W. M. Hairudin, Mohamed Nur Hidayat Mat, Lu Ean Ooi, N. A. Ismail
{"title":"Co-simulation approach for computational aero-acoustic modeling: Investigating wind-induced noise within two-way radio microphone ports cavity","authors":"W. M. Hairudin, Mohamed Nur Hidayat Mat, Lu Ean Ooi, N. A. Ismail","doi":"10.15282/jmes.18.1.2024.9.0784","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Wind-induced noise (aeroacoustic) can cause problem with any outdoor microphone applications, notably impacting the performance of telecommunication mobile. One prominent source in two way radios is the microphone port cavity. In this article, the noise characteristics behaviour is studied at scale-up of microphone port cavity through computational aero-accoustics (CAA) numerical simulation and experimental test. This research aims to investigate the wind-induced noise (aeroacoustic) generated inside the microphone port cavity at various wind orientation angles (wind direction) and distance radii, r. A direct-hybrid co-simulation CAA method, utilizing the LES-WALE (Wall-Adapting Local Eddy-viscosity) and Ffowcs William-Hawking (FW-H) models, is employed to obtain the near-field noise source and far-field noise patterns inside a microphone port cavity. The simulations are conducted using the scFLOW2Actran software. Richardson extrapolation and Grid Convergence Index (GCI) are applied to evaluate the accuracy of the grid independency in numerical simulations.The findings reveal that the leading edge, centre and trailing edge are the primary noise sources and generations inside a microphone port. The study indicates that the noise level in the microphone port cavity is characterized by low frequency noise.The results indicates that at an observation of angles of 0° and distance radii of 0.2 m, the wind noise level is higher compared to other orientation angle and distance radii. This can be attributed to the proximity to the noise source at this location. The directivity pattern of noise propagation exhibits a typical dipole pattern observed at observation angles of 0° to 45°. Numerical results align well with the experimental results from the wind tunnel test, demonstrating the feasibility of the proposed approach for flow-acoustic coupling application. This research holds significant value for engineers as it provides a comprehensive understanding of the physical phenomena involved in microphone port design.","PeriodicalId":16166,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Mechanical Engineering and Sciences","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Mechanical Engineering and Sciences","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15282/jmes.18.1.2024.9.0784","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, MECHANICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Wind-induced noise (aeroacoustic) can cause problem with any outdoor microphone applications, notably impacting the performance of telecommunication mobile. One prominent source in two way radios is the microphone port cavity. In this article, the noise characteristics behaviour is studied at scale-up of microphone port cavity through computational aero-accoustics (CAA) numerical simulation and experimental test. This research aims to investigate the wind-induced noise (aeroacoustic) generated inside the microphone port cavity at various wind orientation angles (wind direction) and distance radii, r. A direct-hybrid co-simulation CAA method, utilizing the LES-WALE (Wall-Adapting Local Eddy-viscosity) and Ffowcs William-Hawking (FW-H) models, is employed to obtain the near-field noise source and far-field noise patterns inside a microphone port cavity. The simulations are conducted using the scFLOW2Actran software. Richardson extrapolation and Grid Convergence Index (GCI) are applied to evaluate the accuracy of the grid independency in numerical simulations.The findings reveal that the leading edge, centre and trailing edge are the primary noise sources and generations inside a microphone port. The study indicates that the noise level in the microphone port cavity is characterized by low frequency noise.The results indicates that at an observation of angles of 0° and distance radii of 0.2 m, the wind noise level is higher compared to other orientation angle and distance radii. This can be attributed to the proximity to the noise source at this location. The directivity pattern of noise propagation exhibits a typical dipole pattern observed at observation angles of 0° to 45°. Numerical results align well with the experimental results from the wind tunnel test, demonstrating the feasibility of the proposed approach for flow-acoustic coupling application. This research holds significant value for engineers as it provides a comprehensive understanding of the physical phenomena involved in microphone port design.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Mechanical Engineering & Sciences "JMES" (ISSN (Print): 2289-4659; e-ISSN: 2231-8380) is an open access peer-review journal (Indexed by Emerging Source Citation Index (ESCI), WOS; SCOPUS Index (Elsevier); EBSCOhost; Index Copernicus; Ulrichsweb, DOAJ, Google Scholar) which publishes original and review articles that advance the understanding of both the fundamentals of engineering science and its application to the solution of challenges and problems in mechanical engineering systems, machines and components. It is particularly concerned with the demonstration of engineering science solutions to specific industrial problems. Original contributions providing insight into the use of analytical, computational modeling, structural mechanics, metal forming, behavior and application of advanced materials, impact mechanics, strain localization and other effects of nonlinearity, fluid mechanics, robotics, tribology, thermodynamics, and materials processing generally from the core of the journal contents are encouraged. Only original, innovative and novel papers will be considered for publication in the JMES. The authors are required to confirm that their paper has not been submitted to any other journal in English or any other language. The JMES welcome contributions from all who wishes to report on new developments and latest findings in mechanical engineering.