Abstract

The outside rear-view mirror (OSRVM) is installed on the vehicle’s surface, which causes unwanted aerodynamic noise and wind drag during driving. It is important to use simulation methods to predict the performance of aerodynamic noise and wind drag of commercial vehicles due to the OSRVM. Considering the wind drag of the OSRVM, a combinational simulation strategy is employed to calculate external flow and interior acoustic fields of commercial vehicles, respectively. The flow field is computed a priori with an incompressible flow solver. The acoustic field was then computed based on the information extracted from the CFD solver. To obtain the interior noise level at the driver’s ears, a vibroacoustic model is used to calculate the response of the window glass structure and interior cavities, where the unsteady aerodynamic pressure loading on the two side windows’ surface is treated as the acoustic source field. The paper provides flow field and acoustic simulations for three OSRVM configuration models. The results are compared to data obtained in road sliding test measurement on the commercial vehicle. The accuracy of the hybrid simulation method is proved, and the comparative analyses verify that the OSRVM B model dramatically reduces the interior noise and wind drag of commercial vehicles.

1. Introduction

The importance of commercial vehicles as medium and long-distance transportation tools has been increasing with the rapid development of the logistics industry. Noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) are now significant in commercial vehicles, and automotive companies are interested in levels of NVH as a component of the development of comfortable vehicles [1]. The commercial vehicle test proves that when the driving speed is greater than 90 m/s, the impact of aerodynamic noise on the interior vehicle is most prominent in broadband frequency noise, directly affecting interior sound quality and driver comfort.

Meanwhile, aerodynamic noise and wind drag are important parameters for the aerodynamic performance of commercial vehicles. In general, the outside rear-view mirror is also known to increase the total amount of wind drag by 2∼7% [2]. The selection of the outside rear-view (or side-view) mirror (OSRVM) and design modification are needed for the reduction of aerodynamic noise and wind drag. The OSRVM is installed on the vehicle’s surface to guarantee the driver sees the areas behind and to the sides of the vehicle. During driving, the high-speed airflow flows through the outer surface of the vehicle are more prominent, resulting in a serious separation of the airflow flowing through the mirror area, and the turbulent pressure generated pulsates against the window, causing strong aerodynamic noise inside the vehicle. It is of great significance to study the transient flow field and sound field propagation for the drag and noise reduction of the whole vehicle.

At present, researchers have made considerable research on the unsteady flow field and sound field of automobile rear-view mirrors. Kucukcoskun et al. [3] reported the distribution of sound source on the surface of the rear-view mirror. The computational fluid dynamics (CFD) combined with the acoustic finite element method (FEM) is used to calculate the distribution of the sound field outside the vehicle. A method for predicting the noise outside the vehicle is obtained by comparing the wind tunnel experiment. However, it did not predict the aerodynamic noise inside the cab. Schell and Cotoni [4] combined CFD with the acoustic wave equation to propose the air-vibration-acoustic simulation method to predict the sound pressure level in the cab, and the sound pressure level near the driver’s ear was obtained by incompressible unsteady flow excitation. However, it did not consider the effects of different rear-view mirrors on the interior noise and the effects of wind drag for the whole vehicle.

Chu et al. [5] compared the aerodynamic characteristics of the OSRVM with the inner ducts and original mirror models. The modified mirror models can enhance the aerodynamic flow and noise around the mirror. This study did not achieve the goal of reducing the sound pressure level in the cab. Mutnuri et al [6] combined CFD with statistical energy analysis (SEA) to evaluate the design of the rear-view mirror aerodynamic noise. The conclusion was obtained that the aerodynamic noise of the rear-view mirror mounted on the glass is larger than the aerodynamic noise of the rear-view mirror mounted on the door from quantitative and qualitative analysis, which indicated the installation position of the rear-view mirror has a great influence on the interior noise and helped to guide the design of the rear-view mirror installation. Gu et al. [7] verified the feasibility of the large-eddy simulation method contrasted the test result and used this method to calculate the buffeting noise data of the car. The interior acoustics were analyzed combined with the weak vibration radiation of the window with the partially open window. However, they did not study the effect of fully enclosed windows on the interior noise. Iida K et al. and Yamade Y et al. [8, 9] employed the finite element method to calculate the hydrodynamic pressure fluctuation of the vehicle surface as the unsteady load and predicted the internal sound field of the test vehicle by solving the Helmholtz acoustic propagation equation. The contribution from the external acoustical field to the interior noise was estimated based on the acoustic analogy and was confirmed to be negligibly small compared with that from the hydrodynamic loading in the present case. Moreover, aerodynamic sources and noise generation generated by the rear-view mirror have been investigated by numerous experimental and simulation measures [1013].

