General treatment of tlm node with embedded structures

K. Biwojno, C. Smartt, P. Sewell, Yafang Liu, C. Christopoulos
{"title":"General treatment of tlm node with embedded structures","authors":"K. Biwojno, C. Smartt, P. Sewell, Yafang Liu, C. Christopoulos","doi":"10.1109/CEMTD.2005.1531710","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This contribution is an extension of the authors’ work in modelling multi-scale systems which is of great importance in many applications such as Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC). By its very nature EMC analysis often requires consideration of systems characterized by many different physical scales, such as when thin wires, gaps and slots are present in large structures. In the Transmission Line Modelling (TLM) method of analysis, nodes that enable fine structures to be embedded within them have been demonstrated for special cases where the fields local to the object may be expanded in terms of analytically known local solutions [1-6]. The approach presented here differs in that it is based on purely numerical calculations of these local expansion and it therefore allows arbitrary structures for which analytical representations of local fields are unavailable, to be incorporated into TLM nodes. This enables the presence of general sub cell objects to be correctly and efficiently modelled in coarse grids. Results are presented for a canonical scattering problem in order to demonstrate the proposed procedure. Introduction Accurate and efficient modelling of electromagnetic fields becomes very challenging with increasing complexity and volume of the simulated systems. Particularly difficult to deal with are structures containing diverse physical geometries in which small structures have a significant effect on the overall response of the system. Such a multi-scale configuration is typical for Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) applications when fine features e.g. thin wires, slots and gaps are embedded within physically large bodies. In order to reliably characterise such a system these features must be included in the simulation models. The classical approach using dense meshing is often inefficient, if not beyond the available computational resources and therefore over the years substantial effort has been made to develop more suitable techniques. One approach to describing fine features that has already been given much attention is to use a special node modelling the effect of sub cell structure into a coarse mesh model [1-6]. A variety of examples for EMC predictions have already been shown using such techniques. A node with a straight metal wire placed in the centre has been demonstrated for the 2D [1,2] and 3D TLM methods [3]. Further extension in the 2D case has been demonstarted, mapping a node containing an arbitrarily positioned thin metal or dielectric post within a single cell into a TLM network [4]. Recently a 2D node that embeds an arbitrary number of wires of various dimensions and characteristics coupled by their near fields within a single cell has 0-7803-9544-1/05/$20.00 ©2005 IEEE 52 been described [5]. The important case of short lengths of thin wires which are obliquely oriented to the cell faces has also been illustrated [6] making it possible to simulate piecewise linear models of arbitrarily routed curved wires in 3D TLM. The embedding process demonstrated in the above examples is based on a suitable set of local solutions to Maxwell’s equations in the vicinity of the enclosed objects. By appropriately sampling the fields at the boundary of the cell, these solutions have then been interfaced with the conventional numerical TLM algorithm. It should be noted that in this previous work the local fields have been obtained analytically. However, in many practical situations suitable analytical solutions may be impossible to identify in which case numerical methods must be employed. This contribution explores the development of sub cell models of arbitrarily shaped objects using numerical algorithms, i.e. the local fields in close proximity to the objects are calculated numerically using a fine mesh at the pre-processing stage and then mapped into a coarse grid. This concept must yield an overall algorithm that is computationally stable and, as it will be shown below, this requires that the local field solutions must be sampled in a physically consistent manner. Although the examples presented in this paper