Abstract

A detailed aeroacoustic analysis of the flow induced by the clearance between the fan tip and the shroud is performed in a scale-model fan stage of an ultrahigh bypass ratio turbofan engine, which was designed to operate at transonic regimes. A wall-modeled large eddy simulation is performed at approach condition, which corresponds to a fully subsonic operating point. The contributions of the tip-gap noise to the total fan noise are investigated using the Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings analogy. The surface is split into two parts: the tip region and the rest of the blade in order to analyze the acoustic contributions of these two regions separately. It is shown that the tip-gap region generates a significant noise component above 2 kHz, which corresponds to approximately 1.2 times the blade passing frequency. Two separate tip-leakage vortices are identified in the vicinity of the fan tip. The dominant noise sources in the tip-gap region are observed at the trailing edge of the fan blade. The wall pressure spectra in the tip-gap region and the coherence of pressure fluctuations between monitor points at different positions show an acoustic contribution of the tip-leakage flow at two different frequency ranges. The first range corresponds to medium frequencies between 2 and 9 kHz, and the second range corresponds to high frequencies between 10 and 25 kHz. The analysis of dynamic mode tracking, fluctuating pressure and velocity spectra, and instantaneous flow fields relates specific vortices in the tip-gap flow to their spectral signature and paves the way for further analytical modeling of tip-gap noise sources.

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