Abstract

Experiments have been performed on the roughness noise produced by a two-dimensional turbulent wall jet boundary layer flowing over short fetches of sandpaper roughness. A range of rough surface sizes were studied from hydrodynamically smooth through fully rough. Velocity measurements were made to document the form of the wall jet boundary layer and the influence of the roughness upon it. Acoustic measurements showed background noise levels to be very low so that the sound produced by the rough surfaces could be clearly detected with signal to noise ratios as large as 20 dB. Even hydrodynamically smooth roughness was found to produce noise, conclusively indicating the presence of scattering as a source mechanism. Variations of the roughness noise spectra with flow speed and roughness size are found to be inconsistent with any simple parameter scaling. Boundary layer wall pressure fluctuation measurements made within the roughness fetches reveal a spectral form quite different than the roughness noise, and fluctuation levels some 50–70 dB higher. Despite these differences the wall pressure and roughness noise are found to be very simply related, at least at lower frequencies (<6 kHz). The roughness noise spectrum varies closely as the product of the wall pressure spectrum, the frequency squared, and the mean-square roughness height. This is the scaling predicted by scattering theory and implies a major simplification to the problem of roughness noise prediction for stochastic surfaces.

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