Effect of grazing flow on the acoustic impedance of Helmholtz resonators consisting of single and clustered orifices
Abstract
A semiempirical fluid mechanical model is derived for the acoustic behavior of thin-walled single orifice Helmholtz resonators in a grazing flow environment. The incident and cavity sound fields are connected in terms of an orifice discharge coefficient whose values are determined experimentally using the two-microphone method. Measurements show that at high grazing flow speeds, acoustical resistance is almost linearly proportional to the grazing flow speed and almost independent of incident sound pressure. The corresponding values of reactance are much smaller and tend towards zero. For thicker-walled orifice plates, resistance and reactance were observed to be less sensitive to grazing flow as the ratio of plate thickness to orifice diameter increased. Loud tones were observed to radiate from a single orifice Helmholtz resonator due to interaction between the grazing flow shear layer and the resonator cavity. Measurements showed that the tones radiated at a Strouhal number equal to 0.26. The effects of grazing flow on the impedance of Helmholtz resonators consisting of clusters of orifices was also studied. In general, both resistance and reaction were found to be virtually independent of orifice relative spacing and number. These findings are valid with and without grazing flow.
- Publication:
-
Final Report Hersh Acoustical Engineering
- Pub Date:
- August 1979
- Bibcode:
- 1979hae..rept.....H
- Keywords:
-
- Acoustic Impedance;
- Cavity Resonators;
- Flow Distribution;
- Grazing Flow;
- Grazing Incidence;
- Orifices;
- Sound Transmission;
- Flow Visualization;
- Fluid Mechanics;
- Impedance Measurement;
- Resonant Frequencies;
- Tables (Data);
- Acoustics