Hassan Kassem

Work place: School of Mathematics, Computer Science and Engineering, City University London

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Research Interests: Computational Science and Engineering

Biography

Hassan Kassem pursued his PhD degree at City University London working on numerical prediction of transonic fluter of composite aircraft wings. He has a master by research from University of Technology, Malaysia where his research was focused on turbulent combustion modeling. During his research he worked on different modeling problems including fluid-structure interaction, multiphase flow, reacting flow and flow in porous media. Most of his CFD work developed within OpenFOAM framework programming.

Author Articles
Enhancing Noise Attenuation in Exhaust Mufflers on Response to Baffle Configuration

By Ahmed Elsayed Christophe Bastien Humberto Medina Steve Jones Hassan Kassem

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijem.2017.04.02, Pub. Date: 8 Jul. 2017

Using baffles in exhaust mufflers is known to improve transmission loss and reduce the noise emitted to the environment. This paper postulates that baffle cut ratio affects the muffler performance in the same effect as a shell-and-tube heat exchanger, consequently the baffle cut ratio should affect the muffler performance. This study presents a parametric study on the effect of baffle configuration on predicted transmission loss and pressure drop. The effect of baffle cut ratio, baffle spacing, number of baffle holes, and hole pattern distribution on transmission loss was investigated. Results showed that reducing the baffle cut ratio increased the transmission loss at intermediate frequencies by up to 45% while decreasing the spacing between muffler plates improved the muffler transmission loss by 40%. The assessment of the baffle effect on flow using a thermal baffle approach model indicated a sudden drop in fluid temperature in axial flow direction by 15% as the baffle cut ratio changed from 75% to 25. To the best of authors knowledge, the effect of baffle cut ratio configuration on acoustic response and back pressure has not been previously reported or investigated.

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