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Identification and measurement of combustion noise from a turbofan engine using correlation and coherence techniques

TLDR
In this paper, the authors used correlation and coherence techniques to determine the relative phase and amplitude relationships between the internal pressures and far field acoustic pressure in a turbofan engine and found that the combustor is a low frequency source region for acoustic propagation through the tailpipe and out to the far field.
Abstract
Fluctuating pressure measurements within the combustor and tailpipe of a turbofan engine are made simultaneously with far field acoustic measurements. The pressure measurements within the engine are accomplished with cooled semi-infinite waveguide probes utilizing conventional condenser microphones as the transducers. The measurements are taken over a broad range of engine operating conditions and for 16 far field microphone positions between 10 deg and 160 deg relative to the engine inlet axis. Correlation and coherence techniques are used to determine the relative phase and amplitude relationships between the internal pressures and far field acoustic pressures. The results indicate that the combustor is a low frequency source region for acoustic propagation through the tailpipe and out to the far field. Specifically, it is found that the relation between source pressure and the resulting sound pressure involves a 180 deg phase shift. The latter result is obtained by Fourier transforming the cross correlation function between the source pressure and acoustic pressure after removing the propagation delay time. Further, it is found that the transfer function between the source pressure and acoustic pressure has a magnitude approximately proportional to frequency squared. These results are shown to be consistent with a model using a modified source term in Lighthill's turbulence stress tensor, wherein the fluctuating Reynolds stresses are replaced with the pressure fluctuations due to fluctuating entropy.

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Citations
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Time Delay Analysis of Turbofan Engine Direct and Indirect Combustion Noise Sources

TL;DR: In this article, a source location technique based on adjusting the time delay between the combustor pressure sensor signal and the far-field microphone signal to maximize the coherence and remove as much variation of the phase angle with frequency as possible was used.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Noise-Source Separation Using Internal and Far-Field Sensors for a Full-Scale Turbofan Engine

TL;DR: In this article, noise source separation techniques for the extraction of the subdominant combustion noise from the total noise signatures obtained in static-engine tests are described, and three methods are applied to data from a static, full-scale engine test.
Book

Aligned and Unaligned Coherence: A New Diagnostic Tool

TL;DR: In this paper, a method has been developed to identify combustion noise spectra using an aligned and unaligned coherence technique, which is applied to data from a Pratt and Whitney PW4098 turbofan engine.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Review of Combustion-acoustic Instabilities

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the literature on combustion-acoustic instability and boundary conditions is presented, with a focus on a variety of practical combustion devices, such as rocket engines and ramjet dump combustors.
References
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Book

RANDOM DATA Analysis and Measurement Procedures

TL;DR: A revised and expanded edition of this classic reference/text, covering the latest techniques for the analysis and measurement of stationary and nonstationary random data passing through physical systems, is presented in this article.