Turbulent flow around bluff bodies generates pressure fluctuations which propagate as acoustic waves. Differences in the shape of a body can affect frequencies and amplitudes of the propagating pressure signals. In the present work three elementary geometries (sphere, cube and prolate spheroid), immersed in a uniform water flow, are examined in order to analyze the differences of the resulting hydroacoustic fields. The turbulent flow at ReA = 4430 (based on the cross-sectional area of the bodies) is reproduced through wall-resolving Large-Eddy Simulation and the hydroacoustic far-field is analyzed by adopting the Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings analogy. The quadrupole term of the acoustic equation is first reformulated in the convective form and then solved through direct computation of the volume integrals. This procedure is found possible in hydrodynamics where the speed of sound is very large and the flow velocities are small. In spite of the fact that the frontal section of the bodies has the same area, the analysis shows that a streamlined body is able to produce a pressure signal one order of magnitude lower than that generated by a bluff geometry. The separate analysis of the loading noise and of the quadrupole one has shown that the former is larger than the latter in case of 3D-shaped bluff body (sphere and cube), whereas the opposite is true in case of a streamlined body. A preliminary analysis between the case of an elongated square cylinder and a cube, shows that the persistence of a two-dimensionally shaped wake when compared to a three-dimensional one contributes to increase the quadrupole part of the radiated noise.

Hydroacoustic noise from different geometries

Cianferra, M.
;
Armenio, V.;
2017-01-01

Abstract

Turbulent flow around bluff bodies generates pressure fluctuations which propagate as acoustic waves. Differences in the shape of a body can affect frequencies and amplitudes of the propagating pressure signals. In the present work three elementary geometries (sphere, cube and prolate spheroid), immersed in a uniform water flow, are examined in order to analyze the differences of the resulting hydroacoustic fields. The turbulent flow at ReA = 4430 (based on the cross-sectional area of the bodies) is reproduced through wall-resolving Large-Eddy Simulation and the hydroacoustic far-field is analyzed by adopting the Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings analogy. The quadrupole term of the acoustic equation is first reformulated in the convective form and then solved through direct computation of the volume integrals. This procedure is found possible in hydrodynamics where the speed of sound is very large and the flow velocities are small. In spite of the fact that the frontal section of the bodies has the same area, the analysis shows that a streamlined body is able to produce a pressure signal one order of magnitude lower than that generated by a bluff geometry. The separate analysis of the loading noise and of the quadrupole one has shown that the former is larger than the latter in case of 3D-shaped bluff body (sphere and cube), whereas the opposite is true in case of a streamlined body. A preliminary analysis between the case of an elongated square cylinder and a cube, shows that the persistence of a two-dimensionally shaped wake when compared to a three-dimensional one contributes to increase the quadrupole part of the radiated noise.
2017
22-dic-2017
Epub ahead of print
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0142727X17304101
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11368/2917576
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