TY - JOUR
T1 - Multi-domain characterization of propeller cavitation noise using spectral-coherence-weighted synchronous modulation spectrum for quantifying rotation-synchronous modulation
AU - Wen, Beini
AU - Hao, Huiyun
AU - Hong, Ming
AU - Wu, Qin
AU - Huang, Biao
AU - Wang, Guoyu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
PY - 2026/6/30
Y1 - 2026/6/30
N2 - This study investigates how cavitation-regime transitions reorganize the broadband and rotation-synchronous components of propeller noise. A five-bladed model propeller was tested in a cavitation tunnel under uniform inflow at fixed rotational speed and advance coefficient, while the cavitation number was reduced from non-cavitating to tip-vortex, sheet, and sheet/cloud conditions. Hydrophone signals were acquired synchronously with high-speed imaging and analyzed using spectral analysis, short-time Fourier transforms, and a spectral-coherence-weighted synchronous modulation spectrum to identify the carrier bands supporting blade-rate modulation and their evolution with cavitation regime. As cavitation intensified, acoustic energy increased persistently in 2–5 kHz and 30–80 kHz, whereas a marked reduction appeared in 5–30 kHz when sheet/cloud cavitation became dominant and tip-vortex cavitation weakened. Rotation-synchronous modulation was supported mainly by 2–10 kHz carriers and shifted towards lower carrier frequencies under stronger cavitation, while radiation above 30 kHz became more intermittent. The results show that cavitation development reorganizes the spectral and modulation structure of propeller noise rather than amplifying all frequency bands uniformly. These conclusions are limited to a model-scale propeller under uniform inflow; extension to full-scale propellers or non-uniform wakes requires consideration of scale effects, wake-induced unsteadiness, and altered cavitation dynamics.
AB - This study investigates how cavitation-regime transitions reorganize the broadband and rotation-synchronous components of propeller noise. A five-bladed model propeller was tested in a cavitation tunnel under uniform inflow at fixed rotational speed and advance coefficient, while the cavitation number was reduced from non-cavitating to tip-vortex, sheet, and sheet/cloud conditions. Hydrophone signals were acquired synchronously with high-speed imaging and analyzed using spectral analysis, short-time Fourier transforms, and a spectral-coherence-weighted synchronous modulation spectrum to identify the carrier bands supporting blade-rate modulation and their evolution with cavitation regime. As cavitation intensified, acoustic energy increased persistently in 2–5 kHz and 30–80 kHz, whereas a marked reduction appeared in 5–30 kHz when sheet/cloud cavitation became dominant and tip-vortex cavitation weakened. Rotation-synchronous modulation was supported mainly by 2–10 kHz carriers and shifted towards lower carrier frequencies under stronger cavitation, while radiation above 30 kHz became more intermittent. The results show that cavitation development reorganizes the spectral and modulation structure of propeller noise rather than amplifying all frequency bands uniformly. These conclusions are limited to a model-scale propeller under uniform inflow; extension to full-scale propellers or non-uniform wakes requires consideration of scale effects, wake-induced unsteadiness, and altered cavitation dynamics.
KW - Cyclostationarity
KW - Envelope demodulation
KW - Propeller cavitation noise
KW - Rotation-synchronous modulation
KW - Sheet/cloud cavitation
KW - Time-frequency analysis
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105038306032
U2 - 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2026.125989
DO - 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2026.125989
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105038306032
SN - 0029-8018
VL - 359
JO - Ocean Engineering
JF - Ocean Engineering
IS - P2
M1 - 125989
ER -