Abstract

A data-driven method for predicting the vortex-induced sound from time-resolved velocimetry data is presented and applied to the sound generated by flow passing through the slat in a multi-element high-lift airfoil. The time-dependent velocity fields in the slat-cove region of the 30P30N multi-element airfoil are obtained from time-resolved particle image velocimetry measurements, and a low-order reconstruction is achieved by using the rank-one vbnm modes from spectral proper orthogonal decomposition. The pressure force and associated dipole sound are then computed via the application of the force and acoustic partitioning methods (Seo et al. in Phys Fluids 34(5):053607, 2002) which involve volume integrals of the product of the second invariant of the velocity gradient tensor and geometry-dependent influence fields. The method enables estimation of the dipole sound generated by local flow structures, and the results are shown to be consistent with theory of vortex sound. Comparison with the measured sound data suggests that while the shear layer modes are responsible for the tonal noise, the interactions between the shear layer modes and other parts of the wing also generate a substantial level of flow noise.

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