Some typical prediction strategies for the interior noise to commercial vehicles are needed in order to reduce the aerodynamic noise. Besides, more studies have employed aerodynamic optimization techniques to reduce the strength of the intrinsic shedding vortex and suppress the generation of the aerodynamic noise by changing the geometric shape of the rear-view mirror, such as its bracket position, the housing modeling and height and size, the elimination of sharp edges on the housing surface, and increasing the microwind guide structure [14, 15]. However, there are limitations to reducing the geometry of the side mirror for aerodynamic noise in commercial vehicles, and these measures apply merely to passenger vehicles.

Very little study has been undertaken to investigate the aerodynamic noise of the rear-view mirror under considering the effect of wind drag in commercial vehicles, and the rear-view mirror has a considerable effect on the wind drag of commercial vehicles. There is little research on reducing the aerodynamic noise and wind drag by studying the modeling factors of the rear-view mirror for commercial vehicles. Accordingly, the object of this study is to consider the aerodynamic flow field and sound field radiation by external shape design of three OSRVMs. The commercial program STAR-CCM+ was used to analyze the wind drag coefficient variation according to the shape of the OSRVM. Based on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis, this study investigates aerodynamic flow characteristics at three major points around the mirror housing and sound pressure levels in the commercial vehicles’ cab.

2. Numerical Calculation of the Outside Rear-View Mirror with the Cab and Vehicle

2.1. DES Governing Equations

The wind drag of the external flow field and the steady-state calculation of the cab model are based on the realizable model. Realizable which is a standard -improved extended model performs well in solving the flow field in the rear-view mirror area. Transport equation for turbulent kinetic energy is given [16] as

Transport equation for turbulent dissipation ratio iswhere is the air density, is the velocity component in the direction, and are laminar viscous coefficient and turbulent viscous coefficient, and are the Prandtl number corresponding to the turbulent kinetic energy and dissipation rate (the values are 1.0 and 1.2), is the turbulent kinetic energy produced by the average velocity gradient, and are experience constants (the values are 1.42 and 1.68), and is the user defined number and provided by STAR-CCM+. The model ensures the continuity of turbulence in Reynolds pressure. It has a more accurate prediction of cylindrical spoiler and has good convergence and accuracy.

Detached eddy simulation (DES) combines the advantages of Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) and large eddy simulation (LES). It is solved by RANS in the near-wall area, which makes the calculation in the boundary layer small. The far wall area is solved by LES, which better simulates the state of large-scale separation turbulent flow. Combining them organically improves computational efficiency and accuracy. The dissipation rate of the kinetic energy equation in DES based on the realizable model [17] iswhere is for the calibration of the DES model, where . When , , realizable model plays the role of RANS. Conversely, when , the equation shows the characteristics of the LES subgrid-scale.

2.2. Computational Model

A simple commercial vehicle cab model is chosen to predict the aerodynamic noise for saving computing resources and calculation time. As shown in Figure 1, the real model is extracted from the whole commercial vehicle, which was represented as a type of commercial vehicle. The left and right rear-view mirrors, the right lower-view mirror, the sun visor, and the front lower mirror are externally highlighted to ensure that they are in accordance with the experimental result. The length, width, and height of the commercial vehicle cab model are 2.0 m, 2.5 m, and 2.1 m, respectively. The OSVRMs are mounted on a simplified commercial vehicle cab. OSRVM A shown in Figure 1(a) is the original reference mode, which is commonly used in commercial vehicles for observing the aerodynamic flow. It has rear-view mirror cover of 15 cm and can be seen in its cross section. OSRVM B displayed in Figure 1(b) is the dislodging rear-mirror cover. The airflow passes from the windward side to the trailing edge of the mirror housing, whose rear-view mirror cover has vital influence for wind drag and aerodynamic noise. While comparing OSRVM C, its windward side was changed that the edge of regression on the windward side was moved toward the left. OSVRM A with the simplified cab is shown in Figure 1(d). The real commercial vehicle cab is shown in Figure 1(e). It is the same as the geometric model. The commercial vehicle model with the trailer is seen in Figure 1(f) and is used to study the aerodynamic drag performance analysis under full-cargo conditions.

