Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control

Low disturbance wind tunnels, such as the Klebanoff–Saric Wind Tunnel (KSWT), offer an ideal environment to study boundary layer transition. In particular, the leading-edge receptivity of sound can be measured by creating acoustic disturbances that interact with the leading edge of a model to create...

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Main Author: Kuester, Matthew
Other Authors: White, Edward B.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2012-05-10731
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2012-05-107312013-01-08T10:43:39ZAcoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active ControlKuester, MatthewAcousticsWind TunnelBoundary Layer ReceptivityActive Noise ControlLow disturbance wind tunnels, such as the Klebanoff–Saric Wind Tunnel (KSWT), offer an ideal environment to study boundary layer transition. In particular, the leading-edge receptivity of sound can be measured by creating acoustic disturbances that interact with the leading edge of a model to create Tollmien–Schlichting Waves. The magnitude and composition (sound, turbulence) of the background disturbances can affect these experiments, so the background disturbances should be minimized and documented thoroughly. The purpose of this thesis is to document the background acoustic signature of the KSWT and describe infrastructure upgrades for acoustic receptivity experiments. The measurements presented in this thesis will support future receptivity measurements in the KSWT. Microphone measurements revealed several important acoustic features in the tunnel. Cross correlations showed that two sources of low-frequency unsteadiness (the extended diffuser and corner two) create large pressure fluctuations that dominate the pressure spectrum. Directional separation of waves in the test section revealed that motor and blade passing noise travels primarily upstream into the test section. Finally, the acoustic treatments in the plenum are effective at removing sound from the tunnel. A wall of speakers was installed in the plenum to enable acoustic receptivity experiments. The speakers create both the primary downstream traveling waves and reflected upstream traveling waves in the test section. An adaptive closed loop control system was installed to reduce the amplitude of the reflected waves during acoustic forcing. Although the performance of the control system is frequency dependent, the technique was implemented successfully. The reduction in the diffuser reflection will increase the quality of future acoustic receptivity experiments in the KSWT.White, Edward B.2012-07-16T15:57:33Z2012-07-16T20:22:33Z2012-07-16T15:57:33Z2012-052012-07-16May 2012thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2012-05-10731en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Acoustics
Wind Tunnel
Boundary Layer Receptivity
Active Noise Control
spellingShingle Acoustics
Wind Tunnel
Boundary Layer Receptivity
Active Noise Control
Kuester, Matthew
Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control
description Low disturbance wind tunnels, such as the Klebanoff–Saric Wind Tunnel (KSWT), offer an ideal environment to study boundary layer transition. In particular, the leading-edge receptivity of sound can be measured by creating acoustic disturbances that interact with the leading edge of a model to create Tollmien–Schlichting Waves. The magnitude and composition (sound, turbulence) of the background disturbances can affect these experiments, so the background disturbances should be minimized and documented thoroughly. The purpose of this thesis is to document the background acoustic signature of the KSWT and describe infrastructure upgrades for acoustic receptivity experiments. The measurements presented in this thesis will support future receptivity measurements in the KSWT. Microphone measurements revealed several important acoustic features in the tunnel. Cross correlations showed that two sources of low-frequency unsteadiness (the extended diffuser and corner two) create large pressure fluctuations that dominate the pressure spectrum. Directional separation of waves in the test section revealed that motor and blade passing noise travels primarily upstream into the test section. Finally, the acoustic treatments in the plenum are effective at removing sound from the tunnel. A wall of speakers was installed in the plenum to enable acoustic receptivity experiments. The speakers create both the primary downstream traveling waves and reflected upstream traveling waves in the test section. An adaptive closed loop control system was installed to reduce the amplitude of the reflected waves during acoustic forcing. Although the performance of the control system is frequency dependent, the technique was implemented successfully. The reduction in the diffuser reflection will increase the quality of future acoustic receptivity experiments in the KSWT.
author2 White, Edward B.
author_facet White, Edward B.
Kuester, Matthew
author Kuester, Matthew
author_sort Kuester, Matthew
title Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control
title_short Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control
title_full Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control
title_fullStr Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control
title_full_unstemmed Acoustics in the Klebanoff-Saric Wind Tunnel: Background Identification, Forcing, and Active Control
title_sort acoustics in the klebanoff-saric wind tunnel: background identification, forcing, and active control
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2012-05-10731
work_keys_str_mv AT kuestermatthew acousticsintheklebanoffsaricwindtunnelbackgroundidentificationforcingandactivecontrol
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