Abstract

When air flows through pipe systems that include a corrugated segment, a whistling tone is generated and increases in intensity with increasing flow velocity. This whistling sound is related to the particular geometry of corrugated pipes, which is in the form of alternating cavities. This whistling is an environmental noise problem as well as a possible structural danger because of the resulting induced vibration. This paper studies the whistling behavior of various pipe systems with a combination of smooth and corrugated pipes through a series of experiments. The considered pipe systems consist of two smooth pipes attached at the upstream and downstream ends of a corrugated segment. Experiments with smooth and corrugated pipes, which had inner diameters of 15.25 and 16.5 mm, respectively, and various lengths, were performed for flow velocities of up to approximately 30 m/s. The minimum and maximum Strouhal numbers (St) obtained during our experiments were 0.25 and 0.38, respectively. For all pipe configurations investigated in this study, the lowest Mach number at which whistling was observed was 0.017, and the maximum was 0.093. The lowest frequency at which whistling was detected in our experiments was 650 Hz, and the highest was 3080 Hz. The results presented in the form of different variables and dimensionless parameters, including the frequency, Mach number, Strouhal number, and Helmholtz number. The average mode gap and number of excited acoustic modes were also taken into account for all considered configurations. The pipe systems with longer corrugated segments had broader whistling ranges than did configurations with shorter segments, indicating that the number of cavities inside the corrugated pipe has a direct effect on whistling. Increasing the smooth pipe length (either upstream or downstream) resulted in a decrease in the average mode gap between successive modes. The number of excited acoustic modes was primarily related to the corrugated segment length, but the smooth pipe length also had a pronounced effect on the excited modes for a constant corrugation length. The highest number of excited modes (13) was seen in the case of corrugated length 450 mm and smooth pipe length (either upstream or downstream) 400 mm while the lowest number of excited modes (1) was observed for corrugated length 250 mm and smooth pipe length (downstream) 300 mm and 400 mm.

Highlights

  • A pipe with a periodic variation in its diameter is called a corrugated pipe

  • This paper presents the results obtained from an experimental study in which both ends of a corrugated pipe were attached to smooth pipes

  • The configurations were divided into two cases, each of which was divided into three sub-cases

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Summary

Introduction

A pipe with a periodic variation in its diameter is called a corrugated pipe. Due to the particular geometry of corrugated pipes, they possess the unique characteristic of being locally rigid while at the same time globally flexible [1]. The corrugations are basically alternating cavities and flat regions that are symmetric about the axis of the pipe [2]. Corrugated pipes have the tendency to generate strong whistling noise as a result of fluid or gas flow through the pipe. Energies 2018, 11, 1954 as a result of strong vibrations. Corrugated pipes are extensively used industrially in heat exchangers, offshore natural gas production systems, and vacuum cleaners [3,4,5]

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