Boeing
Commercial Airplanes and Rolls-Royce Aero Engines have completed a noise
reduction flight test program that promises to make quiet jets even
quieter.
Known as the Quiet Technology Demonstrator (QTD), a Rolls Royce Trent
800 engine was modified with a package of noise reduction technologies
developed collaboratively by the two aerospace companies. Using a
777-200ER, the three week flight-test demonstrated noise levels
significantly below those of a standard 777, which is known as one of
the quietest airplanes in service today. Takeoff jet exhaust noise was
reduced by up to four decibels and inlet fan noise was reduced by up to
13 decibels.
Engineers used saw-tooth-shaped aerodynamic devices at the rear of the
nacelle and on the exhaust nozzle to control the mixing of the hot jet
exhaust, the bypass stream and the ambient air. The shape of the devices
was determined by computational fluid dynamics modeling and verified in
wind tunnel tests using scale models.
Fan noise also was reduced with extensive acoustic improvements to the
redesigned engine nacelle inlet. A new technology called Amax (area
maximization) increased by 30 percent the area of acoustic treatment in
the inlet casing. A new lining design was used that reduces
objectionable "buzz saw" noise passengers often hear during takeoff and
climb.
The flight tests, conducted at Boeing's Glasgow, Mont., airfield,
verified the computer and laboratory results. Some 200 microphones were
placed on the ground along the flight path, and 100 microphones were
affixed to the 777.
Teamed with computers, the microphones became an "acoustic camera" that
accurately and dynamically pinpointed high-frequency noise sources on
the airplane as it took off, flew the flight test pattern and landed
again. This ground noise monitoring capability was made possible by NASA
sponsorship.
Although the purpose of the QTD program was to reduce noise heard on the
ground, levels within the cabin -- equally important to the airlines -
also were analyzed. Nearly 100 microphones placed along the entire
length of the cabin registered a reduction of forward cabin buzz-saw
noise by seven decibels.
The culmination of years of work, these successful tests mark one of the
final stages before QTD noise reduction technology is implemented in
service.
Combined with airframe noise reduction and engine redesign efforts being
pursued separately, the new technologies can be incorporated on a new
airplane program or as a retrofit to airplanes in service. |