Repository logo

Slat Noise from an MD30P30N Airfoil at Extreme Angles of Attack

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Advisor

Coadvisor

Graduate program

Undergraduate course

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Amer Inst Aeronautics Astronautics

Type

Article

Access right

Acesso abertoAcesso Aberto

Abstract

This study investigates the slat noise of a two-dimensional scaled, unswept, and untapered MD30P30N high-lift model. The experimental data refer to aeroacoustic and aerodynamic measurements in a closed-section wind tunnel for a wide range of angles of attack (from -6 deg up to the stall; approximately at 18 deg) and Mach numbers between 0.07 and 0.1. Three slat configurations (the original MD30P30N, another with a higher slat deflection, and one with smaller slat gap and overlap) are studied experimentally. The signal processing applied to the acoustic data involves conventional beamforming enhanced by two deconvolution algorithms, namely, DAMAS and CLEAN-SC. An original variation of the beamforming cluster approach that is based on the coherence level among microphone pairs is introduced, and it improves the results obtained by DAMAS. Below -2 deg and above 12 deg angles of attack, the slat noise is very small and mostly below the wind-tunnel background noise for all configurations. Between -2 and 12 deg angles of attack, the slat noise spectra are substantially affected by the slat configuration, although it always contains a dominant low-frequency content, a midfrequency broadband noise, and a single high-frequency broad peak. Within this range, the lower angles of attack display the strongest low-frequency narrowband peaks. In fact, at lower angles of attack, the low-frequency narrowband peaks scale with a Mach power above 10.

Description

Keywords

Language

English

Citation

Aiaa Journal. Reston: Amer Inst Aeronautics Astronautics, v. 56, n. 3, p. 964-978, 2018.

Related itens

Units

Item type:Unit,
Faculdade de Engenharia de São João
FESJ
Campus: São João da Boa Vista


Departments

Undergraduate courses

Graduate programs

Other forms of access