Acoustic liner
, typically turbofans, use acoustic liners to damp engine noise. Liners are applied on the internal walls of the engine nacelle, both in the intake and by-pass ducts, and use Helmholtz resonance principle for the dissipation of incident acoustic energy.
Configurations
An acoustic liner is a sandwich panel made by:- a porous top layer, called face-sheet;
- a honeycomb structure providing internal partitions;
- an impervious layer, called back-sheet or back-skin;
Acoustic liners can be distinguished by their internal configuration on the base of the number of honeycomb cell layers:
- Single Degree of Freedom liners are sandwich panels with a basic configuration, face-sheet bonded to a honeycomb layer and closed by a back-skin. Often ”rectiling” method is used to make sure linkage is given.
- Double Degree of Freedom liners are made by two layers of honeycomb cells divided by a porous septum. In particular, a DDOF liner is constituted by a top facing-sheet, a first honeycomb layer, a porous septum, a second honeycomb layer, and finally an impervious back-skin. Therefore, a DDOF liner couples two Helmholtz resonator in series.
Acoustic performance
The acoustic liners' performance can be verified in dedicated experimental test rigs, by means of virtual prototypes or by means of ground tests on full-scale engines. Both these types of tests and simulations allow to determine the acoustic attenuation in the far-field. Moreover, the acoustic performance is linked to the acoustic impedance which can be measured with one of the following techniques:- Impedance tube or Kundt's tube;
- Flow-duct-facilities
- In-situ method or Dean's method