Aeroacustic and aerodynamic investigating of a new airfoil trailing-edge noise-suppressing design

2021 ◽  
Vol 263 (5) ◽  
pp. 1652-1663
Author(s):  
Yehia Salama ◽  
Joana Rocha

In this work, a new noise suppressing airfoil trailing-edge design, termed "finned serrations", is presented and numerically evaluated. This brand-new approach consists of the superposition of two different noise suppressing morphological features inspired by the wings of the owl. Embedded Large Eddy Simulations are employed in tandem with the Ffowcs WilliamsHawkings model to predict and analyze the design aerodynamics and aeroacoustics and compare the obtained output to that of a flat trailing-edge airfoil. Finned serrations are shown to combine the effects of having finlets and serrations. Because of the bluntness of the serration roots, the airfoil is subject to vortex shedding, while the flow is generally decorrelated in the spanwise direction, thanks to the channeling effect of the finlets. The turbulent kinetic energy distribution close to the airfoil trailing-edge surface is also significantly altered, as the more energetic eddies are convected away from the airfoil surface. Lastly, mixing across the airfoil surface is improved, and the average size of the turbulent coherent structures near the airfoil trailing-edge is reduced. The presented results suggest that the coupling of different noise-suppressing mechanisms is a promising path to explore, with the goal of coming up with new, quieter trailing-edge configurations.

Acoustics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 691-706
Author(s):  
Pavel Kholodov ◽  
Stéphane Moreau

Large Eddy Simulation is performed using the NASA Source Diagnostic Test turbofan at approach conditions (62% of the design speed). The simulation is performed in a periodic domain containing one fan blade (rotor-alone configuration). The aerodynamic and acoustic results are compared with experimental data. The dilatation field and the dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) are employed to reveal the noise sources around the rotor. The trailing-edge radiation is effective starting from 50% of span. The strongest DMD modes come from the tip region. Two major noise contributors are shown, the first being the tip noise and the second being the trailing-edge noise. The Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings’ (FWH) analogy is used to compute the far-field noise from the solid surface of the blade. The analogy is computed for the full blade, for its tip region (outer 20% of span) and for lower 80% of span to see the contribution of the latter. The acoustics spectrum below 6 kHz is dominated by the tip part (tip noise), whereas the rest of the blade (trailing-edge noise) contributes more beyond that frequency.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document