Efficient boundary element analysis of periodic sound scatterers

Similar documents
ACOUSTIC PERFORMANCE OF PERIODIC COMPOSITE MATERIALS

A quasi two-dimensional model for sound attenuation by the sonic crystals

Phononic Crystals: Towards the Full Control of Elastic Waves propagation OUTLINE

Prediction of the radiated sound power from a fluid-loaded finite cylinder using the surface contribution method

On the Numerical Modeling of Elastic Resonant Acoustic Scatterers

Effects of mass distribution and buoyancy on the sound radiation of a fluid loaded cylinder

Improved near-wall accuracy for solutions of the Helmholtz equation using the boundary element method

Acoustic pressure characteristic analysis in cavity of 2-D phononic crystal

Transmission Matrix Model of a Quarter-Wave-Tube with Gas Temperature Gradients

FastBEM Acoustics. Verification Manual , Advanced CAE Research, LLC (ACR) Cincinnati, Ohio, USA All Rights Reserved

Prediction of Sound Propagation From Power Transmission Plant

Transmission Matrix Model of a Quarter-Wave-Tube with Gas Temperature Gradients

Studies of Sound Radiation From Beams with Acoustic Black Holes

FEM/FMBEM coupling for acoustic structure interaction and acoustic design sensitivity analysis with sound-absorbing materials

Self-noise prediction of a sharp-edged strut using a quasi-periodic CFD-BEM technique

Modelling and Simulation of Acoustic Wave Propagation in. Locally Resonant Sonic Materials

Phononic crystal with low filling fraction and absolute acoustic band gap in the audible frequency range: A theoretical and experimental study

Application and analysis of phononic crystal energy harvesting devices

Method for retrieving effective properties of locally resonant acoustic metamaterials

Sonic Crystals: Fundamentals, characterization and experimental techniques

New Developments of Frequency Domain Acoustic Methods in LS-DYNA

Complete band gaps in two-dimensional phononic crystal slabs

Convergence of modes in exterior acoustics problems with infinite elements

Structural Acoustics Applications of the BEM and the FEM

Effect of effective length of the tube on transmission loss of reactive muffler

Spatio-Temporal Characterization of Bio-acoustic Scatterers in Complex Media

Acoustic radiation by means of an acoustic dynamic stiffness matrix in spherical coordinates

Effect of Length and Porosity on the Acoustic Performance of Concentric Tube Resonators

Efficient calculation for evaluating vast amounts of quadrupole sources in BEM using fast multipole method

Wojciech ŁAPKA, Czesław CEMPEL

NUMERICAL MODELING AND EXPERIMENTS ON SOUND PROPAGATION THROUGH THE SONIC CRYSTAL AND DESIGN OF RADIAL SONIC CRYSTAL ARPAN GUPTA

Dual phononic and photonic band gaps in a periodic array of pillars deposited on a membrane

Transmission Loss Assessment for a Muffler by Boundary Element Method Approach

Band gaps in a phononic crystal constituted by cylindrical dots on a homogeneous plate

Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics

Learning Acoustics through the Boundary Element Method: An Inexpensive Graphical Interface and Associated Tutorials

Simulation of Horn Driver Response by Direct Combination of Compression Driver Frequency Response and Horn FEA

Fast Multipole BEM for Structural Acoustics Simulation

Fan duct noise elimination by the use of helicoidal resonators

Muffler Transmission Loss Simple Expansion Chamber

An adaptive fast multipole boundary element method for the Helmholtz equation

A study on regularization parameter choice in Near-field Acoustical Holography

Sound radiation from nested cylindrical shells

Modeling and Analysis of Spacecraft Structures Subject to Acoustic Excitation

HACES SONOROS EN CRISTALES DE SONIDO FINITOS

inter.noise 2000 The 29th International Congress and Exhibition on Noise Control Engineering August 2000, Nice, FRANCE

A far-field based T-matrix method for three dimensional acoustic scattering

Numerical modeling of Panphonics s G1 flat loudspeaker

American International Journal of Research in Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics

Numerical Model of the Insertion Loss Promoted by the Enclosure of a Sound Source

Simulation of acoustic and vibroacoustic problems in LS-DYNA using boundary element method ABSTRACT:

Sound radiation from the open end of pipes and ducts in the presence of mean flow

SIMULATION OF ORGAN PIPES ACOUSTIC BEHAVIOR BY MEANS OF VARIOUS NUMERICAL TECHNIQUES

Noise impact of innovative barriers dedicated to freight trains in urban areas

A wavenumber approach to characterizing the diffuse field conditions in reverberation rooms

