Surface Impedance Determination via Numerical Resolution of the Inverse Helmholtz Problem
Danish Patel, Prateek Gupta, Carlo Scalo

TL;DR
This paper introduces the inverse Helmholtz solver (iHS), a numerical method to determine acoustic impedance at boundaries by solving the inverse Helmholtz problem, validated through multiple complex geometries and theoretical comparisons.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel numerical approach, the iHS, for directly computing boundary impedance from thermoviscous wave equations, enabling broadband impedance estimation with high precision.
Findings
Validated against Rott's theory for ducts
Reconstructed impedance of complex cavity geometry
Verified with time-domain impedance boundary conditions
Abstract
Assigning boundary conditions, such as acoustic impedance, to the frequency domain thermoviscous wave equations (TWE), derived from the linearized Navier-Stokes equations (LNSE) poses a Helmholtz problem, solution to which yields a discrete set of complex eigenfunctions and eigenvalue pairs. The proposed method -- the inverse Helmholtz solver (iHS) -- reverses such procedure by returning the value of acoustic impedance at one or more unknown impedance boundaries (IBs) of a given domain, via spatial integration of the TWE for a given real-valued frequency with assigned conditions on other boundaries. The iHS procedure is applied to a second-order spatial discretization of the TWEs on an unstructured staggered grid arrangement. Only the momentum equation is extended to the center of each IB face where pressure and velocity components are co-located and treated as unknowns. The iHS is…
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