Abstract

Recently, the NORSOK standards, which regulate noise and vibration on offshore platforms, were strengthened by prohibiting the use of glass wool for environmental and safety reasons. In addition, the use of sound-absorbing materials in panels and silencers was prohibited. Therefore, developing a silencer that does not use sound-absorbing materials is necessary. In this study, a bandgap expressed by acoustic characteristics of a periodic structure was applied to develop a silencer without sound-absorbing materials. The bandgap is formed in a frequency range in which propagation of acoustic waves is suppressed by setting a specific distance between single units based on periodic structural theory. The designed silencer evaluates the noise attenuation effect of the periodic structure based on a fluid-structure coupling finite-element equation for a plane wave in a stationary medium. In addition, the silencer model was selected by analyzing the regenerated noise originating from the periodic structure in the flow duct. This flow noise is used to analyze the propagation of sound waves based on the FW-H equation. This is achieved by employing the Lighthill acoustic analogy to predict the flow-induced sound pressure. Furthermore, compressed air was injected at the end of the duct in the flow noise experiment to perform measurements. The results from the acoustic and flow noise experiments were compared to confirm the effect of the flow in the duct on noise generation. Moreover, the flow noise analysis based on the flow velocity elucidated the effect of the periodic structure on the flow. In addition, the analysis results were used to investigate its performance of the silencer with the periodic rod arrangement considering the flow noise in the duct and predict its acoustic characteristics in the bandgap frequency range.

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