Transmission Loss of a Dissipative Muffler with Perforated Central Pipe

Noise in enclosed spaces. Phil Joseph

Sound Radiation Modes of a Tire on a Reflecting Surface

Phase-controlling phononic crystals: Realization of acoustic Boolean logic gates

Guided convected acoustic wave coupled with a membrane wall used as noise reduction device

ACOUSTIC FILTERS CHARACTERIZATION BASED ON FINITE ELEMENTS MODELS

A SIMPLE DECOUPLED MODAL CALCULATION OF SOUND TRANSMISSION BETWEEN VOLUMES

Acoustics Analysis of Speaker ANSYS, Inc. November 28, 2014

The Corrected Expressions for the Four-Pole Transmission Matrix for a Duct with a Linear Temperature Gradient and an Exponential Temperature Profile

Sound Propagation in Porous Media

Experimental evidence for the existence of absolute acoustic band gaps in two-dimensional periodic composite media

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Modeling of cylindrical baffle mufflers for low frequency sound propagation

CONVERGENCE BOUNDS FOR PRECONDITIONED GMRES USING ELEMENT-BY-ELEMENT ESTIMATES OF THE FIELD OF VALUES

NATO ASI on Photonic Crystals and Light Localization, Crete, June 19-30, 2000 ACOUSTIC BAND GAP MATERIALS

Sound Propagation Analysis on Sonic Crystal Elastic Structures using the Method of Fundamental Solutions (MFS)

EFFECTS OF PERMEABILITY ON SOUND ABSORPTION AND SOUND INSULATION PERFORMANCE OF ACOUSTIC CEILING PANELS

Band structure and transmission of 3D chiral sonic crystals

VIBRO-THERMOGRAPHY OF DEBONDING DEFECTS IN COMPOSITE PLATES

Redirection of flexural waves in platonic crystal slabs

Finite Element Analysis of Acoustic Scattering

Chapter 2 Fundamental Properties of Phononic Crystal

The equivalent translational compliance of steel studs and resilient channel bars

SUPPLEMENTARY FIGURES

arxiv: v1 [physics.class-ph] 24 Jul 2008

THE RADIATION EFFICIENCY OF FINITE SIZE FLAT PANELS

Low Frequency Noise Attenuation inside Ducts using locally resonant periodic flush mounted Steel Patches

FDTD analysis on the sound insulation performance of wall system with narrow gaps

Transmission loss of rectangular silencers using meso-porous and micro-perforated linings

Designable hybrid sonic crystals for transportation and division of acoustic images

Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto daigaku-katsura, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto, Japan.

WAVE PROPAGATION IN PLATES WITH PERIODIC ARRAY OF IMPERFECT ACOUSTIC BLACK HOLES

A broadband method for liner impedance eduction in the presence of a mean flow

inter.noise 2000 The 29th International Congress and Exhibition on Noise Control Engineering August 2000, Nice, FRANCE

BEM Methods for Acoustic and Vibroacoustic Problems in LS-DYNA

Interfacial effects in electromagnetic coupling within piezoelectric phononic crystals

An explicit time-domain finite-element method for room acoustics simulation

Investigation of Passive Control Devices for Potential Application to a Launch Vehicle Structure to Reduce the Interior Noise Levels During Launch

Prediction of Light Rail Vehicle Noise in Running Condition using SEA

Static pressure and temperature coefficients of working standard microphones

Sound radiation and transmission. Professor Phil Joseph. Departamento de Engenharia Mecânica

1817. Research of sound absorption characteristics for the periodically porous structure and its application in automobile

Analytical Solution for a Fluid-Structure Interaction Problem in Comparison with Finite Element Solution

The sound power output of a monopole source in a cylindrical pipe containing area discontinuities

Modelling I. The Need for New Formulas Calculating Near Field, Lateral Resolution and Depth of Field D. Braconnier, E. Carcreff, KJTD, Japan

Transcription:

Boundary Element and Meshless Methods in Acoustics and Vibrations: Paper ICA2016-418 Efficient boundary element analysis of periodic sound scatterers M. Karimi, P. Croaker, N. Kessissoglou 1 School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia, m.karimi@unsw.edu.au Abstract A boundary element technique is used to formulate exterior acoustic problems comprising of periodic arrangements of sound scatterers. The matrix equation formulated by the boundary element method for this acoustic scattering problem is a block Toeplitz matrix. The discrete Fourier transform is then employed in an iterative algorithm to solve the block Toeplitz system. Solving a periodic acoustic problem using the block Toeplitz system significantly reduces computational time and storage requirements. Solid cylindrical scatterers in a periodic square lattice arrangement are examined. Result for the insertion loss of the sonic crystal barrier is presented. Directivity and contour plots of the total acoustic field at selected discrete frequencies are also presented and compared with those obtained by the finite element method. Keywords: Boundary element method; Periodic scatterers; Block Toeplitz matrix; Sonic crystal noise barrier

