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Evaluation of Packing_3D Code for Design of Variable-Depth, Bent-Chamber Acoustic Liners

Abstract

Increases in the bypass ratio for commercial aircraft engines have caused the broadband fan noise component to become dominant. As a result, there is a need to develop improved acoustic liners suitable for absorption of this fan noise over a wide frequency range, preferably up to at least two octaves. Variable depth liners with bent chambers and three-dimensional geometries present one way to achieve this goal, however, they can be difficult and time-consuming to design due to their complexity and volume constraints. A packing code, called Packing3D, has been developed that automatically designs the chamber configurations of such liners once the chamber dimensions and volume constraints are known. The code uses a randomized trial and error approach to place each chamber in a representation of the liner sample, then returns a colored diagram and sufficient information for the liner sample to be fabricated. For evaluation, the code is used to design four liner samples of varying levels of complexity. These samples are tested with and without a mesh facesheet in the NASA Langley Normal Incidence Tube, and the results are compared to predictions computed in COMSOL. The results indicate that the packing code is able to quickly design samples that are predictable, achieve the desired absorption spectrum, fit the given constraints, and are able to be built. This code is flexible, lends itself to optimization, and allows samples to be designed quickly, accurately, and efficiently

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