Abstract

An acoustic metasurface consisting of two layers of perforated plates is proposed for suppression of the Mack second mode in hypersonic boundary-layer flow. The upper layer with very tiny holes is permeable to acoustic waves and hardly alters the background hypersonic boundary-layer flow, offering rather low resistive and inductive components of surface acoustic impedance. The bottom layer with large and sparse square holes is attached to a rigid wall surface and forms a periodic array of chambers, each covering multiple holes of the upper layer, which can adjust the impedance phase by working as a capacitive component. Based on a linear stability analysis of hypersonic boundary-layer instability, such an acoustic metasurface satisfying the required surface impedance is designed and numerically investigated. The results show that the metasurface can efficiently suppress the Mack second mode over a relatively wide bandwidth. This work provides an alternative strategy for the design of porous walls for hypersonic boundary-layer stabilization.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call