
Experimental study of the transmission of vibrations and noise of an hydrofoil excited by cavitation in a hydrodynamic tunnel
Ship propellers are responsible for radiated noise in the near and far environment. One of the main sources of noise from propellers is due to the cavitation phenomenon that occurs on each blade. This phenomenon produces strong pressure fluctuations, which in turn generate noise that
propagates in the ocean but also inside the boat. The strong wall pressure fluctuations excite the hull structure, which then transmits the noise inside the ship. The transmission is problematic for passenger ships and cruise liners, for whom silence is synonymous with quality. Efforts are
being made to improve sound absorption and insulation, but the phenomenon of noise transmission from propellers to the hull via strong pressure fluctuations is still poorly understood. The aim of the paper is to simplify the problem studying a hydrofoil excited by a controlled flow and subjected
to different states of cavitation. Vibration and acoustic measurements will be carried out to study the transmission of noise and vibration through the tunnel wall in order to be correlated to the different states of cavitation.
The requested document is freely available to subscribers. Users without a subscription can purchase this article.
- Sign in below if you have already registered for online access
Sign in
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: IRENav - Ecole Navale
Publication date: 04 October 2024
The Noise-Con conference proceedings are sponsored by INCE/USA and the Inter-Noise proceedings by I-INCE. NOVEM (Noise and Vibration Emerging Methods) conference proceedings are included. All NoiseCon Proceedings one year or older are free to download. InterNoise proceedings from outside the USA older than 10 years are free to download. Others are free to INCE/USA members and member societies of I-INCE.
- Membership Information
- INCE Subject Classification
- Ingenta Connect is not responsible for the content or availability of external websites
- Access Key
- Free content
- Partial Free content
- New content
- Open access content
- Partial Open access content
- Subscribed content
- Partial Subscribed content
- Free trial content