“Herschel-Quincke Spiral” A New Interference Silencer
2003-01-1722
05/05/2003
- Event
- Content
- Over the last ten years there has been a steady growth in the market share of light-duty diesel engines, especially in Europe. At the same time, a general trend in petrol engine development has been seen, in which normal aspirated engines are being replaced by downsized turbocharged engines. Therefore, NVH engineers have to deal with new challenges. Turbochargers produce an aerodynamic noise in the frequency range above 1000Hz, which might influence the exterior and interior noise level. As a result, the additional requirement for acoustical components to reduce this flow noise is going to pose an increasing challenge for air intake system suppliers.This paper describes a new design of well-known wide band silencer first mentioned by A. Selamet, N.S.Dickey and J.M.Novak [1,2]. The silencer works according to the interference principle. The sound is guided into two or more parallel pipes of different lengths. The difference in length can be tuned to certain frequencies so that the waves in the different pipes cancel out each other if the phase difference is 180 degrees. The new design is well suited for difficult packaging requirements and can be easily manufactured by a rotary core molding process.
- Pages
- 7
- Citation
- Graefenstein, A., and Wenzel, W., "“Herschel-Quincke Spiral” A New Interference Silencer," SAE Technical Paper 2003-01-1722, 2003, https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-1722.