jonasinc
Materials
- Feb 17, 2005
- 23
We have been testing a piezoelectric transducer connected to a small steel waveguide in close proximity to a flow orifice (~ 1 mm). The flow through the orifice should be subsonic since the pressure ratio is only about 0.4 (24 psig inlet, 14.7 psig outlet). However, we have encountered a phonomenon where the acoustic noise level increases by over 10X when the Reynolds number in the orifice goes above 1000. From 16 to 24 psig the noise level is at 1, then abover 24 psig, the noise increases to 10 or higher. I could understand if there was critical flow that there would be small sonic shockwaves, but that should not occur until approx. 30 psig.
Does anyone know why this occurs? It is just turbulence? We have tested several orifice sizes. While the increase in noise occurs at a different differential pressure for each one, the Reynolds number in the orifice is the same (!1000) at the pressure ratio where the noise increases.
Thanks,
Lee
Does anyone know why this occurs? It is just turbulence? We have tested several orifice sizes. While the increase in noise occurs at a different differential pressure for each one, the Reynolds number in the orifice is the same (!1000) at the pressure ratio where the noise increases.
Thanks,
Lee