Circular Acoustic Black Holes Integrated into Carbon/Epoxy Stiffened Panels for Noise Control
Carbon fiber reinforced epoxy composite stiffened panels are increasingly being used for structural components in large transport rotorcraft. However, problems are arising with high levels of vibration and interior noise due to the increased stiffness-to-density ratio of composites. The current investigation explores the potential of reducing vibrations in carbon/epoxy stiffened panels with the integration of acoustic black holes (ABH), namely features that incorporate a power law thickness taper. The proposed approach involves designing a taper into the thickness of the blade stiffeners as well as the thin plate. Integration of ABHs into the fuselage structure has the potential to reduce broadband vibrations. Multiple parametric studies with either an ABH integrated into the blade stiffener or a grid of ABHs integrated into the plate were conducted, and the tradeoffs between vibration amplitudes, panel mass, and compressive buckling load were examined. Carbon/epoxy panels were fabricated using vacuum-bag-oven processing with out-of-autoclave prepreg and verified to be of good quality. The integrated velocity response, a proxy for the radiated noise from a panel, and compressive buckling were simulated using finite elements. Comparisons were made to experimentally measured data from modal testing and compression buckling testing. Experimental results indicated that when an ABH is integrated into the blade stiffener and 15 ABHs are integrated into the plate in a grid configuration, the panel mass was unchanged, the integrated velocity response decreased by 2.82 dB, and the buckling load increased by 2.9% compared to a baseline non-tapered design.
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Work Title | Circular Acoustic Black Holes Integrated into Carbon/Epoxy Stiffened Panels for Noise Control |
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License | In Copyright (Rights Reserved) |
Work Type | Article |
Publication Date | January 1, 2024 |
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Deposited | June 30, 2025 |
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