Presented herein is a comprehensive workflow for the aeroacoustic analysis of a tilt-rotor air taxi during cruise and
hover flight using high-fidelity numerical methods. Employing a hybrid approach, the near-field flow is resolved by
an unsteady Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (URANS) solver, which is paired with a Ffowcs Williams-Hawkings
(FW-H) acoustic solver to compute the far-field noise. Both impermeable and permeable FW-H integration surface
approaches are incorporated. To balance computational resources and accuracy, the flow domain is halved, while
the acoustic data is processed to reflect the full vehicle acoustics. Isolated acoustic contributions of each rotor are
extracted, allowing the investigation into the impact of phase shifts on the acoustic signature of the vehicle. Spectral
analysis, directivity maps, and noise hemispheres reveal the resolution of fundamental open rotor characteristics and
amplified tonal interaction noise that can be linked to aeropropulsive phenomena. The introduction of phase shifts
can lead to reduced noise levels and an unsymmetrical acoustic field development. A direct comparison of the results
based on impermeable and permeable FW-H source surfaces shows general agreement on the directivity prediction
but significant differences in noise levels, potentially due to numerical dissipation, grid settings and the symmetry
boundary.
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Presented herein is a comprehensive workflow for the aeroacoustic analysis of a tilt-rotor air taxi during cruise and
hover flight using high-fidelity numerical methods. Employing a hybrid approach, the near-field flow is resolved by
an unsteady Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (URANS) solver, which is paired with a Ffowcs Williams-Hawkings
(FW-H) acoustic solver to compute the far-field noise. Both impermeable and permeable FW-H integration surface
approaches are incorporated. To balance com...
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