Title :
A new computationally efficient method for the analysis of planar transmission lines and complex MMIC elements
Author :
Lin, Xing Ping ; Naishadham, Krishna
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Wright State Univ., Dayton, OH, USA
Abstract :
Microstrip and coplanar transmission line components have been analyzed by the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method. The FDTD computational mesh is truncated by imposing absorbing boundary conditions on the walls of the mesh, thus simulating outgoing waves appropriate to an open structure. The residual reflection from these boundaries introduces significant error in the frequency-domain parameters derived by Fourier transformation of the time-domain voltages and currents. In this paper, we have developed a new computationally-efficient method called the geometry rearrangement technique (GRT) to cancel the dominant contribution to such reflection. We have applied the GRT to compute the effective dielectric constant of planar transmission lines and the scattering parameters of MMIC components. The computed results have been found to be in good agreement with published data, thus indicating the effectiveness of the GRT in canceling boundary reflection. This research is applicable to efficient characterization of MMIC elements and high-density microwave and millimeter-wave packages, which are currently being investigated in aerospace research
Keywords :
MMIC; S-parameters; computational complexity; electromagnetic wave reflection; electronic engineering computing; finite difference time-domain analysis; microstrip components; microstrip lines; permittivity; waveguide theory; Fourier transformation; absorbing boundary conditions; aerospace; analysis of planar transmission lines; boundary reflection; complex MMIC elements; computationally efficient method; coplanar transmission line components; effective dielectric constant; finite-difference time-domain method; frequency-domain parameters; geometry rearrangement technique; high-density microwave packages; microstrip components; millimeter-wave packages; planar transmission lines; residual reflection; scattering parameters; time-domain currents; time-domain voltages; Boundary conditions; Computational modeling; Coplanar transmission lines; Finite difference methods; Frequency domain analysis; MMICs; Microstrip components; Reflection; Time domain analysis; Voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace and Electronics Conference, 1994. NAECON 1994., Proceedings of the IEEE 1994 National
Conference_Location :
Dayton, OH
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1893-5
DOI :
10.1109/NAECON.1994.332833