A series of experiments were conducted at an outdoor facility to evaluate the aerodynamic and acoustic performance of a supersonic inlet with a modified auxiliary door geometry. A 1/14 scale model of an axisymmetric, mixed-compression, supersonic inlet designed for civil transportation (P-inlet) was
EFFECTS OF CHOKING ON THE AEROACOUSTICS OF AN AXISYMMETRIC SUPERSONIC INLET
β Scribed by K.C. Miller; W.F. Ng
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 203 KB
- Volume
- 203
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-460X
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β¦ Synopsis
An experimental study was conducted to determine the effect of choking on the aerodynamic and acoustic performance of a supersonic inlet. The investigated inlet was a prototype model of a mixed compression, axisymmetric supersonic inlet designed for the high speed civil transport aircraft. A 10β’4 cm (4β’1 in) turbofan engine simulator was used in conjunction with the inlet. The inlet was tested with the centerbody in the fully extended position at different fan speeds. Results show that ''soft choking'', as characterized by a reduction in forward propagating fan noise, can occur when the Mach number at the inlet throat exceeds 0β’5. In the forward sector (0Β°-60Β°from the inlet axis), the overall sound pressure level was reduced by about 7 dB as the fan speed increased from 50,000 to 70,000 rpm, due to the increase in the Mach number at the inlet throat. Additional comparison was made between the inlet configurations with the centerbody fully extended and fully retracted at a fan speed of 50,000 rpm. The results show that the higher Mach number at the inlet throat for the full retracted centerbody configuration was successful in reducing the overall sound pressure level by about 4 dB between 0Β°and 30Β°angular sector. While there is no measurable difference in the total pressure recovery for the two inlet configurations, there is, however, a significant increase in the circumferential flow distortion at the fan face for the higher throat Mach number test case.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
An experiment was conducted on a two-dimensional bifurcated, supersonic inlet to investigate the aeroacoustics at take-o! and landing conditions. A 104)1 mm (4)1 in) diameter turbofan simulator was coupled to the inlet to generate the noise typical of a turbofan engine. Aerodynamic and acoustic data
As a parallel effort to complement the experimental study on the aeroacoustics of an axisymmetric supersonic inlet, a computational study was conducted to provide a better understanding of the mechanism that generates the circumferential flow distortion at the fan face. A three-dimensional, compress