are based upon the TLM method as a well-established time domain technique for electromagnetic modelling, it should be recognised that there is no fundamental restriction of the general technique to use with TLM. Theoretical Formulations The basis of this approach is to identify a suitable set of local frequency domain solutions to Maxwell’s equations within the vicinity of an object. By appropriate sampling of these fields on the boundary of a cell, a scattering formulation is derived which will readily interface to the overarching numerical algorithm. Consider a small object bounded by a cubic surface, as shown in Figure 1a. For the TLM method it is required to map the tangential electric and magnetic fields on the faces of the cube to port voltages and currents in an equivalent electrical network. Enforcing voltage and current continuity between adjacent cells in the grid enables the node to be interfaced to the rest of the solution. The fields inside the cube are represented as a superposition of local field solutions, en and hn weighted by expansion coefficients Xn. Each solution satisfies the boundary conditions on the enclosed object. ∑ = = n T n n X e X e E and ∑ = = n T n n X h X H H (1) As presented in [6] the port voltage vector is defined by: ∫∫ ⋅ = p S p EdS f V , where fp is a set of orthonormal vector basis functions at port “p” positioned on surface Sp. Substituting equation (1) leads to the definition of a general voltage vector as: X u X dS e f V","PeriodicalId":407683,"journal":{"name":"Workshop on Computational Electromagnetics in Time-Domain, 2005. CEM-TD 2005.","volume":"150 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2005-11-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Workshop on Computational Electromagnetics in Time-Domain, 2005. CEM-TD 2005.","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/CEMTD.2005.1531710","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2

Abstract

This contribution is an extension of the authors’ work in modelling multi-scale systems which is of great importance in many applications such as Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC). By its very nature EMC analysis often requires consideration of systems characterized by many different physical scales, such as when thin wires, gaps and slots are present in large structures. In the Transmission Line Modelling (TLM) method of analysis, nodes that enable fine structures to be embedded within them have been demonstrated for special cases where the fields local to the object may be expanded in terms of analytically known local solutions [1-6]. The approach presented here differs in that it is based on purely numerical calculations of these local expansion and it therefore allows arbitrary structures for which analytical representations of local fields are unavailable, to be incorporated into TLM nodes. This enables the presence of general sub cell objects to be correctly and efficiently modelled in coarse grids. Results are presented for a canonical scattering problem in order to demonstrate the proposed procedure. Introduction Accurate and efficient modelling of electromagnetic fields becomes very challenging with increasing complexity and volume of the simulated systems. Particularly difficult to deal with are structures containing diverse physical geometries in which small structures have a significant effect on the overall response of the system. Such a multi-scale configuration is typical for Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) applications when fine features e.g. thin wires, slots and gaps are embedded within physically large bodies. In order to reliably characterise such a system these features must be included in the simulation models. The classical approach using dense meshing is often inefficient, if not beyond the available computational resources and therefore over the years substantial effort has been made to develop more suitable techniques. One approach to describing fine features that has already been given much attention is to use a special node modelling the effect of sub cell structure into a coarse mesh model [1-6]. A variety of examples for EMC predictions have already been shown using such techniques. A node with a straight metal wire placed in the centre has been demonstrated for the 2D [1,2] and 3D TLM methods [3]. Further extension in the 2D case has been demonstarted, mapping a node containing an arbitrarily positioned thin