Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
2 years ago
14 janv. 2023, 09:59 UTC−5
Natalia,
you might consider to use a PML to supress reflections from the model boundary.
Cheers,
Edgar
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Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
Natalia,
you might consider to use a PML to supress reflections from the model boundary.
Cheers,
Edgar
Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
2 years ago
14 janv. 2023, 11:09 UTC−5
Updated:
2 years ago
14 janv. 2023, 11:25 UTC−5
I encourage you to provide a picture of your geometry. How is your waveguide arranged and oriented relative to your antenna? You mention wanting to do a 2D, axisymmetric model. But is the combination of your antenna and waveguide axisymmetric? You say the waveguide is "some distance away." Is it close enough for local fields to couple to your antenna? Is it far enough away that your antenna might as well be being illuminated by a plane wave? If so, might you prefer to compute your waveguide generated fields separately and ignore local mutual coupling effects between the waveguide and antenna? You say that you are using a circular waveguide. What mode are you using to feed the waveguide? Is this waveguide mode consistent with your plan to use a 2D axisymmetric model? FYI, the "Comsol Application Library" contains examples of 3D antennas modeled using 2D axisymmetric models. I refer specifically to the "conical_horn_lens_antenna" and the "corrugated_circular_horn_antenna". You might want to take a look at those.
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Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
I encourage you to provide a picture of your geometry. How is your waveguide arranged and oriented relative to your antenna? You mention wanting to do a 2D, axisymmetric model. But is the *combination* of your antenna and waveguide axisymmetric? You say the waveguide is "some distance away." Is it close enough for local fields to couple to your antenna? Is it far enough away that your antenna might as well be being illuminated by a plane wave? If so, might you prefer to compute your waveguide generated fields separately and ignore local mutual coupling effects between the waveguide and antenna? You say that you are using a circular waveguide. What mode are you using to feed the waveguide? Is this waveguide mode consistent with your plan to use a 2D axisymmetric model? FYI, the "Comsol Application Library" contains examples of 3D antennas modeled using 2D axisymmetric models. I refer specifically to the "conical_horn_lens_antenna" and the "corrugated_circular_horn_antenna". You might want to take a look at those.