2.3. Numerical Simulation Condition Setting

To improve the accuracy of the CFD analysis results and reduce the number of calculations, the surface mesh size of the vehicle is set to 10–150 mm for the aerodynamic analyses. The OSRVM, side window, and A-pillar surface mesh are approximately 2 mm. The volume mesh is generated based on the created surface mesh. The calculated domains are all four-layer encryption, and the encryption area of the rear-view mirror area is 2 mm (simulations can be obtained within 2500 Hz sound pressure level). In the DES analysis, the required Y+ wall value is less than 5. The DES boundary layer is shown in Table 1 based on the first boundary layer thickness and the total thickness formula to obtain the corresponding boundary layer structure and determine a reasonable boundary layer and grid growth rate. The number of trim meshes used in the calculations reached 65 million. The simulation adopts the high-speed working condition of the CV at 100 km/h, and the inlet is the turbulence intensity (calculated as I = 0.06) and the characteristic length, which is taken as the length of the rear-view mirror. The pressure and velocity subrelaxation factors of the separation flow are set to 0.3 and 0.7, respectively. Table 2 describes the boundary conditions for the total computational domain. A cuboid domain was used to perform the CFD simulations, as illustrated in Figure 2, which considers the airflow rate and field, where the dimensions of the computational domain are 20L × 5W × 6H.

The transient calculations use the steady-state results as the initial values to solve the incompressible flow. The result of steady-state computational convergence is shown in Figure 3. Before the transient calculations, the side windows are defined as the sound source surface, and the CGNS sound source data code is the output. The acoustic analogue method is then used to solve the sound pressure level of the window surface. Realizable is applied to calculate the steady-state behaviour, and the parameters used for the calculations are presented in Table 3. The DES model is applied to calculate the transient-state behaviour, and the set for the transient-state solver is given in Table 4. The total time duration is set to 0.5 s, and the time step for the calculation is 0.0002 s. As the computational solution gradually tends to be stable, the results between 0.2 and 0.5 s are selected for the analysis.

2.4. Aerodynamic Drag Performance Analysis

As there are few wind tunnels suitable for commercial vehicles and they have high associated costs, the calculations for the aerodynamics of commercial vehicles with three OSRVMs are from the CFD method based on variations of the drag coefficient or the rate of velocity and transient pressure. Any vehicles that travel through a fluid experience drag forces in the direction of the flow due to the pressure and shear forces that act on the surface of an object. The aerodynamic drag coefficient can be expressed as

Here, is the aerodynamic drag force , is the fluid density, is the characteristic frontal area of the commercial vehicle with the rear-view mirror , and is the velocity of the operational vehicle .

All models are simulated under the commercial vehicle driving speed of 100 km/h (27.8 m/s). The wind drag coefficient for the three rear-view mirrors is shown in Table 5. OSRVM B cancels the aerofoil of the rear-view mirror relative to OSRVM A. The table shows that the aerofoil of the rear-view mirror does not influence the aerodynamic drag for the entire commercial vehicle model. From OSRVM C, the windward side of the rear-view mirror is blunted, and the corresponding drag coefficient is higher than that for OSRVM A. is the power consumption factor, which is used to illustrate the aerodynamic drag related to the front projection area of the car cab. The table indicates that the rear-view mirror with passivation at the windward surface does not appreciably reduce the wind resistance comparing the values of mirror B and mirror A. Compared with cancelling of the rear-view mirror, the drag coefficient is the highest, up to 0.6349, although the corresponding orthographic projection area is the smallest, and the power consumption factor is indeed the largest. Therefore, the rear-view mirror helps reduce the wind drag and improve the aerodynamic performance of the commercial vehicles.

