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Experimental Study on Slat Noise from 30P30N Three-Element High-Lift Airfoil at JAXA Hard-Wall Lowspeed Wind Tunnel
Author(s) -
Mitsuhiro Murayama,
Kazuyuki Nakakita,
Kazuomi Yamamoto,
Hiroki Ura,
Yasushi Ito,
Meelan M. Choudhari
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
28th aiaa/ceas aeroacoustics 2022 conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-2080
Subject(s) - wind tunnel , airfoil , lift (data mining) , noise (video) , aerospace engineering , aerodynamics , acoustics , structural engineering , engineering , geology , physics , computer science , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics) , data mining
Aeroacoustic measurements associated with noise radiation from the leading edge slat of the canonical, unswept 30P30N three-element high-lift airfoil configuration have been obtained in a 2 m x 2 m hard-wall wind tunnel at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Performed as part of a collaborative effort on airframe noise between JAXA and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the model geometry and majority of instrumentation details are identical to a NASA model with the exception of a larger span. For an angle of attack up to 10 degrees, the mean surface Cp distributions agree well with free-air computational fluid dynamics predictions corresponding to a corrected angle of attack. After employing suitable acoustic treatment for the brackets and end-wall effects, an approximately 2D noise source map is obtained from microphone array measurements, thus supporting the feasibility of generating a measurement database that can be used for comparison with free-air numerical simulations. Both surface pressure spectra obtained via KuliteTM transducers and the acoustic spectra derived from microphone array measurements display a mixture of a broad band component and narrow-band peaks (NBPs), both of which are most intense at the lower angles of attack and become progressively weaker as the angle of attack is increased. The NBPs exhibit a substantially higher spanwise coherence in comparison to the broadband portion of the spectrum and, hence, confirm the trends observed in previous numerical simulations. Somewhat surprisingly, measurements show that the presence of trip dots between the stagnation point and slat cusp enhances the NBP levels rather than mitigating them as found in a previous experiment.

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