SCATTERING OF STABLE AND UNSTABLE WAVES IN A FLOW DUCT

Authors
Citation
B. Nilsson, SCATTERING OF STABLE AND UNSTABLE WAVES IN A FLOW DUCT, Quarterly Journal of Mechanics and Applied Mathematics, 51, 1998, pp. 599-632
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Mathematics,Mechanics,Mathematics
ISSN journal
00335614
Volume
51
Year of publication
1998
Part
4
Pages
599 - 632
Database
ISI
SICI code
0033-5614(1998)51:<599:SOSAUW>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
The transmission and reflection properties of sound at sharp edges are the key elements when calculating the performance of absorptive and r eactive splitter silencers using the Building Block method. These acou stic properties are here determined for a two-dimensional duct, having an air flow in its lower part only. In one, half-infinite, section an acoustically hard wall separates the moving and still media, while in the other there is an infintely shear layer, that is, a vortex sheet is present. Leading and trailing edges are dealt with, while scatterin g problems, expressed through Fourier methods as Wiener-Hopf equations , solved under causality and edge behaviour constraints, provide a uni que solution. Explicit expressions for scattering matrices are constru cted and numerical examples are presented and discussed. A vital part of the theory is an analysis of the modal structure in the part of the duct having the infintely thin shear layer. To this end Green's funct ion ii determined, and by applying causality the unique solution is fo und as an inverse Fourier integral, which is expressed as an infinite sum of modes. Therefore the modal system is complete. These modes, the properties of which are essential in establishing causality, have bee n studied by analytic techniques and the results are reported. The exi stence of ordinary acoustic modes as well as hydrodynamic ones is veri fied and the latter propagate only downstream. One of the hydrodynamic modes is found to be unstable for all frequencies, a consequence of c ausality: its amplitude grows rather than decays with the downstream d istance. An example is given of an unusual acoustic mode that gets cut -on at a certain frequency and stays cut-on for higher frequencies exc ept for a frequency interval where it is cut-off.