The aerodynamic drag coefficient for the four cases in the commercial vehicles with a trailer (Figure 4) changes for the rear-view mirrors and trailer. Figures 4(a)4(c) illustrate the vehicle aerodynamic drag development curve for the three rear-view mirror cases of vehicles with trailers. Rear-view mirrors A, B, and C relative to the original car resistance development curve do not significantly differ. For example, when the rear-view mirror resistance slightly increased, no obvious difference was observed in . The aerodynamic drag for rear-view mirrors of different shapes also shows negligible effects on commercial vehicles with a trailer. In contrast with the case without a rear-view mirror, showed obvious changes in the rear-view mirror and trailer regions with increased. This is consistent with the results in Table 5. A preliminary assessment of the presence of the rear-view mirror can improve the flow field behind the mirror and reduce the aerodynamic drag.

The steady-state velocity flow field with or without the rear-view mirror is shown in Figure 5. The elliptical dashed circle in the A pillar leads to the separation of air flow on the side. The rear-view mirror can guide the air flow back and reduce the eddy current in the side area. The rear-view mirror can reduce the negative pressure area of the side of the cab and avoid the airflow directly shocking the trailer. For commercial vehicles with the trailer, the wind drag without the rear-view mirror status is higher.

2.5. Unsteady Flow Analysis

The Z-section is created to study the airflow field and aerodynamic characteristics of the rear-view mirror tail region, which is parallel to the XOY plane, and is shown in Figure 6 (top). Figures 6(a)–6(d) show the transient velocity contour for the three OSVRMs and the NO OSRVM, respectively. The velocity magnitudes at the side window, windward side, and trailing of the mirror are displayed in the graphs, which symbolize three representative velocity directions and magnitude. The airflow velocity of OSRVM A is relatively larger than the other model around the windward side and side window. In particular, the airflow velocity increases significantly at the windward side to 50 m/s at a vehicle speed of 30 m/s. However, OSVRM C shows a lower airflow velocity in the place of side window and windward side, which is a moderate change in the area around the rear-view mirror. Compared with NO OSRVM, there is little airflow on rushes at the side window, and the airflow velocity is significantly reduced. Therefore, the NO OSRVM case is a promising way to reduce the influence of airflow shocks against the side window, that is, the high-pressure fluctuations around the mirror housing that propagate the vibrations to the window are accordingly reduced [18].

Figures 7(a)7(d) show the transient pressure contours for the four models at typical driving speeds. Overall, airflow through the mirror has a pressure gradient from the negative to the positive pressure zones and forms a pressure vortex with a periodic direction of rotation that is opposite to its rotation [19, 20]. The various airflow vortices significantly affect the flow field outside the vehicle, which can reduce or increase the aerodynamic drag and noise for commercial vehicles. OSVRM A shows that a circular pressure contour appears at the junction of the lens and the frame and periodically changes over time. The transient pressure flow field in OSRVM A is more disordered compared to OSRVM B, which forms a large low-pressure vortex in the rear-view mirror tailing region. The airflow vortices of OSRVM C are relatively small. The first three rear-view mirror modes cause each eddy current to impinge on the window glass and generate a vortex that becomes squeezed, enlarged, and broken in the rear-view mirror tailing area. There is a strong pressure pulsation in the wake field, which is accompanied by the generation of aerodynamic noise [2123]. A small low-pressure vortex is formed in the rear-view mirror tailing region for the NO OSRVM case, and the low-pressure vortex develops backwards with time and gradually evolves into a large low-pressure vortex. The formed low-pressure cavity in the space increases the air resistance of the vehicle, which is not conducive to reduce the drag of the commercial vehicles.

3. Dynamic Analysis of the Window Structure

The vibration of the window can be excited from a fluctuating pressure, which affects the flow field in two ways: the boundary condition of the flow field and the elastic waves caused by the vibrations. The influence of the vibrations on the fluid is ignored, and those caused by other excitations are omitted as the magnitude of the displacement caused negligible vibrations and a Mach number which is less than 1.

