Bubble curtains for noise mitigation: one vs. two
Bubble curtains are widely used to protect marine life from exposure to noise during offshore construction. However, operating a bubble curtain is costly. Therefore optimizing the acoustic effect of the available air is important. An interesting approach is to split the airflow rate into two separat...
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Zusammenfassung: | Bubble curtains are widely used to protect marine life from exposure to noise
during offshore construction. However, operating a bubble curtain is costly.
Therefore optimizing the acoustic effect of the available air is important. An
interesting approach is to split the airflow rate into two separate bubble
curtains, rather than one single curtain. This concept is tested experimentally
and numerically. The experiments and the model show an increase in performance
of the compressed air when it is split between two manifolds. An increased
insertion loss of up to 11dB is measured. This increase in performance is
possibly due to the fact that the reflective properties of the bubble curtains
are maintained when halving the airflow rate. In effect, by splitting the
airflow a second acoustic barrier is added. Additionally, the variations in the
bubble curtain performance between individual measurements are shown to be
largely caused by temporal variations in the air distribution. The
applicability of equivalent fluid models for bubble curtains is discussed, and
it is shown that accounting for a gap in the bubble curtain, close to the
manifold where the bubble curtain is not fully developed, results in better
agreement between the modelled and the measured insertion loss. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.14415 |