Prediction of radiation from finite-length fluid-loaded periodic structures subject to broadband excitation using local-global homogenization

Local-Global Homogenization (LGH) is a method to predict directly the smooth global response of periodic fluid-loaded structures in a self-contained manner. Many fluid-loaded structures, such as fuselages and hulls, have periodically spaced braces, ribs, or attachments. Structural motion, acoustic r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol. 117; no. 4_Supplement; p. 2487
Main Authors Danilov, Pavel V., Bliss, Donald B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.04.2005
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Summary:Local-Global Homogenization (LGH) is a method to predict directly the smooth global response of periodic fluid-loaded structures in a self-contained manner. Many fluid-loaded structures, such as fuselages and hulls, have periodically spaced braces, ribs, or attachments. Structural motion, acoustic radiation, and the interior sound field are of interest. Calculating the motion of such fluid-loaded structures is difficult because of their complexity and the disparity of length scales. Periodic discontinuities cause the structural response to occur in a broad spectrum of spatial wavenumbers, and to exhibit stop-band and pass-band behavior. The broad spatial wavenumber spectrum contains both radiating and non-radiating components. The global low-wavenumber part of the response is most efficiently coupled to the acoustic field, since low wavenumbers correspond to supersonic phase speeds. In the LGH reformulation, an infinite order operator that embodies both the structural modes and the evanescent component of the fluid loading governs the equivalent smooth global problem. Numerical implementation is demonstrated for the structural response and acoustic radiation from a finite-length fluid-loaded plate with periodic impedance discontinuities subject to broadband excitation. Calculations show good agreement with the exact solution and substantially improved computational efficiency. Radiation characteristics are discussed for single frequency and broadband structural motions.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.4787809