Efficient boundary element analysis of periodic sound scatterers 1 Introduction Sonic crystals are periodic arrangements of acoustic scatterers embedded in a fluid medium [1]. An interesting property of these structures is the occurrence of ranges of frequencies where no propagating modes are supported by the periodic structure, known as band gaps. The physical mechanism that explains this phenomenon is the destructive Bragg interference. Vasseur et al. [2] examined the sound attenuation by a square array of parallel copper cylinders in air both theoretically and experimentally. Their results revealed that rigid hollow and solid cylinders produce similar sound transmission. The performance of a two-dimensional arrangement of rigid hollow cylinders in air was investigated by Sanchez-Perez et al. [3]. Koussa et al. [4] combined two geometries of sonic crystal scatterers aligned parallel to the ground with a rigid straight noise barrier. To further extend the barrier insertion loss, the scatterers were modelled as either rigid cylinders or resonant cavities, where the cavities were either rigid or lined with an absorbent material. The outdoor experiment on periodic arrays of scatterers showed that they can be exploited as a suitable device to reduce noise in free-field conditions. A Toeplitz system is a linear system of equations in which the coefficient matrix has constant elements along each diagonal [5]. Levinson [6] proposed an algorithm which solves n Toeplitz equations in O(n 2 ) operations. The solution of block Toeplitz matrices with Toeplitz entries was studied by Kalouptsidis et al. [7]. Gohberg et al. [8] described a unified approach to obtain the solution of a linear system of equations with a recursive structure which includes Toeplitz, Hilbert and Vandermonde matrices. A fast stable solver was derived using a modified QR algorithm for non-symmetric Toeplitz-like matrices [9]. Saad [10, 11] showed that the minimum residual method and generalized minimal residual method (GMRES) can be used to solve indefinite and non-symmetric Toeplitz systems, respectively. Czuprynski et al. [12] showed that for acoustic radiation problems with rotationally symmetric boundary surfaces, the coefficient matrix is a block circulant matrix. They also demonstrated that a distributed parallel algorithm can speed up the solution of block circulant linear systems. The authors recently showed that formulating an acoustic problem involving a unidirectional periodic structure leads to a block Toeplitz system [13]. A small segment of a structure was selected as a unit cell and the boundary element method was implemented to model the problem. In this work, sonic crystal noise barriers with periodicity in three directions are examined. Consequently, a 3-level block Toeplitz matrix is formed using the boundary element method. Due to the translational invariance of the free-space Green s function, applying the boundary element method to the multi-directional periodic system leads to the formation of a multilevel block Toeplitz matrix. The GMRES algorithm is then used to solve the multilevel block Toeplitz system. Rigid cylindrical scatterers in a square lattice arrangement are examined. Results for the insertion loss, directivity and contour plots of the sound pressure at receiver locations in the shadow zone of the sonic crystal barrier are presented and compared with those obtain using the finite element method. 2

2 Numerical Methodology Assuming a time harmonic dependence of the form e iωt, the Helmholtz equation is given by p(x) + k 2 f p(x) = F (1) where p(x) is the acoustic pressure at field point x, is the Laplacian operator, k f = ω/c f is the acoustic wave number, ω is the angular frequency, c f is the speed of sound and F is the source. Equation (1) can be written in a weak formulation after integrating by parts twice as follows [14] G(x,y) c(x)p(x) + n(y) p(y)dγ(y) = iωρ f G(x,y)v f (y)dγ(y) + p inc (x) (2) Γ where ρ f is the fluid density, v f (y) is the fluid particle velocity and i = 1. The vector n(y) represents the outward normal vector at the source point position y on the boundary Γ. / n(y) is the normal derivative. In equation (2), c(x) is a free-term coefficient and equals one in the domain interior and 0.5 on a smooth boundary. G(x, y) is the free-space Green s function for the Helmholtz equation given by G(x,y) = eik f r 4πr Γ where r = x y (3) p inc is the incident acoustic pressure as a result of the acoustic source. In this work, a monopole source was considered. Assuming the monopole source to be a pulsating sphere with strength Q, the incident pressure is given by [15] p inc (x) = iωρ f Q eik f r (4) 4πr The incident acoustic field radiated by the monopole sound source is applied as a load in the boundary integral equation (2). The sonic crystal barrier examined in this work is considered as a rigid structure. Hence the fluid particle velocity at the scatterer surface is zero, that is, v f (y) = 0, y Γ. The boundary element method (BEM) formulation then becomes a linear system of equations which can be expressed as follows T a = b (5) where T is the BEM coefficient matrix and a, b represent the sound pressure and incident pressure at nodal points, respectively. For an acoustic scattering problem which involves periodic structures, the matrix equation formulated by the BEM is a block Toeplitz matrix. A block Toeplitz matrix has constant blocks along each diagonal and has the form: T 0 T 1 T 1 m T 1 T 0 T 1 T 2 m T =.. T..... 1. (6)........ T 1 T m 1 T m 2 T 1 T 0 3

