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Browsing by Author "Lawrence, Jack L. T."

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    Far-field pressure measurements of elliptic jets discharged close to a wing
    (IOP, 2022-02-15) Ramos Proenca, Anderson; Lawrence, Jack L. T.
    This paper presents a preliminary experimental investigation into the acoustics of two elliptical jet nozzles installed close to a wing model. Acoustic pressure data is obtained for a range of observer polar angles mounted in the far field of the jets. Three nominal jet Mach numbers, namely 0.4, 0.6 and 0.8 are studied. Results suggest that the elliptic jets surveyed provide a noise reduction of the jet-surface installation noise source. The noise reduction is maximum in the forward arc and in the order of 1 dB for the fully-corrected overall sound pressure level data. Additionally, the noise benefit exists only when the minor axis of the elliptical nozzle is mounted parallel to the wing trailing edge. It is hypothesised that the reduction in the jet plume cross-section width limits the scattering of the near pressure field by the wing trailing edge to a lower frequency range. The jet mixing noise source, however, is seen to increase with decreasing nozzle exit-plane aspect ratio. The three jet velocities surveyed suggest the consistency of the key results discussed in the paper. Investigation of the jet turbulent flow structures and jet near pressure field is under way.
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    Jet flow and noise predictions for the Doak laboratory experiment
    (AIAA, 2023-04-02) Gryazev, Vasily; Markesteijn, Annabel P.; Karabasov, Sergey A.; Lawrence, Jack L. T.; Proença, Anderson R.
    Large-eddy simulations (LESs) are performed for two isolated unheated jet flows corresponding to a Doak Laboratory experiment performed at the University of Southampton. The jet speeds studied correspond to acoustic Mach numbers of 0.6 and 0.8 as well as Reynolds numbers based on the nozzle exit diameter of about one million. The LES method is based on the compact accurately boundary-adjusting high-resolution technique (CABARET) and is implemented on graphics processing units (GPUs) to obtain 1000–1100 convective time units for statistical averaging with reasonable run times. In comparison with the previous jet LES calculations with the GPU CABARET method, the mean-flow velocity and turbulent intensity profiles are matched with the hot-wire measurements just downstream of the nozzle exit. The far-field noise spectra of the Doak jets are evaluated using two methods: the Ffowcs Williams–Hawkings approach and a reduced-order implementation of the Goldstein generalized acoustic analogy. The flow and noise results are compared with hot-wire and acoustic microphone measurements of the Doak Laboratory and critically analyzed in comparison with the NASA small hot jet acoustic rig database.

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