3.1. Governing Equations

The differential equations of motion for a damped n-degree-of-freedom system can be expressed in the matrix form aswhere is the mass matrix, is the stiffness matrix, is the damping matrix, and is the vector of generalized nonconservative forces.

For preliminary application of modal analysis, we must solve the eigenvalue problem, which is given by

Equation (6) has the solutions and , where are the natural frequencies and are the natural modes (modal vectors). The eigenvalues and eigenvectors can be arranged in the matrix form:where is the modal matrix. Moreover, it is convenient to normalize the modal matrix so as to satisfy the orthonormality relations:

The damping matrix can be expressed as a linear combination of the mass and stiffness matrices of the formwhere and are known scalar constants. Multiplying equation (9) on the left by and on the right by and considering equation (8) give the diagonal matrix:

The solution of equation (5) can be expressed as a linear combination of the modal vectors aswhere represents the modal coordinates and is the corresponding vector.

Next, equation (11) is substituted into equation (5), and the results are left-multiplied by . Then, considering equations (8) and (10) gives

This has the notation ofwhere are modal viscous damping factors. Equation (12) can be rewritten in the form of the independent modal:where are modal forces having the form given as .

3.2. Computational Details

HyperMesh software is applied to calculate the glass-constrained modes of the side windows, and HyperWork shell 63 is chosen as the element type. The elastic connection unit was employed to simulate the window seal knot, and glass is used as the medium for data transmission between solids and gases. The acoustic harmonic FEM in the LMS Virtual.Lab uses interpolation to map the CFD time-domain data onto a structural grid for the glass. The modal superposition method is adopted as it has a rapid calculation speed, a high solution precision, and a relatively small required disk space. There are 100 modals, and the sound pressure level within 2500 Hz is calculated using Fourier transform with a calculation step of 5 Hz. Young’s modulus, Poison’s ratio, the tempered glass density and thickness are 7.2E10 Pa, 0.21, 2520 kg/m3, and 3.5 mm, respectively.

Figure 8 describes the change processes for displacements at the two side windows. The order of displacement magnitude is between 10E − 3 and 10E − 8 m, and the displacement in the direction is greater than for the other directions. As shown in Figure 8, the displacement magnitude at the two side windows forms peaks and valleys, which increase in number at higher frequencies. There are separated flows and vortices around the two side windows, and the turbulent kinetic energy and pressure around the left front side-window are greater than those around the right front side-window, which is sometimes opposite. Thus, the displacement gradients along for left and right side-windows are considered.

4. Acoustic Simulation

4.1. Governing Equations

The acoustic pressure is governed by the classical wave equation, expressed bywhere is the Laplacian operator, is the acoustic pressure, is the speed of sound in the acoustic medium, and is the added mass caused from unit volume acceleration. When only the harmonic steady-state case is considered, the classical wave equation reduces to the Helmholtz equation aswhere is the acoustic wave number, is the angular frequency, is the frequency (Hz), , , and . The solution for equation (16) satisfies the boundary condition as follows:where denotes the unit normal pointing into the boundary and denotes the displacement vector. The solution can be derived by the indirect boundary element method, given aswhere is the single-layer potential vector, is the double-layer potential vector, and and are coefficient vectors corresponding to and , respectively.

The sound pressure at an arbitrary point, say, in the field can be expressed as the summation of all the panels’ noise contributions at the point:where is the total sound pressure at point and is the sound pressure contribution at point from panel , which is given bywhere denotes the sound pressure for panel from modal .

For illustrating the meaning of more distinctly, the normalized factor is introduced as follows:where is the complex conjugate; then, the modal participation factor of modal from panel can be written aswhere denotes the real part of the complex. Positive indicates that the sound pressure increases with the elevation of the response of panel from modal . Negative means that the sound pressure decreases as the response of panel from modal increases.

