Performance of a Checkerboard Liner with Uncertain Impedances
Author(s) -
Jay Robinson,
Willie R. Watson
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
28th aiaa/ceas aeroacoustics 2022 conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2005-2850
Subject(s) - checkerboard , electrical impedance , computer science , electrical engineering , mathematics , engineering , geometry
The current fleet of large commercial aircraft has successfully achieved FAA noise certifications because of, in part, the successful application of uniform passive duct liner treatments to control engine system noise. One goal of NASA’s engine system noise reduction program is to develop technologies to improve the sound absorbing properties of duct liner treatments so that they remain eective in modern turbo fan engines. One such technology being studied is checkerboard or periodic axially and circumferentially segmented liners. A preliminary assessment of the potential of this technology was conducted by applying uncertainties associated with manufacturing, installation, source structure, and tonal frequency to a liner developed using deterministic design methods and generating a measure of improvement with respect to a uniform liner subjected to the same uncertainties. Deterministic design and analysis of the candidate checkerboard liner showed that it obtains a 1.5 dB per duct aspect ratio improvement in liner attenuation over a similarly designed uniform liner. When uncertainties in liner impedances, source structure, and frequency are considered, the performance of the checkerboard liner drops o dramatically. The final results of this paper show that the candidate checkerboard liner has a less than 25 percent chance of outperforming the uniform liner when moderate levels of uncertainty are considered. It is important to note that this study did not include the eects of mean flow on liner performance and, more important to note, that as a gradient based optimization process was used to design the checkerboard liner, it is almost certain that a global optimal design was not found for the candidate checkerboard liner. Had it been possible to find a better deterministically performing checkerboard liner, the probability that this candidate liner would outperform the uniform liner would certainly have been higher.
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