where each T i is an n n matrix if the structure is periodic in only one direction. Inspection of equation (6) reveals that the block Toeplitz matrix T can be specified by its first block row and its first block column. If the structure has periodicity in multiple directions, T is a multilevel block Toeplitz matrix. As such, the number of levels in T corresponds to the number of periodic directions. 3 Results and Discussion The acoustic performance of a periodic array of acoustically rigid cylinders in free space is examined. The surface of the 3D model was discretised by linear discontinuous quadrilateral elements. In the numerical model, the cylinder exterior diameter is 0.2 m, the cylinder height is 1 m and the lattice constant is 0.3 m, where the lattice constant is defined as the distance between the centres of adjacent scatterers. Figure 1 shows a schematic diagram of the acoustic domain and relative position of the source and the receiver points with respect to the barriers. A monopole source is placed in front of the barrier and the receiver is located in the barrier shadow zone, as shown in Figure 1. Sound attenuation by a noise barrier is expressed in terms of insertion loss (IL) as follows [16] IL = SPL without barrier SPL with barrier (7) where SPL without barrier and SPL with barrier respectively correspond to the sound pressure levels at the same receiver position without and with the presence of the barrier. Source Receiver 0.95m 3m Figure 1: Configuration of a 4 5 square lattice sonic crystal barrier showing the point source and receiver locations Figure 2 presents the insertion loss as a function of frequency for a 4 5 square lattice sonic crystal barrier using solid cylinder scatterers under monopole source excitation. Results obtained using the periodic BEM (PBEM) technique and from a similar model of the sonic crystal barrier using the finite element method (FEM) are presented. In the periodic BEM model, a small segment of a single scatterer was chosen as a unit cell and the sonic crystal barrier is 4

represented by periodicity in three directions. The FEM model was developed as a reference solution using the commercial software COMSOL Multiphysics (v5.0). The acoustic domain in the FEM model was discretised using tetrahedral elements. A non-reflective boundary condition was applied on the boundary of the acoustic domain to allow the outgoing acoustic waves to leave the domain with minimal reflections. Very good agreement in the results from the periodic BEM technique and FEM can be observed. High insertion loss is achieved between 500 Hz and 700 Hz. The centre frequency predicted by Bragg s law for a lattice constant of 0.3 m is 572 Hz which is nearly midway between the lower and upper frequencies of the high insertion loss. Since the sonic crystal barrier in this study is in free space, the insertion loss results include diffraction around the top and bottom of the scatterers as well as around the edges of the square lattice array. Insertion loss (db) 30 20 10 0-10 PBEM FEM -20 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 Frequency (Hz) Figure 2: Insertion loss obtained using the 3D periodic BEM (PBEM) technique and from a 3D FEM model for a 4 5 square lattice sonic crystal barrier comprising of solid cylinder scatterers The directivity of the sound pressure in the barrier shadow zone at two distinct frequencies of 500 Hz and 850 Hz is presented in Figure 3. The direct incident pressure denoted by Pinc is also shown. The source was located in front of the barrier at 270. The periodic BEM technique was used to calculate the scattered sound pressure at data recovery points located on a circle with radius of 3 m from the centre of the sonic crystal barrier in the barrier shadow zone. The directivity of the sound pressure field predicted by the periodic BEM technique is in very good agreement with results obtained from FEM. At 500 Hz, a low pressure region is generated in the barrier shadow zone due to destructive interference between scattered waves within the periodic arrangement of the sound scatterers. In contrast, at 850 Hz, constructive interference between scattered waves amplifies the sound pressure in the barrier shadow zone at 90. 5

