Title :
Dispersion properties and applications of the Coifman scaling function based S-MRTD
Author :
Alighanbari, Abbas ; Sarris, Costas D.
Author_Institution :
Edward S. Rogers Sr. Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Toronto Univ., Ont.
Abstract :
We illustrate some salient dispersion properties of the Coifman scaling function based multiresolution time domain (MRTD) technique (Coifman S-MRTD) and discuss its applicability to modeling problems of interest in microwave and wireless communication engineering. Having been recently introduced, this method presents advantages similar to those of the Daubechies-based MRTD, namely highly linear numerical dispersion and finite support of the basis functions involved. It is additionally shown that inherent accuracy-computational complexity trade-offs related to with its dispersion properties can be utilized to accelerate its execution, without compromising its accuracy. Since the Coifman basis function is non-symmetric, the modeling of perfect electric conducting boundaries cannot be pursued via the image theory approach presented in the past. Therefore, a modified approach, along with its computationally efficient implementation, is proposed and validated. Several case studies and comparisons with the conventional finite-difference time-domain method demonstrate the usefulness of Coifman S-MRTD as a time-domain analysis and design tool
Keywords :
computational complexity; finite difference time-domain analysis; radiocommunication; Coifman scaling function based S-MRTD; Daubechies-based MRTD; basis functions; finite support; finite-difference time-domain method; highly linear numerical dispersion; image theory; inherent accuracy-computational complexity trade-off; microwave communication engineering; multiresolution time domain technique; perfect electric conducting boundaries; salient dispersion properties; wireless communication engineering; Acceleration; Circuit stability; Finite difference methods; Helium; Maxwell equations; Microwave circuits; Microwave theory and techniques; Numerical stability; Time domain analysis; Wireless communication; Finite-difference methods; microwave circuits; numerical dispersion; stability; wireless communications;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2006.879194