Title :
A hybrid time-domain technique that combines the finite element, finite difference and method of moment techniques to solve complex electromagnetic problems
Author :
Monorchio, Agostino ; Bretones, Amelia Rubio ; Mittra, Raj ; Manara, Giuliano ; Martín, Rafael Gómez
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Eng., Univ. of Pisa, Italy
Abstract :
This paper describes a hybrid technique directly operating in time domain that combines the finite element time domain (FETD), the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) and the integral-equation-based method of moments in the time domain (MoMTD) techniques to analyze complex electromagnetic problems involving thin-wire antennas radiating in the presence of inhomogeneous dielectric bodies whose shape can be arbitrary. The method brings together the ability of the FDTD scheme to deal with arbitrary material properties, the versatility of the FETD to accurately model curved geometries, and that of the MoM to analyze thin-wire structures. Working in the time domain provides wide-band information from a single execution of the marching-on-in-time procedure and simplifies the interfacing of the FE and MoM methods with the FDTD, an approach specifically designed for time domain analysis. Numerical results that validate the hybrid method and show its capabilities are presented in the paper.
Keywords :
antenna radiation patterns; dielectric bodies; dielectric materials; electromagnetic wave propagation; finite difference time-domain analysis; finite element analysis; inhomogeneous media; integral equations; method of moments; wire antennas; FDTD; MoM; antenna radiation; dielectric material property; electromagnetic problem; finite element finite difference method; finite element time domain; finite-difference time-domain; hybrid time-domain technique; inhomogeneous dielectric body; integral-equation; marching-on-in-time; method of moment technique; thin-wire antenna; wide-band information; Dielectrics; Electromagnetic analysis; Electromagnetic radiation; Finite difference methods; Finite element methods; Material properties; Moment methods; Shape; Solid modeling; Time domain analysis; FDTD; FE; Finite-difference time-domain; MoM; finite element; hybrid methods; method of moments; methods; time domain;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2004.834431