Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4924009 | Journal of Sound and Vibration | 2017 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Unsteady heat release coupled with pressure fluctuation triggers the thermoacoustic instability which may damage a combustion chamber severely. This study demonstrates an electroacoustic control approach of suppressing the thermoacoustic instability in a Rijke tube by altering the wall boundary condition. An electrically shunted loudspeaker driver device is connected as a side-branch to the main tube via a small aperture. Tests in an impedance tube show that this device has sound absorption coefficient up to 40% under normal incidence from 100Â Hz to 400Â Hz, namely over two octaves. Experimental result demonstrates that such a broadband acoustic performance can effectively eliminate the Rijke-tube instability from 94Â Hz to 378Â Hz (when the tube length varies from 1.8Â m to 0.9Â m, the first mode frequency for the former is 94Â Hz and the second mode frequency for the latter is 378Â Hz). Theoretical investigation reveals that the devices act as a damper draining out sound energy through a tiny hole to eliminate the instability. Finally, it is also estimated based on the experimental data that small amount of sound energy is actually absorbed when the system undergoes a transition from the unstable to stable state if the contrpaol is activated. When the system is actually stabilized, no sound is radiated so no sound energy needs to be absorbed by the control device.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Authors
Yumin Zhang, Lixi Huang,