2019
DOI: 10.3813/aaa.919284
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The Challenge of Tonal Fan Noise Prediction for an Aircraft Engine in Flight

Abstract: Expensive flyover tests are needed to verify that noise certification standards are fulfilled. Currently, no numerical alternative exists to perform a holistic "virtual fly-over" test. As a step towards enabling such evaluations in the future, the authors focus on an isolated noise source-the tonal rotor-stator-interaction (RSI) of the fan stage. A high-fidelity simulation relying on a state-of-the-art yet computationally efficient method is performed for a V2527 aircraft engine in approach conditions. The com… Show more

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“…Special care was taken to validate the accuracy of the interfaces between the tools. To ensure that the entire computational chain delivers plausible results, the results were compared to another simulation [73] using an established technique for the case of an isolated engine and a good agreement was found. To prove the new methods capability of predicting the tonal fan noise of an installed engine, the technique was applied to a V2527 engine mounted underneath the fully equipped wing of an A320 aircraft in approach conditions (shown in Fig 32).…”
Section: Uncertainty Quantification For Direct Aeroacoustics Of Cavity Noisementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Special care was taken to validate the accuracy of the interfaces between the tools. To ensure that the entire computational chain delivers plausible results, the results were compared to another simulation [73] using an established technique for the case of an isolated engine and a good agreement was found. To prove the new methods capability of predicting the tonal fan noise of an installed engine, the technique was applied to a V2527 engine mounted underneath the fully equipped wing of an A320 aircraft in approach conditions (shown in Fig 32).…”
Section: Uncertainty Quantification For Direct Aeroacoustics Of Cavity Noisementioning
confidence: 99%