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Difference between revisions of "Electrostatic Beam"

(Added Electrostatic Beam)
 
 
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{{preliminary}} <!-- Do not remove -->
 
 
 
 
[[Category:benchmark]]
 
[[Category:benchmark]]
  +
[[Category:Oberwolfach]]
   
  +
{{Infobox
 
  +
|Title = Electrostatic Beam
  +
|Benchmark ID =
  +
* electrostaticBeam_n38m1q1
  +
* electrostaticBeam_n398m1q1
  +
|Category = oberwolfach
  +
|System-Class = NLTI-SOS
  +
|nstates =
  +
* 38
  +
* 398
  +
|ninputs = 1
  +
|noutputs = 1
  +
|nparameters = 0
  +
|components = B, C, E, F, K, M, f
  +
|License = NA
  +
|Creator = [[User:Himpe]]
  +
|Editor =
  +
* [[User:Himpe]]
  +
|Zenodo-link = NA
  +
}}
   
 
==Description: Beam Actuated by Electrostatic Force==
 
==Description: Beam Actuated by Electrostatic Force==
Line 13: Line 30:
 
Moving structures are an essential part for many microsystem devices, among them fluidic components like pumps and electrically controllable valves, sensing cantilevers, and optical structures.
 
Moving structures are an essential part for many microsystem devices, among them fluidic components like pumps and electrically controllable valves, sensing cantilevers, and optical structures.
   
Several actuation principles can be employed on microscopic length scales, the most frequent certainly the electromagnetic forces.
+
Several actuation principles can be employed on microscopic length scales, certainly most frequent electromagnetic forces.
While electrostatic actuation falls behind at the macro scale, the effect of charged bodies outperforms magnetic forces in the micro scale both in terms of performance and fabrication expense.
+
While electrostatic actuation falls behind at the macro scale, the effect of charged bodies outperforms magnetic forces in the micro scale both in terms of performance and manufacturing expense.
   
 
While the single component can easily be simulated on a usual desktop computer, the calculation of a system of many coupled devices still presents a challenge.
 
While the single component can easily be simulated on a usual desktop computer, the calculation of a system of many coupled devices still presents a challenge.
Line 21: Line 38:
   
 
Accurate modelling of such a system typically leads to high order models.
 
Accurate modelling of such a system typically leads to high order models.
The tasks of simulation, analysis and controller design of high order nonlinear control systems can be simplified by reducing the order of the original system and approximate it by a lower order model.
+
The tasks of simulation, analysis and controller design of high order nonlinear control systems can be simplified by reducing the order of the original system and approximating it by a lower order model.
   
A application of electrostatic moving structures are e.g. RF switches or filters.
+
An application of electrostatic moving structures are e.g. [[wikipedia:RF_switch|RF switches]] or filters.
 
Given a simple enough shape, they often can be modelled as one-dimensional beams embedded in two or three dimensional space.
 
Given a simple enough shape, they often can be modelled as one-dimensional beams embedded in two or three dimensional space.
   
 
===Model description===
 
===Model description===
   
This model describes a slender beam which is actuated by a voltage between the beam and the ground electrode below (see <xr id="fig1"/>).
+
This model describes a slender beam which is actuated by a voltage between the beam and the ground electrode below (see Fig.&nbsp;1).
   
 
On the beam, at least three degrees of freedom per node have to be considered:
 
On the beam, at least three degrees of freedom per node have to be considered:
Line 50: Line 67:
   
 
The calculation of the electrostatic force would require a boundary element discretization, where it would be necessary to recalculate the capacity matrix for each time-step due to the motion of the charges
 
The calculation of the electrostatic force would require a boundary element discretization, where it would be necessary to recalculate the capacity matrix for each time-step due to the motion of the charges
This would require an integration over the beam's elements.
+
This would require an integration over the beam's elements and could be written in analytical form by using e.g. [[wikipedia:Gaussian_quadrature|Gauss integration]];
This could be written in analytical form by using e.g. Gauss integration;
 
 
however, the complexity of the resulting system would be too high.
 
however, the complexity of the resulting system would be too high.
 
We therefore use the method shown in <ref name="siverberg1996"/>, i.e. we concentrate the charges on the nodes.
 
We therefore use the method shown in <ref name="siverberg1996"/>, i.e. we concentrate the charges on the nodes.
Line 80: Line 96:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Beam width (w)
 
|Beam width (w)
|<math>15 10^{-6} m</math>
+
|<math>15 \cdot 10^{-6} m</math>
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Distance between beams (s)
 
|Distance between beams (s)
|<math>200 10^{-9} m</math>
+
|<math>200 \cdot 10^{-9} m</math>
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Material density (rho)
 
|Material density (rho)
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|-
 
|-
 
|Cross-sectional area (A)
 
|Cross-sectional area (A)
|<math>150e-12 m12</math>
+
|<math>150 \cdot 10^{12} m^2</math>
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Moment of inertia (I)
 
|Moment of inertia (I)
|<math>1.25e-21 m^4</math>
+
|<math>1.25 \cdot 10^{-21} m^4</math>
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Modulus of elasticity (E)
 
|Modulus of elasticity (E)
|<math>1.31e11 Pa</math>
+
|<math>1.31 \cdot 10^{11} Pa</math>
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Contribution of <math>M</math> to damping
 
|Contribution of <math>M</math> to damping
Line 117: Line 133:
 
