Abstract

The transient vortex dynamics within a microsecond-level acoustic cycle were numerically investigated when an orifice–cavity structure, which is a unit component of an acoustic liner, was subjected to high-intensity acoustic waves. Three-dimensional vortex-acoustic coupling fields were determined by solving the compressible linearized Navier–Stokes equations (LNSEs) and considering the nonlinear thermoviscous effect around the micro-orifice. First, the LNSE results were well validated by literature results in terms of the sound absorption coefficient, reflection coefficient, acoustic resistance, acoustic reactance, acoustic impedance, and the spatial features of acoustically induced vortex structures. Subsequent cross correlation analysis demonstrated that attenuated standing-waves were generated inside the back cavity when the incident acoustic wave propagated across the orifice. Aeroacoustic energy analysis revealed that the periodic production of vortex kinetic energy contributed more to the sound attenuation in the orifice structure than the viscous dissipation effect. Then, the acoustically induced vortex dynamics were characterized in terms of a phase-dependent evolution process, and the formation, convection, and dissipation regions were classified. Finally, dynamic mode decomposition analyses were conducted to extract the dominant vortex structures by determining their frequency spectra. The dominant modes contained large-scale vortices around the orifice, while the high-order modes contained a series of small-scale vortices toward the upstream incident tube and downstream cavity.

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