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Finite element modelling of acoustic field inside small components: application to an annular slit terminated by an aperture in an infinite screen

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine |
2012

Abstract

Investigating accurately the acoustic behaviour of small fluid-filled cavities and ducts and their association is a problem of persistent importance, because nowadays both experimental investigations and theoretical modelling must provide results of increasingly higher precision. The motivation here is provided mainly by the acoustic measurement tools used for both the calibration of microphones and the artificial ear (IEC 60318-1).

Both improved analytical models of small acoustic components (small tubes and slits), which account for the effects of the viscous and thermal boundary layers accurately in the frequency range of interest (20 Hz to 20 kHz), and experimental characterization of their input impedances (with a relative uncertainty of the order of magnitude of 10(-2)) have been proposed recently (Rodrigues et al 2008 J. Sound Vib. 315 890-910).

Existing analytical procedures for coupled components suffer from strong approximations at the interfaces between narrow tubes and slits or other elements as well as the open space. A dedicated numerical model can be used in order to investigate accurately the acoustic field at these interfaces.

The numerical model presented in the paper relies on a suitable linear exact formulation, based upon two coupled equations involving particle velocity and temperature variation (Joly 2010 Acta Acust. United Acust. 96 102-14) and utilizes an adaptive anisotropic meshing technique to model correctly the strong variations which occur around the geometrical discontinuities and inside the boundary layers.

Application to a 2D axisymmetrical device (annular slit ending in an aperture in an infinite screen) is considered to present the ability of the method. Acoustic pressure, temperature variation and particle velocity distributions inside and around the end of the slit are depicted, and the input acoustic admittance of the slit obtained numerically is compared with both experimental and analytical results available.