with the analytical model converges at will toward a quieter or noisier population. As already described by Bloy (Bloy, 1979, “The Pressure Waves Produced by the Convection of Temperature Disturbances in High Subsonic Nozzle Flows,” J. Fluid Mech., 94(3), pp. 465–475), the results therefore confirm the significant dependence of the indirect combustion noise with respect to the shape of the nozzle, even when the operating regime is kept constant. It appears that the quietest nozzle profile evolves almost linearly along its converging and diverging sections, leading to a square evolution of the cross-section area. Providing insight into the underlying physical reason leading to the difference in the noise emission between two extreme individuals, the integral value of the source term of the equation describing the behavior of the acoustic pressure of the nozzle is considered. It is shown that its evolution with the frequency can be related to the global acoustic emission. Strong evidence suggest that the noise emission increases as the source term in the converging and diverging parts less compensate each other. The main result of this article is the definition and proposition of an acoustic emission factor, which can be used as a surrogate to the complex determination of the exact acoustic levels in the nozzle for the thermoacoustic shape optimization of nozzle flows. This acoustic emission factor, which is much faster to compute, only involves the knowledge of the evolution of the cross-section area and the inlet thermodynamic and velocity characteristics to be computed.


Author(s):  
Dimitrios Papadogiannis ◽  
Florent Duchaine ◽  
Laurent Gicquel ◽  
Gaofeng Wang ◽  
Stéphane Moreau ◽  
...  

Indirect combustion noise, generated by the acceleration and distortion of entropy waves through the turbine stages, has been shown to be the dominant noise source of gas turbines at low-frequencies and to impact the thermoacoustic behavior of the combustor. In the present work, indirect combustion noise generation is evaluated in the realistic, fully 3D transonic high-pressure turbine stage MT1 using Large-Eddy Simulations (LES). An analysis of the basic flow and the different turbine noise generation mechanisms is performed for two configurations: one with a steady inflow and a second with a pulsed inlet, where a plane entropy wave train at a given frequency is injected before propagating across the stage generating indirect noise. The noise is evaluated through the Dynamic Mode Decomposition of the flow field. It is compared with previous 2D simulations of a similar stator/rotor configuration, as well as with the compact theory of Cumpsty and Marble. Results show that the upstream propagating entropy noise is reduced due to the choked turbine nozzle guide vane. Downstream acoustic waves are found to be of similar strength to the 2D case, highlighting the potential impact of indirect combustion noise on the overall noise signature of the engine.


Author(s):  
Karsten Knobloch ◽  
Tiago Werner ◽  
Friedrich Bake

Noise originating from the unsteady heat-release during the combustion process in the combustor of a gas turbine is well known. However, an effect known as indirect combustion noise has received considerable interest only recently. Indirect combustion noise will be generated, when entropy or vorticity fluctuations will be subject to a strong velocity gradient like in nozzle guide vane of the high pressure turbine. First experimental proof of this phenomenon could be obtained some years ago in a dedicated small-scale laboratory experiment. Recent experiments performed in the Hot Acoustic Test rig (HAT) by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) aim at further understanding of this phenomenon by investigating the sound propagation through a nozzle and sound generation when cold air spots are injected into a hot mean flow. The nozzle Mach number was varied from subsonic to sonic conditions. First results based on propagation time analysis reveal noise generation at the location of the nozzle. Parameter studies of nozzle Mach number, temperature of the cold streaks, and the way the cold air is injected (radial/axial blowing) have been performed.


Author(s):  
Friedrich Bake ◽  
Ulf Michel ◽  
Ingo Röhle ◽  
Christoph Richter ◽  
Frank Thiele ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Dimitrios Papadogiannis ◽  
Gaofeng Wang ◽  
Stéphane Moreau ◽  
Florent Duchaine ◽  
Laurent Gicquel ◽  
...  

Indirect combustion noise, generated by the acceleration and distortion of entropy waves through the turbine stages, has been shown to be the dominant noise source of gas turbines at low-frequencies and to impact the thermoacoustic behavior of the combustor. In the present work, indirect combustion noise generation is evaluated in the realistic, fully 3D transonic high-pressure turbine stage MT1 using large eddy simulations (LESs). An analysis of the basic flow and the different turbine noise generation mechanisms is performed for two configurations: one with a steady inflow and a second with a pulsed inlet, where a plane entropy wave train at a given frequency is injected before propagating across the stage generating indirect noise. The noise is evaluated through the dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) of the flow field. It is compared with the previous 2D simulations of a similar stator/rotor configuration, as well as with the compact theory of Cumpsty and Marble. Results show that the upstream propagating entropy noise is reduced due to the choked turbine nozzle guide vane. Downstream acoustic waves are found to be of similar strength to the 2D case, highlighting the potential impact of indirect combustion noise on the overall noise signature of the engine.


Author(s):  
C. Becerril ◽  
S. Moreau ◽  
L. Y. M. Gicquel

Generation of combustion noise is here studied in a realistic turbine stage configuration, where the temperature fluctuations generated by an aeronautical burner (responsible of the direct combustion noise generation, often neglected in most of the studies) are modelled using a cylindrical fluctuating energy source term placed upstream of the inlet guide vanes. This modelling not only better accounts for the actual physical combustion noise generation phenomena, but also for the actual stratification of temperature at the combustor exit and covers a broader range of exciting frequencies as in actual engines. The temperature fluctuations generated by this realistic fluctuating energy source term are then convected through the turbine stage and the resulting noise is analyzed and compared with previous LES results with ideal monochromatic entropy forcing and analytical compact methods. New physical insight on the various noise generation mechanisms and mode conversion is also provided.


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