Effect of swirl on self-sustained azimuthal aeroacoustic modes in an axisymmetric cavity
ORAL
Abstract
We investigate the effect of a swirling mean flow on azimuthal aeroacoustic modes in an axisymmetric cavity. In absence of imposed swirl, a self-sustained aeroacoustic wave of azimuthal order 1 can emerge from the reflectionally symmetric mean flow, and depending on the initial condition, it spins either in the clockwise or in counterclockwise direction. With the Navier-Stokes equations linearized around the low-Mach turbulent mean flow, we show that an imposed swirl promotes the global mode spinning against the swirl direction, i.e. the co-winding counter-spinning eigenmode. These findings explain our experimental observations based on simultaneous acoustic recordings and time-resolved stereoscopic particle image velocimetry. We show that the fluid mechanics of this intriguing whistle can be leveraged to create an acoustic scatterer that can non-reciprocally transmit acoustic energy without losses. This aeroacoustic realization of loss-immune non-reciprocal scattering is based on the synchronization of the aeroacoustic limit cycle and the incident acoustic wave, and it opens the way for exciting research in acoustic metamaterials.
*This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement no. 765998, and from the Swiss National Science Foundation under grant agreement no. 184617.
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Publication: Self-sustained azimuthal aeroacoustic modes - Effect of a swirling mean flow on the modal dynamics, Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Presenters
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Nicolas Noiray
- ETH Zürich
- CAPS Laboratory, Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, ETH Zürich, Zürich 8092, Switzerland