! Compressed Size [kB]
 
! Compressed Size [kB]
 
|-
 
|-
  +
|[https://csc.mpi-magdeburg.mpg.de/mpcsc/MORWIKI/Oberwolfach/ElectrostaticBeam-dim1e1-E10.zip ElectrostaticBeam-dim1e1-E10.zip]
|[https://portal.uni-freiburg.de/imteksimulation/downloads/benchmark/Eletrostatic%20beam%20%2838882%29/files/fileinnercontentproxy.2010-02-08.3711017358 E10.zip]
 
 
|10
 
|10
 
|38
 
|38
 
|4144
 
|4144
 
|-
 
|-
  +
|[https://csc.mpi-magdeburg.mpg.de/mpcsc/MORWIKI/Oberwolfach/ElectrostaticBeam-dim1e2-E100.zip ElectrostaticBeam-dim1e2-E100.zip]
|[https://portal.uni-freiburg.de/imteksimulation/downloads/benchmark/Eletrostatic%20beam%20%2838882%29/files/fileinnercontentproxy.2010-02-08.3729192050 E100.zip]
 
 
|100
 
|100
 
|398
 
|398
Line 137: Line 153:
 
</math>
 
</math>
   
where <math>B</math> is a <math>n \times 1</math> matrices with <math>1</math> at all charge DOFs of the upper beam and <math>C</math> is a <math>1 \times n</math> matrix with the only nonzero entry at the <math>y</math> DOF of the middle node.
+
where <math>B</math> is a <math>n \times 1</math> matrix with <math>1</math> at all charge DOFs of the upper beam and <math>C</math> is a <math>1 \times n</math> matrix with the only nonzero entry at the <math>y</math> DOF of the middle node.
   
Details of the implementation are available in a separate report ([https://portal.uni-freiburg.de/imteksimulation/downloads/benchmark/Eletrostatic%20beam%20%2838882%29/files/fileinnercontentproxy.2010-02-08.3748527563 ElectrostatBeam.pdf]), see also <ref name="lienemann2006"/>.
+
Details of the implementation are available in a separate report ([https://www.mpi-magdeburg.mpg.de/mpcsc/MORWIKI/Oberwolfach/ElectrostaticBeam.pdf ElectrostaticBeam.pdf]), see also <ref name="lienemann2006"/>.
   
 
A typical input to this system is a step response; periodic on/off switching is also possible.
 
A typical input to this system is a step response; periodic on/off switching is also possible.
Line 168: Line 184:
 
<tt>E10</tt>: <math>N = 38</math>, <math>S = 28</math>,
 
<tt>E10</tt>: <math>N = 38</math>, <math>S = 28</math>,
 
<tt>E100</tt>: <math>N = 398</math>, <math>S = 298</math>.
 
<tt>E100</tt>: <math>N = 398</math>, <math>S = 298</math>.
  +
  +
==Citation==
  +
  +
To cite this benchmark, use the following references:
  +
  +
* For the benchmark itself and its data:
  +
::The MORwiki Community, '''Electrostatic Beam'''. MORwiki - Model Order Reduction Wiki, 2018. http://modelreduction.org/index.php/Electrostatic_Beam
  +
  +
@MISC{morwiki_ebeam,
  +
author = <nowiki>{{The MORwiki Community}}</nowiki>,
  +
title = {Electrostatic Beam},
  +
howpublished = {{MORwiki} -- Model Order Reduction Wiki},
  +
url = <nowiki>{https://modelreduction.org/morwiki/Electrostatic_Beam}</nowiki>,
  +
year = {20XX}
  +
}
  +
  +
* For the background on the benchmark:
  +
  +
@ARTICLE{morLieRK06,
  +
author = <nowiki>{J. Lienemann and E.B. Rudnyi and J.G. Korvink}</nowiki>,
  +
title = {{MST} {MEMS} model order reduction: Requirements and benchmarks},
  +
journal = {Journal of Biomechanics},
  +
volume = {415},
  +
number = {2--3},
  +
pages = {469--498},
  +
year = {2006},
  +
doi = {10.1016/j.laa.2005.04.002}
  +
}
   
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 07:28, 12 June 2025


Electrostatic Beam
Background
Benchmark ID
  • electrostaticBeam_n38m1q1
  • electrostaticBeam_n398m1q1
Category

oberwolfach

System-Class

NLTI-SOS

Parameters
nstates
  • 38
  • 398
ninputs

1

noutputs

1

nparameters

0

components

B, C, E, F, K, M, f

Copyright
License

NA

Creator

Christian Himpe

Editor
Location

NA


Description: Beam Actuated by Electrostatic Force

Figure 1
Figure 2: Degrees of freedom y and \theta_z

Moving structures are an essential part for many microsystem devices, among them fluidic components like pumps and electrically controllable valves, sensing cantilevers, and optical structures.

