4.7 Article

Fluid-structure-sound interaction in noise reduction of a circular cylinder with flexible splitter plate

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 920, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.403

Keywords

noise control; flow-structure interactions; vortex shedding

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11761131009, 11721202]

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The study investigates the impact of fluid-structure-sound interaction on flow-induced noise reduction by attaching splitter plates to the rear of a circular cylinder. The experiment shows that flexible splitter plates can effectively reduce Aeolian tone under certain parameters, with their movement pattern having significant effects on secondary and high-frequency noise.
The fluid-structure-sound interaction in reducing the flow-induced noise of a circular cylinder with a back flexible splitter plate is investigated experimentally. The rigid splitter plate (RSP) and the flexible splitter plate (FSP) are individually attached to the rear of the cylinder with a diameter D=30 min. Three parameters are considered: the flexibility of the plates, the length of the plates (L = 0.5 D similar to 6.0 D) and the Reynolds numbers (Re = 3.83 x 10(4) similar to 9.57 x 10(4)). Both RSP and FSP achieve the optimal reduction in the Aeolian tone at L/D = 1.0 regardless of Re, where the RSP results in a reduction of 14 dB on average and the FSP a superior reduction of 18 dB. Subsequently, the velocity fields are measured with two-dimensional particle image velocimetry for L/D = 1.0. The dynamic deformation of the FSP is captured with a single-camera three-dimensional digital image correlation system. The results show that the splitter plate elongates the recirculation region length (L-r) significantly, and it is preferable to normalize the streamwise coordinate x with L-r instead of D in this investigation. It is determined that the Aeolian tone is mainly induced by the fluctuations in the near wake region of 1 < x/L-r < 3. The splitter plates effectively suppress the overall fluctuations originating from vortex shedding in the wake, thereby reducing the Aeolian tone successfully. The movement of the FSP, which is dominated by low-frequency vibrations with broadband and a relatively energetic periodic vibration, has important effects on the secondary and high-frequency noise.

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