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Numerical simulation of aeroacoustics using the variational multiscale method. Application to the problem of human phonation

  • Autores: Arnau Pont Ribas
  • Directores de la Tesis: Ramón Codina Rovira (dir. tes.), Joan Baiges Aznar (codir. tes.)
  • Lectura: En la Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC) ( España ) en 2018
  • Idioma: español
  • Tribunal Calificador de la Tesis: Johan Hoffman (presid.), Riccardo Rossi (secret.), Leo Miguel González Gutiérrez (voc.)
  • Programa de doctorado: Programa de Doctorado en Análisis Estructural por la Universidad Politécnica de Catalunya
  • Materias:
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  • Resumen
    • The solution of the human phonation problem applying computational mechanics is covered by several research branches, such as Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), biomechanics or acoustics, among others. In the present thesis, the problem is approached from the Computational Aeroacoustics (CAA) point of view and the first main objective consists in developing numerical methods of general application that can take part in the solution of any scenario related to human phonation with a reasonable cost. In this sense, only the compressible Navier-Stokes equations can describe all flow and acoustic scales without any modeling, which is known as Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS), but its computational cost is usually unaffordable. Even in the case of a Large Eddy Simulation (LES), where the small scales are modeled, the cost can still be a handicap due to the complexity of the problem. This drawback gets worse in the low Mach regime due to the large disparity between flow velocity and sound speed, which leads to an ill-conditioning of the system of equations, specially for conservative schemes. At this point, it makes sense to move towards the incompressible flow approximation, bearing in mind the low velocities expected in human phonation problems.

      Incompressible flows do not yield any acoustics, for which a second problem containing the propagation of the sound sources needs to be modeled and solved. These are the so called hybrid methods, which allow a better conditioning of the problem by segregating flow and acoustic scales. Lighthill's analogy has been taken as starting point for the present work, but its restriction to free-field scenarios has motivated the extension of the method to arbitrary geometries and non-uniform flows. The first development in this direction consists in a splitting of Lighthill's analogy into a quadrupolar and dipolar component, which does not change the original problem but allows assessing the contribution of solid boundaries to the generation of sound. The second step consists in the development of a stabilized Finite Element (FEM) formulation for the Acoustic Perturbation Equations (APE) which account for non-uniform flows and perform a complete filtering of the acoustic scales. The final step assumes the compressible approach but omitting the energy equation and thus considering both flow and acoustic propagation as isentropic. In this case the solver is unified and hence a method for applying compatible boundary conditions for flow and acoustics has been developed. Moreover, the whole numerical framework has been extended to dynamic phonation cases, which require using an Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian (ALE) reference. Also, a novel remeshing strategy with conservative interpolation between meshes is presented.

      In the last chapter a challenging case in human phonation has been chosen for testing the developed computational framework: the fricative phoneme /s/. Unlike vowels, which are voiced sounds defined by a few characteristic frequencies, fricatives cannot be simulated as the propagation of a known analytic solution (glottal pulse) because the sound sources correspond to a wide range of turbulent scales. Therefore, a CFD calculation is mandatory in order to capture all relevant eddies behind the generation of sound. This problem is solved with an LES together with the Variational Multiscale (VMS) stabilization method as turbulence model, which is supplemented with several acoustic formulations when using incompressible flow. The analysis of the results focuses on the numerical representation of turbulence and the acoustic signal at the far-field, which has been compared to experimental recordings. Finally, the role of the upper incisors in the generation of the fricative sound has been evaluated. All simulations have been run with the parallel multiphysics FEM code FEMUSS, based on FORTRAN Object-Oriented-Programming land the OpenMPI parallel library.


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