Abstract

An analysis has been carried out to investigate the sound radiation through a heated jet in cooler cross-flow, which is representative of many industrial exhaust systems, using a hybrid steady-state computational fluid dynamics and computational acoustic model. The mean flow and temperature fields are modelled using steady-state computational fluid dynamics, with the turbulence modelled using Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes equations. The corresponding mean flow and temperature fields are used in the computational sound propagation model using linearised acoustic wave equation with mean flow based on a scalar flow potential. The results obtained from the computational simulations show that the flow significantly changes the sound propagation path and that the sound levels downstream of the duct outlet are higher than expected from using an acoustic monopole radiation pattern. The dominant mechanism affecting the propagation of sound is the refraction arising from the plume's temperature and velocity gradients. The sound propagation is highly dependent on the proximity from the duct outlet, normalised wavenumber, temperature and the jet to cross-flow mean velocity ratio. This computational study builds upon previous experimental work to analyse the fluid-acoustic interaction for heated jets in cooler cross-flow to understand the complex radiation pattern that leads to higher-than-expected sound levels downstream of the duct outlet.

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