metal or dielectric post within a single cell into a TLM network [4]. Recently a 2D node that embeds an arbitrary number of wires of various dimensions and characteristics coupled by their near fields within a single cell has 0-7803-9544-1/05/$20.00 ©2005 IEEE 52 been described [5]. The important case of short lengths of thin wires which are obliquely oriented to the cell faces has also been illustrated [6] making it possible to simulate piecewise linear models of arbitrarily routed curved wires in 3D TLM. The embedding process demonstrated in the above examples is based on a suitable set of local solutions to Maxwell’s equations in the vicinity of the enclosed objects. By appropriately sampling the fields at the boundary of the cell, these solutions have then been interfaced with the conventional numerical TLM algorithm. It should be noted that in this previous work the local fields have been obtained analytically. However, in many practical situations suitable analytical solutions may be impossible to identify in which case numerical methods must be employed. This contribution explores the development of sub cell models of arbitrarily shaped objects using numerical algorithms, i.e. the local fields in close proximity to the objects are calculated numerically using a fine mesh at the pre-processing stage and then mapped into a coarse grid. This concept must yield an overall algorithm that is computationally stable and, as it will be shown below, this requires that the local field solutions must be sampled in a physically consistent manner. Although the examples presented in this paper are based upon the TLM method as a well-established time domain technique for electromagnetic modelling, it should be recognised that there is no fundamental restriction of the general technique to use with TLM. Theoretical Formulations The basis of this approach is to identify a suitable set of local frequency domain solutions to Maxwell’s equations within the vicinity of an object. By appropriate sampling of these fields on the boundary of a cell, a scattering formulation is derived which will readily interface to the overarching numerical algorithm. Consider a small object bounded by a cubic surface, as shown in Figure 1a. For the TLM method it is required to map the tangential electric and magnetic fields on the faces of the cube to port voltages and currents in an equivalent electrical network. Enforcing voltage and current continuity between adjacent cells in the grid enables the node to be interfaced to the rest of the solution. The fields inside the cube are represented as a superposition of local field solutions, en and hn weighted by expansion coefficients Xn. Each solution satisfies the boundary conditions on the enclosed object. ∑ = = n T n n X e X e E and ∑ = = n T n n X h X H H (1) As presented in [6] the port voltage vector is defined by: ∫∫ ⋅ = p S p EdS f V , where fp is a set of orthonormal vector basis functions at port “p” positioned on surface Sp. Substituting equation (1) leads to the definition of a general voltage vector as: X u X dS e f V
tlm节点内嵌结构的一般处理
这一贡献是作者在多尺度系统建模方面工作的延伸,这在许多应用中都是非常重要的,比如电磁兼容性(EMC)。就其本质而言,EMC分析通常需要考虑具有许多不同物理尺度的系统,例如当大型结构中存在细线、间隙和槽时。在传输线建模(TLM)分析方法中,已经证明了在特殊情况下,可以将精细结构嵌入其中的节点,其中对象的局部场可以根据解析已知的局部解进行扩展[1-6]。这里提出的方法的不同之处在于,它是基于这些局部扩展的纯粹数值计算,因此它允许将局部域的解析表示不可用的任意结构合并到TLM节点中。这使得一般子单元对象的存在能够在粗网格中正确有效地建模。最后给出了典型散射问题的计算结果,以证明所提出的方法。随着仿真系统的复杂性和体积的增加,准确有效的电磁场建模变得非常具有挑战性。特别难以处理的是包含各种物理几何形状的结构,其中小结构对系统的整体响应有重大影响。这种多尺度配置在电磁兼容性(EMC)应用中是典型的,当细线、槽和间隙等精细特性嵌入在物理上较大的主体中时。为了可靠地表征这样一个系统,这些特征必须包含在仿真模型中。使用密集网格的经典方法通常效率低下,如果没有超出可用的计算资源,因此多年来已经做出了大量的努力来开发更合适的技术。描述精细特征的一种方法已经得到了很大的关注,即使用一个特殊的节点来模拟子单元结构对粗网格模型的影响[1-6]。已经展示了使用此类技术进行EMC预测的各种示例。在2D[1,2]和3D TLM方法[3]中,已经演示了在中心放置一条直金属丝的节点。二维情况下的进一步扩展已经开始演示,将单个单元内包含任意位置的薄金属或介电柱的节点映射到TLM网络中[4]。最近,一种2D节点被描述为在单个单元内嵌入任意数量的各种尺寸和特征的导线,这些导线通过它们的近场耦合在一起,该节点有0-7803-9544-1/05/$20.00©2005 IEEE 52[5]。还说明了斜面向单元面的短长度细导线的重要情况[6],使得可以在3D TLM中模拟任意布线的弯曲导线的分段线性模型。上述例子所演示的嵌入过程是基于在被包围物体附近麦克斯韦方程组的一组合适的局部解。通过对单元边界处的场进行适当采样,这些解决方案随后与传统的数值TLM算法相结合。应该指出的是,在之前的工作中,局部场是解析得到的。然而,在许多实际情况下,可能无法确定合适的解析解,在这种情况下必须采用数值方法。这一贡献探索了使用数值算法的任意形状物体的子单元模型的发展,即在预处理阶段使用精细网格对靠近物体的局部场进行数值计算,然后映射到粗网格中。这个概念必须产生一个计算稳定的整体算法,正如下面将展示的那样,这要求必须以物理一致的方式对局部字段解进行采样。虽然本文中给出的例子是基于TLM方法作为一种完善的电磁建模时域技术,但应该认识到,使用TLM的一般技术没有基本限制。该方法的基础是在物体附近确定麦克斯韦方程组的一组合适的局域频域解。通过在单元边界上对这些场进行适当的采样,可以推导出一个易于与总体数值算法相结合的散射公式。考虑一个被立方体表面包围的小物体,如图1a所示。对于TLM方法,需要将立方体表面的切向电场和磁场映射到等效电网络中的端口电压和电流。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术官方微信