150 Frequency=800 Hz 90 300 120 60 200 100 30 150 Frequency=850 Hz 90 400 120 60 300 200 100 30 180 0 180 0 210 330 210 330 240 300 270 PBEM FEM Pinc (a) 500 Hz 240 300 270 PBEM FEM Pinc (b) 850 Hz Figure 3: Directivity of the total sound pressure (in Pascals) for the 4 5 square lattice sonic crystal barrier Figure 4 presents contour plots of the sound pressure level for the sonic crystal barrier at 500 and 850 Hz, obtained from both the 3D FEM model and using the periodic BEM technique by computing the sound pressure on a rectangular data recovery mesh consisting of almost 83,000 points located on a horizontal plane at the bottom of cylinders. Very close agreement in the contour plots of the sound pressure level predicted using FEM and the periodic BEM technique is observed. At 500 Hz in Figure 4(a), the sound waves within the sonic crystal barrier destructively interfere resulting in significant attenuation in the barrier shadow zone. 4 Summary A periodic array of sound scatterers was modelled by exploiting the block Toeplitz structure in the boundary element formulation. The block Toeplitz system for this acoustic scattering problem was solved using the GMRES algorithm. Periodicity of the structures in three directions was taken into account. Results for the insertion loss, directivity and contour plots of the sound pressure at receiver locations in the shadow zone of the sonic crystal barrier were presented. Very good agreement was observed from the comparison between the results obtained by the periodic BEM and those obtain using the finite element method, showing that in addition to significant reduction in computational time and storage requirements, the current approach produces accurate results. 6

(a) 500 Hz (b) 850 Hz Figure 4: Sound pressure level (db) for the 4 5 square lattice sonic crystal barrier using FEM (left) and periodic BEM (right) at (a) 500 Hz and (b) 850 Hz 7

References [1] Economou, E. N. and Sigalas, M. Stop bands for elastic waves in periodic composite materials, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol 95 (4), 1994, pp 1734-1740. [2] Vasseur, J. O., Deymier, P. A., Khelif, A., Lambin, P., Djafari-Rouhani, B., Akjouj, A., Dobrzynski, L., Fettouhi, N., and Zemmouri, J. Phononic crystal with low filling fraction and absolute acoustic band gap in the audible frequency range: A theoretical and experimental study, Physical Review E, Vol 65, 2002, 056608. [3] Sanchez-Perez, J. V., Rubio, C., Martinez-Sala, R., Sanchez-Grandia, R., and Gomez, V. Acoustic barriers based on periodic arrays of scatterers, Applied Physics Letters, Vol 81 (27), 2002, pp 5240-5242. [4] Koussa, F., Defrance, J., Jean, P., and Blanc-Benon, P. Acoustical efficiency of a sonic crystal assisted noise barrier, Acta Acustica United with Acustica, Vol 99 (3), 2013, pp 399-409. [5] Golub, G. and Van Loan, C., Matrix computations. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (USA), 2nd ed., 1989. [6] Levinson, N., The Wiener RMS error criterion in filter design and prediction, Journal of Mathematical Physics, Vol 25, 1947, pp 261-278. [7] Kalouptsidis, N., Carayannis, G., and Manolakis, D. Fast algorithms for block Toeplitz matrices with Toeplitz entries, Signal Processing, Vol 6 (1), 1984, pp 77-81. [8] Gohberg, I., Kailath, T., and Koltracht, I. Efficient solution of linear systems of equations with recursive structure, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, Vol 80, 1986, pp 81-113. [9] Chandrasekaran, S. and Sayed, A. H. A fast stable solver for nonsymmetric Toeplitz and quasi-toeplitz systems of linear equations, SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Applications, Vol 19 (1), 1998, pp 107-139. [10] Saad, Y. and Schultz, M. H. GMRES: A generalized minimal residual algorithm for solving nonsymmetric linear systems, SIAM Journal on Scientific and Statistical Computing, Vol 7 (3), 1986, pp. 856 869. [11] Saad, Y. Iterative methods for sparse linear systems. Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, Philadelphia (USA), 2nd ed., 2003. [12] Czuprynski, K. D., Fahnline, J. B., and Shontz, S. M. Parallel boundary element solutions of block circulant linear systems for acoustic radiation problems with rotationally symmetric boundary surfaces, in Proc. Inter-noise 2012, (19-22 August 2012, New York, USA). [13] Karimi, M., Croaker, P., and Kessissoglou, N. Boundary element solution for periodic acoustic problems, Journal of Sound and Vibration, Vol 360, 2016, pp 129-139. 8

[14] Marburg, S. and Nolte, B. Computational acoustics of noise propagation in fluids - Finite and boundary element methods. Springer, Berlin (Germany), 2008. [15] Crocker, M. Handbook of Noise and Vibration Control. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey (USA), 2007. [16] Gupta, A., Lim, K. M., and Chew, C. H. A quasi two-dimensional model for sound attenuation by the sonic crystals, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol 132 (4), 2012, pp 2909-2914. 9