
Identification of low frequency wind turbine noise using secondary windscreens of various geometries
To accurately characterise the noise measured in the vicinity of wind farms, outdoor microphones must be adequately protected from the wind. A standard 90 mm windshield is appropriate for measurements in light winds; however, as the wind speed increases, wind-induced pressure fluctuations
contribute to the measured sound pressure level, leading to erroneous data. Three alternative secondary windshields have been developed and tested in an outdoor environment and evaluated for their ability to allow low frequency noise and infrasound measurements to be obtained in the presence
of wind. Performance evaluation is facilitated through analysis of high resolution spectra as well as analysis of the coherence between microphones with different windshields under various meteorological conditions. This enables a distinction to be made between noise originating from sources
such as a wind farm and wind-induced noise. The effect of the microphone location with respect to the ground surface has also been investigated for frequencies up to 100 Hz.
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: University of Adelaide
Publication date: 01 March 2014
NCEJ is the pre-eminent academic journal of noise control. It is the Journal of the Institute of Noise Control Engineering of the USA. Since 1973 NCEJ has served as the primary source for noise control researchers, students, and consultants.
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