External Aircraft Noise Reduction Liners

aerospace
External Aircraft Noise Reduction Liners (LAR-TOPS-152)
External acoustic liners for multifunctional aircraft noise reduction
Overview
NASA Langley Research Center, in collaboration with Boeing and Lockheed Martin, has developed a new external acoustic liner for aircraft noise reduction. While the acoustic liner can be placed on any external aircraft surface, one attractive application is for open rotor noise reduction. Airframe manufacturers are considering open rotor engines for future aircraft designs as they provide significant fuel savings. However, open rotor engines have no nacelle and, thus, do not allow the use of conventional nacelle liners for noise abatement. This technology strategically places acoustic liners on the external surface of the aircraft to reduce such engine noise.

The Technology
This technology is an evolution of acoustic liners developed for engine noise abatement that are typically located inside nacelles. The acoustic liners described here can be outfitted on external surfaces and in tight spaces. Three initial areas of the aircraft have been considered as part of an aircraft configuration incorporating an open rotor propulsion system. The three areas where the liner configurations were applied were (1) under the rotor, (2) on the upper surface of the elevon, and (3) on the surface of a strut.
Open rotor Technology can be applied to wind turbines (image of NASA researchers testing a turbine in wind tunnel).
Benefits
  • Has minimal impact on aircraft weight
  • Has minimal impact on aerodynamic characteristics
  • Allows for noise reduction in space-constrained areas
  • Uses proven noise reduction designs
  • Can be easily retrofitted in some areas of the aircraft

Applications
  • Aircraft
  • Wind Turbines
  • Other noise abatement applications
Technology Details

aerospace
LAR-TOPS-152
LAR-18024-1
9,623,952
Russell H. Thomas, Yueping Guo, Jeffrey J. Berton and Hamilton Fernandez. Aircraft Noise Reduction Technology Roadmap Toward Achieving the NASA 2035 Noise Goal. AIAA AVIATION Forum, 5-9 June 2017, Denver, Colorado, 23rd AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference. https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/epdf/10.2514/6.2017-3193.

Jason C. June, Russell H. Thomas, Yueping Guo, and Ian A. Clark. Far Term Noise Reduction Technology Roadmap for a Large Twin-Aisle Tube-and-Wing Subsonic Transport. Aeroacoustics Conferences, 20-23 May 2019, Delft, The Netherlands, 25th AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference. https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/epdf/10.2514/6.2019-2428.

Far Term Noise Reduction Roadmap for the NASA D8 and Single-Aisle Tube-and-Wing Aircraft Concepts. Ian A. Clark, Russell H. Thomas, and Yueping Guo. Aeroacoustics Conference. 25th AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference, 20-23 May 2019, Delft, The Netherlands. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/20200002464/downloads/20200002464.pdf.

