In view of the foreseen ISO 362 standard update in a more restrictive way, power-train exterior noise is likely to become a relevant issue in the automotive industry. This will lead to a strong focus on the design of engine shields and other thermo-acoustic trim parts positioned inside the engine bay. The possibility of designing such parts in an efficient and cost-effective way will call for reliable simulation methods to tackle real industrial cases. Available deterministic simulation methodologies have been tested by the authors during these last years in relation to the above-mentioned problem. The object of the simulations consists in evaluating the exterior Acoustic Transfer Functions (ATFs) of a simplified (but not trivial) vehicle engine bay mockup in the analysis frequency range up to 3.5 kHz. The focus was concentrated on both traditional and more innovative deterministic analysis methods. Boundary Element Method (BEM) and Finite Element Method (FEM) acoustic technologies, and their implementations in LMS Virtual.Lab code as Fast Multipole Method (FM BEM) and Automatically Matched Layer (FEM AML), have been mainly tested in this benchmarking activity. The computation performance of the very last approach FEM Adaptive Order (FEM AO) has also been evaluated. A comparison with experimental test results is always taken into account as a reference in order to judge on the methods models' accuracy. The capabilities of these methods to well represent both acoustic trim parts effect and apertures positioning around the engine bay were assessed and their computational performance compared.

High Performance Computation Codes for Vibro-acoustic Simulation in the Automotive Field

Giuseppe Miccoli;
2016

Abstract

In view of the foreseen ISO 362 standard update in a more restrictive way, power-train exterior noise is likely to become a relevant issue in the automotive industry. This will lead to a strong focus on the design of engine shields and other thermo-acoustic trim parts positioned inside the engine bay. The possibility of designing such parts in an efficient and cost-effective way will call for reliable simulation methods to tackle real industrial cases. Available deterministic simulation methodologies have been tested by the authors during these last years in relation to the above-mentioned problem. The object of the simulations consists in evaluating the exterior Acoustic Transfer Functions (ATFs) of a simplified (but not trivial) vehicle engine bay mockup in the analysis frequency range up to 3.5 kHz. The focus was concentrated on both traditional and more innovative deterministic analysis methods. Boundary Element Method (BEM) and Finite Element Method (FEM) acoustic technologies, and their implementations in LMS Virtual.Lab code as Fast Multipole Method (FM BEM) and Automatically Matched Layer (FEM AML), have been mainly tested in this benchmarking activity. The computation performance of the very last approach FEM Adaptive Order (FEM AO) has also been evaluated. A comparison with experimental test results is always taken into account as a reference in order to judge on the methods models' accuracy. The capabilities of these methods to well represent both acoustic trim parts effect and apertures positioning around the engine bay were assessed and their computational performance compared.
2016
Istituto per le Macchine Agricole e Movimento Terra - IMAMOTER - Sede Ferrara
High performance
Computation codes
Simulation models
Experimental test
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/372873
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