Blade Stiffened Carbon/Epoxy Panels with Longitudinally Tapered Acoustic Black Holes for Vibration Reduction

F-0081-2025-0276

5/20/2025

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Abstract
Content
ABSTRACT

Carbon/epoxy stiffened panels are being increasingly used in transport rotorcraft. The reduced mass density and high stiffness of carbon/epoxy composites can lead to higher levels of vibration relative to comparable metallic structures, which themselves can have vibrations and interior noise high enough to damage the hearing of crew and passengers. The current investigation explores a method to reduce the vibration of carbon/epoxy stiffened panels by introducing thickness tapers known as acoustic black holes (ABHs). The ABH feature is integrated into either the stiffeners or plate of a representative stiffened panel configuration. A finite element (FE) parametric study was used to guide designs that reduce the vibration of the panel without compromising the compressive buckling capability or mass of the panel. FE studies showed that a 30 ply to 12 ply thickness taper longitudinally oriented in the blade stiffener can reduce vibrations and increase compressive buckling capability. Carbon/epoxy panels were manufactured using a low-cost out-of-autoclave material with simple molding. Experimental testing concluded that integrating the ABH into the stiffeners longitudinally helped to reduce the broadband vibration by 5 dB and increase the buckling load (+4.3%) and collapse load (+16.5%) without increasing the mass greatly compared to a traditional baseline design.

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Citation
Brown, A., Patel, B., Robertson, N., Bakis, C., et al., "Blade Stiffened Carbon/Epoxy Panels with Longitudinally Tapered Acoustic Black Holes for Vibration Reduction," Vertical Flight Society 81st Annual Forum and Technology Display, Virginia Beach, Virginia, May 20, 2025, .
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
5/20/2025
Product Code
F-0081-2025-0276
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English