event
PhD Proposal by Jackson Larisch
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Jackson Larisch
(Advisor: Prof. Krish Ahuja)
will propose a doctoral thesis entitled,
Noise Reduction Mechanisms and Sources of Noise in Jets Issuing from Lobed
Mixer Nozzles
On
Friday, May 23 at 12:00 p.m.
Montgomery Knight Building 317
Abstract
With the return of SST on the horizon, future supersonic civilian airliners will need to meet
stringent noise criteria for certification. As a result of this, such aircraft are likely to employ
internally mixed exhaust systems with forced mixers which demonstrate the ability to improve thrust
and reduce jet noise during LTO regimes. In such a configuration, the core and bypass exhaust gases
are mixed within the engine before being expelled through a final exhaust nozzle. Improved mixing
of these streams reduces the average velocity and temperature of exhaust gasses, helping to combat
increased levels of thrust-specific jet noise introduced through the use of low-to- moderate bypass
jet engines more efficient at higher cruise speeds.
One popular jet mixing enhancement device is the so-called lobed mixer or lobed suppressor nozzle.
These forced mixer nozzles have petal-shaped corrugations on the nozzle trailing edge which greatly
increase the contact perimeter between the jet and ambient (or core stream and bypass stream if
used internally) and introduce streamwise vorticity to rapidly inject quiescent gas into the jet.
However, these two mechanisms paint an incomplete picture and are insufficient in describing the
complex processes by which lobed nozzles enhance mixing and reduce jet noise. As with most jet
mixing-enhancement devices, lobed nozzles typically result in decreased levels of jet noise at low
frequencies - especially at observation angles close to the jet axis - and substantially increased
levels of jet noise at higher frequencies. The former is typically ascribed to the inhibited
formation of large-scale turbulent structures within the jet, while the latter is chalked up as
mixing noise due to increased levels of fine-scale turbulence. This too fails to provide a
comprehensive explanation of the effects of lobed nozzles on jet aeroacoustics.
The proposed thesis seeks to provide a detailed explanation of the precise mechanisms by which
lobed nozzles combat jet noise through complementary acoustic and flow analyses. This is achieved
through various experimental tests involving two novel lobed mixer nozzles of equivalent exit area
and a circular, axisymmetric baseline nozzle. The findings of this work are expected to inform the
design of future noise suppression devices including nozzles and acoustic liners, as well as
provide models to predict jet noise reduction and mixing noise levels.
Committee
• Prof. Krishan K. Ahuja – School of Aerospace Engineering (advisor)
• Prof. Lakshmi Sankar – School of Aerospace Engineering
• Assistant Prof. Beckett Zhou – School of Aerospace Engineering
• Dr. Joseph Gavin – Preliminary Design, Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation
• Dr. Donald Nance – Senior Scientist, Harris Miller Miller & Hanson Inc.
Groups
Status
- Workflow Status:Published
- Created By:Tatianna Richardson
- Created:05/20/2025
- Modified By:Tatianna Richardson
- Modified:05/20/2025
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