4.2. Results and Discussion

The boundary conditions of the acoustic finite element method include the following: the two side-window elements are set as the displacement boundary condition, the seat elements are removed, the roof elements are set as the automatically matched layer boundary condition (no reflection boundary), and the car door and interior trim were dismantled, which were substituted by the outermost surface of a car [24, 25]. Other elements are set as the simple panel, which is also set as the automatically matched layer boundary condition.

The cab sound cavity is set as the computational field and is created to analyze the distribution of the sound pressure level (SPL) on the surface of the cab. As shown in Figure 9, the SPL contour gradually decreases from the side window to the other locations of the passenger cab compartment at frequencies of 80, 100, 125 Hz, etc. At some selected frequencies, the cloud maps indicate that the maximum SPL of the noise is distributed around the side window, and the SPL gradually increases with frequency in the range of 20–400 Hz. The SPL then gradually reduces when over 400 Hz, but the sound pressure area near the side window is still the largest. Therefore, the side-window area of the rear-view mirror is the primary source of noise while driving and is also the main noise source for the passenger.

The two vertical and horizontal planes through the points of the driver’s left and right ear were set as the computational field. As shown in Figure 10, the SPL contour of the acoustic space inside the cab can be seen such that the influence of the aerodynamic noise on the interior of the vehicle is mainly concentrated on the place around the driver’s left ear. The noise in the driver's head area is greater than other spaces when the frequency is 125 Hz and 250 Hz.

The SPL contour images in Figure 11 for different OSRVMs at 400 and 500 Hz show that the SPL distributions around the side-window surface are higher than the other regions at the same frequency. Comparing the SPL contours for OSRVM A and B, the side-window surface emerges as the largest SPL region that exceeds 90 dB. This suggests that the rear-view mirror cover between the lens and the frame reduces the aerodynamic noise to some extent. This is limited to reducing the noise near the window as the overall change is not large. The SPL of OSRVM C is lower than for B, which means that the windward side of the rear-view mirror influences the SPL of the rear-view mirror area. Appropriately changing the parameters for both mirrors reduces the aerodynamic noise that propagates to the vehicle. Therefore, a proper rear-view mirror cross section is beneficial to reduce the aerodynamic noise and drag. The SPL distributions of the sound cavity without the mirror are the smallest. Combined with the transient speed and pressure contour, the NO OSRVM reduces the turbulent pressure pulsation at the mirror area and reduces the aerodynamic noise, which is derived primarily from the pressure fluctuations of the A-pillar airflow separation [14, 23, 2628]. Compared with the sound pressure distribution at 500 Hz, the SPL tends to decrease with frequency, and the SPL of the window surface becomes increasingly important.

Figure 12 shows the SPL distribution of the interior vehicle acoustic space for the 1/3 octave centre frequency of the three OSRVMs and the NO OSRVM case. The 400 and 500 Hz SPL contours show that OSRVM A has the highest SPL in the cab. This indicates that the influence of OSRVM A on the wind noise inside the vehicle is large, while OSRVM B and C reduce the noise inside the vehicle. However, the SPL for the NO OSRVM in the car is the lowest, which is 45 dB near the left ear of the driver. It is seen that the gap between the lens and the frame influences the aerodynamic noise inside the vehicle. The windward side of the rear-view mirror affects the SPL in the car and is lower in the centre of the rear-view mirror than on its side. The SPL in the car changes at 500 Hz and gradually decreases.

Figure 13 summarizes the spectrum of the 1/3 octave centre frequency at the driver’s right ear for the three OSRVMs and for NO OSRVM. And the 1/3 octave was considered to be a frequency band division method that is more in line with the characteristics of the human ear. The rate of change corresponding to the 1/3 octave centre frequency based on the vehicle speed is similar among the three OSRVM and NO OSRVM modes, where the maximum SPL of the exterior mirrors occurs at approximately 400 Hz. Multiple peaks appear in the 20–2500 Hz band, which also confirms that the aerodynamic noise is broadband [12, 29, 30]. As the frequency increases, the SPL shows a downward trend, indicating that the aerodynamic noise energy is reflected primarily in the middle- and low-frequency bands. The amplitude of the noise is approximately 60 dB, which easily fatigues the driver’s auditory nerve and significantly affects the driving comfort. The SPL spectrum for OSRVM A is the largest and OSRVM C is the lowest (thus, optimal) at approximately 10 dB lower. This echoes the SPL cloud map for the vehicle interior. Similarly, the curve of the 1/3 octave centre frequency SPL under NO OSRVM is significantly lower.

