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Journal ArticleDOI

The near pressure field of co-axial subsonic jets

Charles E. Tinney, +1 more
- 25 Sep 2008 - 
- Vol. 611, pp 175-204
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TLDR
In this paper, an analysis of the axial, temporal and azimuthal structure of the pressure field of a co-axial jet with and without serrations on the secondary nozzle lip is presented.
Abstract
Results are presented from pressure measurements performed in the irrotational near field of unbounded co-axial jets. Measurements were made for a variety of velocity and temperature ratios, and configurations both with and without serrations on the secondary nozzle lip. The principal objective of the study is to better understand the near pressure field of the jet, what it can tell us regarding the underlying turbulence structure, and in particular how it can be related to the source mechanisms of the flow.A preliminary analysis of the axial, temporal and azimuthal structure of the pressure field shows it to be highly organized, with axial spatial modes (obtained by proper orthogonal decomposition) which resemble Fourier modes. The effects of serrations on the pressure fluctuations comprise a global reduction in level, a change in the axial energy distribution, and a modification of the evolution of the characteristic time scales.A further analysis in frequency–wavenumber space is then performed, and a filtering operation is used to separate the convective and propagative footprints of the pressure field. This operation reveals two distinct signatures in the propagating component of the field: a low-frequency component which radiates at small angles to the flow axis and is characterized by extensive axial coherence, and a less-coherent high-frequency component which primarily radiates in sideline directions. The serrations are found to reduce the energy of the axially coherent propagating component, but its structure remains fundamentally unchanged; the high-frequency component is found to be enhanced. A further effect of the serrations involves a relative increase of the mean-square pressure level of the acoustic component – integrated over the measurement domain – with respect to the hydrodynamic component. The effect of increasing the velocity and temperature of the primary jet involves a relative increase in the acoustic component of the near field, while the hydrodynamic component remains relatively unchanged: this shows that the additional acoustic energy is generated by the mixing region which is produced by the interaction of the inner and the outer shear layers, whereas the hydrodynamic component of the near field is primarily driven by the outer shear layer.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Using LES to explore sound-source mechanisms in jets

TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis of data generated by means of Large Eddy Simulation for a single-stream, isothermal Mach 0.9 jet is presented, where the acoustic field is decomposed in Fourier modes in the azimuthal direction, and filtered by a continuous wavelet transform in the temporal direction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intermittency of the near pressure field induced by a compressible coaxial jet

TL;DR: In this article, a wavelet transform and linear stochastic estimation (LSE) was used to identify and localize fluid dynamic events responsible for the generation of near field hydrodynamic and acoustic intermittent pressure fluctuations.
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Spanwise-coherent hydrodynamic waves around flat plates and airfoils

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate spanwise coherent structures in the turbulent flow around airfoils, motivated by their connection with trailing-edge noise, and evaluate the dependence of such structures on the domain size, to ensure that they are not an artefact of periodic boundary conditions in small computational boxes.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Mach-number dependence of acoustic source properties in high speed jets -- Part I: ensemble statistics of active regions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present ensemble statistics connecting the near-field and far-field of a cold circular jet at Mach numbers 0.6, 0.85 and 1.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the Two Components of Turbulent Mixing Noise from Supersonic Jets

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