The distortion of turbulence interacting with thick airfoils is analyzed with scale-resolved numerical simulations to elucidate its impact on leading-edge-noise generation and prediction. The effect of the leading-edge geometry is investigated by considering two airfoils with different leading-edge radii subjected to grid-generated turbulence. The velocity field is shown to be altered near the stagnation point, in a region whose extension does not depend on the leading-edge radius. Here, the deformation of large-scale turbulence causes the amplitude of the upwash velocity fluctuations to increase in the low-frequency range of the spectrum because of the blockage exerted by the surface. Conversely, the distortion of small-scale structures leads to an exponential decay of the spectrum at high frequencies due to the alteration of the vorticity field. The prevalence of a distortion mechanism over the other is found to depend on the size of the turbulent structures with respect to the curvilinear length from the stagnation point to the location where surface-pressure fluctuations and pressure gradient peak. This occurs at the curvilinear abscissa where the curvature changes the most. The same high-frequency exponential-decay slope observed for the upwash velocity is retrieved for surface-pressure spectra in the leading-edge region, suggesting that the airfoil unsteady response is induced by the distorted velocity field. This physical mechanism can be accounted for in Amiet's model by using a distorted turbulence spectrum as input and accounting for the increased amplitude of the distorted gust in the aeroacoustic transfer function, retrieving an accurate noise prediction for both airfoils.

Turbulence distortion and leading-edge noise / Piccolo, Andrea; Zamponi, Riccardo; Avallone, Francesco; Ragni, Daniele. - In: PHYSICS OF FLUIDS. - ISSN 1089-7666. - 36:(2024). [10.1063/5.0244627]

Turbulence distortion and leading-edge noise

Avallone, Francesco;Ragni, Daniele
2024

Abstract

The distortion of turbulence interacting with thick airfoils is analyzed with scale-resolved numerical simulations to elucidate its impact on leading-edge-noise generation and prediction. The effect of the leading-edge geometry is investigated by considering two airfoils with different leading-edge radii subjected to grid-generated turbulence. The velocity field is shown to be altered near the stagnation point, in a region whose extension does not depend on the leading-edge radius. Here, the deformation of large-scale turbulence causes the amplitude of the upwash velocity fluctuations to increase in the low-frequency range of the spectrum because of the blockage exerted by the surface. Conversely, the distortion of small-scale structures leads to an exponential decay of the spectrum at high frequencies due to the alteration of the vorticity field. The prevalence of a distortion mechanism over the other is found to depend on the size of the turbulent structures with respect to the curvilinear length from the stagnation point to the location where surface-pressure fluctuations and pressure gradient peak. This occurs at the curvilinear abscissa where the curvature changes the most. The same high-frequency exponential-decay slope observed for the upwash velocity is retrieved for surface-pressure spectra in the leading-edge region, suggesting that the airfoil unsteady response is induced by the distorted velocity field. This physical mechanism can be accounted for in Amiet's model by using a distorted turbulence spectrum as input and accounting for the increased amplitude of the distorted gust in the aeroacoustic transfer function, retrieving an accurate noise prediction for both airfoils.
2024
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2995456