5. Comparison between Simulation and Experiment

Using acoustic wind tunnels for actual vehicle aerodynamic noise tests is expensive, which limits its practical use. Therefore, this paper performs road tests using an actual commercial at the high-speed flat asphalt road in the Xiangzhou state of Liuzhou. There were no other vehicles on the road surface, and the conditions were closer to the operations of high-speed CVs. The temperature was 24 degrees with a 1 m/s breeze. The lab noise test equipment from LMS (Belgium) was used, and the Lab 17 A experimental analysis software system was integrated with a 16-channel SCADAS portable data acquisition front end. Prepolarized microphones and preamplifiers from GRAS (Denmark, shown in Figure 14) were used, and the total sound pressure level at 100 mph was measured using a handheld sound level meter. Figure 14(b) shows the test points and instruments for the road tests.

The sound pressure level (SPL) tests in the commercial measure the noise for the entire vehicle, and differences between the low-frequency band simulation and the test values are as much as 20 dB, as shown in Figure 15. As the frequency increases, the differences between the simulations and experiments gradually decrease. In the middle-and high-frequency bands, they are in good agreement and show that the aerodynamic noise plays an important role. The simulated total SPL level is 85.56 dB and the experimental is 74.84 dB, giving an error of nearly 11 dB. The main causes of this error are the low-frequency structural vibration and noise caused by the engine and road surface excitation during the experiment, which amplifies the test values. During the simulation, the pressure pulsation of the window is considered, and the aerodynamic noise generated from the sun visor and other parts of the cab is ignored. In addition, the whistling sound caused by the hole on the surface of the car body and the aerodynamic noise caused by the separation of the airflow of the local step (such as the roof bump) are ignored.

6. Conclusions

A simulation methodology is presented in order to predict the interior acoustic field in the commercial vehicle cab generated by the outside rear-view mirror. The methodology relies on a hybrid aeroacoustic strategy, where the sound source field is obtained from unsteady surface pressure extracted on two side windows from an incompressible CFD solution by STAR-CCM+. The acoustic field is then solved with the surface dipole approach in the FEMAO framework of LMS Virtual.Lab. Based on hybrid simulation strategy analysis, the aerodynamic flow characteristics and interior acoustic field sound pressure levels for commercial vehicles with the trailer of the proposed three outside rear-view mirror models were compared. The comparative studies at none mirror status showed that the velocity/pressure profiles and sound pressure levels were dramatically improved for commercial vehicles with the trailer. And the following conclusions are made:(1)It was showed that the proposed methodology is applicable to predict the aerodynamic noise inside the cab of commercial vehicles comparing the data of actual road test of the taxiing road. It is very beneficial to optimize the outside rear-view mirror based on the analysis of the wind drag and then to investigate the propagation of the aerodynamic noise into the cab interior.(2)Various rear-view mirrors have different wind drags for commercial vehicles with the trailer. The greatest impact was approximately 1.2%. The presence of the rear-view mirror can effectively reduce the wind drag for commercial vehicles with the trailer, comparing the data (4.9%) from the state of commercial vehicles without the rear-view mirror.(3)The guide cover of the rear-view mirror frame, the thickness of the rear-view mirror housing, and passivation affect different degrees of aerodynamic interior noise of the cab. Optimizing these parameters can reduce the aerodynamic noise inside the car as well as the wind drag.

Data Availability

The data used to support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon request.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

This research was financially supported by the Promotion of Basic Ability of Young and Middle-aged Teachers in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region (no. 2018KY0205), Guangxi Youth Science Foundation Project (2018GXNSFBA281012), Liuzhou Science Research and Planning Development Project (nos. 2019AD10203 and 2018AA20301), and Innovation-Driven Development Special Fund Project of GuangXi (GuiKe AA19182004).