Author_Institution :
University of Bremen, MiG - Microwave Innovation Group, D-28359 Bremen, Germany
Abstract :
In computational electromagnetics, the principle of combining different methods to "hybrid methods" typically achieves efficiency capabilities, which go beyond the individual features of the involved methods. Based on an advanced multi-solver electromagnetic (EM) CAD technology, hybridizing mode-matching (MM) / finite-element (FE) / method-of-moment (MoM) / finite-element-boundary-integral (FE-BI) / physical theory of diffraction (PTD) and physical optics (PO) methods, the fast rigorous optimization of arbitrary, user-defined microwave structures, including large antennas and arrays together with feed-networks can be directly accomplished on the EM level. Typical calculation times for one optimization iteration are in the order of a few seconds (e.g. for waveguide, coax, microstrip, substrate integrated waveguide (SIW) components or body-of-revolution (BOR) type of antennas including feeds) up to a few hundreds of seconds (e.g. for large dual-offset reflector antennas or large slot-arrays including feeds) on standard quad-core PCs without additional hardware acceleration means. Complicated 3D structures are importable, can be suitably decomposed, parametrized and efficiently re-optimized.