Far-Term Noise Reduction Roadmap for the Midfuselage Nacelle Subsonic Transport. Yueping Guo, Russell H. Thomas, Ian A. Clark, and Jason C. June. Journal of Aircraft, Volume 56, Number 5, September 2019. https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/full/10.2514/1.C035307?af=R&utm_campaign=Journal_of_Aircraft_TrendMD_0&utm_medium=cpc&utm_source=TrendMD.
Similar Results
Low-drag liner with shared inlets.
Low, Drag, Variable-Depth Acoustic Liner
The drag penalty incurred by a conventional acoustic liner is dependent, to a large extent, on the perforate open area ratio (porosity) of the perforated facesheet. As the open area ratio is decreased, the facesheet behaves more like a solid surface and the drag is reduced. However, if the open area ratio is too small, the external acoustic field will be isolated from the resonators (in the liner), and the system will not provide noise reduction. The technology is a new type of variable-depth acoustic engine liner, which will reduce the drag and potentially manufacturing cost of this class of engine liner. Individual resonators within a conventional variable-depth liner are effective near resonance, but provide less acoustic benefit at other frequencies. In fact, at anti-resonance, a resonator behaves similar to a hard wall (i.e., the normal component of the particle velocity at the inlet is zero). Therefore, the proposed innovation couples neighboring resonators (tuned for different frequencies) together within the core of the liner. In other words, multiple resonators share a single inlet/port. Sharing inlets reduces the overall number of openings needed to maintain the acoustic performance of the liner by a factor of two or more. Reducing the open area ratio will in turn reduce the liner drag, and will reduce the number of holes that have to be machined into the facesheet, potentially reducing manufacturing cost. The functional operation of the proposed innovation will be identical to conventional engine liners. The innovation enables a reduction of the open area ratio of the perforated facesheet (by a factor of two or more) without degrading the acoustic performance. This will decrease the liner drag, and has the potential to reduce the manufacturing cost of the liner, since fewer holes need to be machined in the facesheet.
Airplane Noise
Compact, Lightweight, CMC-Based Acoustic Liner
NASA researchers are extending an existing oxide/oxide CMC sandwich structure concept that provides mono-tonal noise reduction. That oxide/oxide CMC has a density of about 2.8 g/cc versus the 8.4 g/cc density of a metallic liner made of IN625, thus offering the potential for component weight reduction. The composites have good high-temperature strength and oxidation resistance, allowing them to perform as core liners at temperatures up to 1000°C (1832°F). NASA's innovation uses cells of different lengths or effective lengths within a compact CMC-based liner to achieve broadband noise reduction. NASA has been able to optimize the performance of the proposed acoustic liner by using improved design tools that help reduce noise over a specified frequency range. One such improvement stems from the enhanced understanding of variable-depth liners, including the benefits of alternate channel shapes/designs (curved, bent, etc.). These new designs have opened the door for CMC-based acoustic liners to offer core engine noise reduction in a lighter, more compact package. As a first step toward demonstrating advanced concepts, an oxide/oxide CMC acoustic testing article with different channel lengths was tested. Bulk absorbers could also be used, either in conjunction with or in place of the liners internal chambers, to reduce noise further if desired.
Anti-Phase Noise Suppression Rotor Technologies
Rotor noise and vibration are two sources of operational challenges for all aircraft operating with open rotors such as helicopters, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), urban air mobility personal air vehicles, drones, and aircraft operating with ducted fans such as passenger aircraft. One disadvantage of convention rotor design is the noise due to noise-induced shed vortices generated by rotor blades. The unique problem with rotor noise and vibration is the periodic blade passage that causes a harmonic reinforcement and causes the rotor blades to vibrate and generate noise sources. This technology from NASA Ames seeks to optimize the implementation of anti-phase trailing edge designs and asymmetric blade tip treatments for rotor noise suppression and integrated aircraft noise solutions by incorporating the anti-phase rotor design concepts into an aircraft flight control system to reduce noise footprint. There are several embodiments of the invention, which include the following: (1) an anti-phase trailing edge design whereby the trailing edge pattern of the leading rotor blade is offset by a phase shift from the trailing edge pattern of the following blade; (2) an anti-phase rotor design implementing asymmetric blade tips with inverted airfoil; and (3) other anti-phase enabled concepts such as unequal blade length, ducted rotors with non-radial unequally spaced struts, and multi-axis tilt rotor design incorporating the anti-phase rotor design.
Low Flying Plane
A Method for Reducing Broadband Noise
This NASA technology is ideally suited to absorb sounds below 1000 Hz (at the low end of human auditory range), which commercially available materials have struggled to absorb effectively. NASA innovators designed the acoustic liner to mimic the geometry and the low-frequency acoustic absorption of natural reeds. To provide excellent noise absorption that endures even in a variety of challenging conditions, researchers have created and tested prototypes of acoustic filters using thin and lightweight parallel-stacked tubes one-fourth to three-eights of an inch in diameter. The assembly can feature a porous or perforated face sheet positioned on one or more sides of the acoustic absorber layer to increase noise-reduction capability as needed. These filters have demonstrated exceptional acoustic absorption coefficients in the frequency range of 400 to 3000 Hz. Results indicate that these assemblies can be additively manufactured from synthetic materials, generally plastic; however, ceramics, metals, or other materials can also be used. The reeds can be narrow or wide, hollow or solid, straight or bent, etc., giving this acoustic liner remarkable flexibility and versatility to meet the needs of virtually any application. This technology effectively demonstrates that a new class of structures can now be considered for a wide range of environments and applications that need durable, lightweight, broadband acoustic absorption that is effective at various frequencies, particularly between 400 and 3000 Hz.
Noisy helicopter in flight
Device for Providing Real-Time Rotorcraft Noise Abatement Information
The magnitude and direction of rotor noise radiation is determined by the aerodynamic operating state of the rotor commonly referred to as the "Blade-Vortex Interaction" which occurs when the wake vortex trailing from a preceding rotor blade interacts with the front edge of the following rotor blade. The wake vortex causes a rapid change in the blade loading, which results in the generation of high amplitude, impulsive, and highly directional noise. The occurrence, magnitude, and directionality of Blade-Vortex Interaction noise is very sensitive to the rotor operating state because it is dependent on the relative positions of the rotor and its vortex wake. By providing the rotorcraft pilot with information about annoying noise levels currently being emitted by the rotorcraft and its effects on the ground, corrective action can be taken to change the operating state of the vehicle to minimize or avoid annoyance due to such rotor noise sources. During operation, the pilot would activate the device before or during operation of the rotorcraft. The device displays the noise abatement information through a display unit, informing the pilot about the current acoustic state of the vehicle and providing guidance on how to change the vehicle performance and acoustic state to avoid objectionable blade-vortex Interaction noise. Annoyance footprint information can then be used by the pilot to change the flight path of the vehicle such that the annoyance footprint will not extend into noise sensitive areas.
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