This paper discusses unsteady surface pressures on aircraft flaps and their correlation
with far-field noise. Analyses are made of data from a 4.7% DC-10 aircraft model test,
conducted in the 40 × 80 feet wind tunnel at NASA Ames Research Center. Results
for various slat/wing/flap configurations and various flow conditions are discussed
in detail to reveal major trends in surface pressure fluctuations. Spectral analysis,
including cross-correlation/coherence, both among unsteady surface pressures and
between far-field noise and near-field fluctuations, is used to reveal the most coherent
motions in the near field and identify potential sources of noise related to flap
flows. Dependencies of surface pressure fluctuations on mean flow Mach numbers,
flap settings and slat angles are discussed. Dominant flow features in flap side edge
regions, such as the formation of double-vortex structures, are shown to manifest
themselves in the unsteady surface pressures as a series of spectral humps. The
spectral humps are shown to correlate well with the radiated noise, indicating the
existence of major noise sources in flap side edge regions. Strouhal number scaling is
used to collapse the data with satisfactory results. The effects of flap side edge fences
on surface pressures are also discussed. It is shown that the application of fences
effectively increases the thickness of the flaps so that the double-vortex structures
have more time to evolve. As a result, the characteristic timescale of the unsteady
sources increases, which in turn leads to a decrease in the dominant frequency of
the source process. Based on this, an explanation is proposed for the noise reduction
mechanism of flap side edge fences.
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