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Quadrupole noise generated from a low-speed aerofoil in near- and full-stall conditions

Jacob Turner, Jae Wook Kim

2022Journal of Fluid Mechanics29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this paper, direct numerical simulations are performed for low-speed flows past a NACA0012 aerofoil at high incidence angles. The aim is to investigate the significance of quadrupole noise generated due to separated shear layers, in comparison to dipole noise emanating from the aerofoil surface. The two different noise components (dipole and quadrupole) are calculated by using the Ffowcs Williams & Hawkings method in two different approaches: one with a solid surface and another with a permeable surface. The quadrupole noise is then estimated approximately by taking the relative difference between the two. The current study provides detailed comparisons between the quadrupole and dipole noise components at various observer locations in a wide range of frequencies. The comparisons are also made in terms of Mach number scaling, which differs significantly from theoretical predictions and changes rapidly with frequency. Additionally, pre-, near- and full-stall conditions are cross-examined, which reveals significant differences in the quadrupole contributions, including changes in the major source locations and frequencies. It is found that the inclusion of the quadrupole sources gives rise to the predicted noise power level at all frequencies (varying between 2 and 10 dB for an observer above the aerofoil) compared to the dipole-only case. The quadrupole contribution is far from negligible even at the low subsonic speeds (Mach 0.3 and 0.4) when aerofoil stall occurs.

Topics & Concepts

AirfoilQuadrupoleStall (fluid mechanics)Mach numberPhysicsAcousticsMechanicsDipoleNoise (video)Atomic physicsComputer scienceImage (mathematics)Artificial intelligenceQuantum mechanicsAerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet FlowsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsWind and Air Flow Studies
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