Several actuation principles can be employed on microscopic length scales, certainly most frequent electromagnetic forces. While electrostatic actuation falls behind at the macro scale, the effect of charged bodies outperforms magnetic forces in the micro scale both in terms of performance and manufacturing expense.

While the single component can easily be simulated on a usual desktop computer, the calculation of a system of many coupled devices still presents a challenge. This challenge is raised by the fact that many of these devices show a nonlinear behavior. Especially for electrostatic structures, a further difficulty is the large reach of the electrostatic forces, leading to a strong spatial coupling of charges.

Accurate modelling of such a system typically leads to high order models. The tasks of simulation, analysis and controller design of high order nonlinear control systems can be simplified by reducing the order of the original system and approximating it by a lower order model.

An application of electrostatic moving structures are e.g. RF switches or filters. Given a simple enough shape, they often can be modelled as one-dimensional beams embedded in two or three dimensional space.

Model description

This model describes a slender beam which is actuated by a voltage between the beam and the ground electrode below (see Fig. 1).

On the beam, at least three degrees of freedom per node have to be considered:

y Flexural displacement
\theta_z Flexural rotation
q Charge

On the ground electrode, all spatial degrees of freedom are fixed, so only charge has to be considered. The beam is supported either on the left side or on both sides. The damping matrix is calculated by a linear combination of the mass matrix M and the stiffness matrix K.

The calculation of the electrostatic force would require a boundary element discretization, where it would be necessary to recalculate the capacity matrix for each time-step due to the motion of the charges This would require an integration over the beam's elements and could be written in analytical form by using e.g. Gauss integration; however, the complexity of the resulting system would be too high. We therefore use the method shown in [1], i.e. we concentrate the charges on the nodes. The capacity matrix then follows a simple 1/r law.

Origin

This benchmark is part of the Oberwolfach Benchmark Collection[2].

Data

Based on the finite element discretization presented in [3], an interactive matrix generator has been created using Wolfram Research's webMathematica. Models produced by this generator are in the DSIF[4] format, which allows for nonlinear terms.

All examples are made for a silicon beam with the following properties:

Property Value
Beam length (l) 10^{-5} m
Beam height (h) 10^{-6} m
Beam width (w) 15 \cdot 10^{-6} m
Distance between beams (s) 200 \cdot 10^{-9} m
Material density (rho) 2330 kg/m^3
Cross-sectional area (A) 150 \cdot 10^{12} m^2
Moment of inertia (I) 1.25 \cdot 10^{-21} m^4
Modulus of elasticity (E) 1.31 \cdot 10^{11} Pa
Contribution of M to damping 0
Contribution of K to damping 10^{-6}
Support Both sides, y DOF only

The following examples are available (all files are zipped compressed DSIF files, Units: SI):

File Number of Nodes Number of Equations Compressed Size [kB]
ElectrostaticBeam-dim1e1-E10.zip 10 38 4144
ElectrostaticBeam-dim1e2-E100.zip 100 398 347679

The .m files contain matrices M, E, K, B, F and C, the vector f and initial conditions for the following system of equations:


\begin{align}
M \ddot{x}(t) + E\dot{x}(t) + K x(t) &= B u(t) + F f(x(t),u(t)) \\
y(t) &= C x(t)
\end{align}

where B is a n \times 1 matrix with 1 at all charge DOFs of the upper beam and C is a 1 \times n matrix with the only nonzero entry at the y DOF of the middle node.

Details of the implementation are available in a separate report (ElectrostaticBeam.pdf), see also [5].

A typical input to this system is a step response; periodic on/off switching is also possible. The reduced model should thus both represent the step response as well as the possible influence of higher order harmonics.

Dimensions

System structure:


\begin{align}
M \ddot{x}(t) + E\dot{x}(t) + K x(t) &= B u(t) + F f(x(t)) \\
y(t) &= C x(t)
\end{align}

System dimensions:

M \in \mathbb{R}^{N \times N}, E \in \mathbb{R}^{N \times N}, K \in \mathbb{R}^{N \times N}, B \in \mathbb{R}^{N \times 1}, F \in \mathbb{R}^{N \times S}, f : \mathbb{R}^N \to \mathbb{R}^S, C \in \mathbb{R}^{1 \times N}.

System variants: E10: N = 38, S = 28, E100: N = 398, S = 298.

Citation

To cite this benchmark, use the following references:

  • For the benchmark itself and its data:
The MORwiki Community, Electrostatic Beam. MORwiki - Model Order Reduction Wiki, 2018. http://modelreduction.org/index.php/Electrostatic_Beam
@MISC{morwiki_ebeam,
  author =       {{The MORwiki Community}},
  title =        {Electrostatic Beam},
  howpublished = {{MORwiki} -- Model Order Reduction Wiki},
  url =          {https://modelreduction.org/morwiki/Electrostatic_Beam},
  year =         {20XX}
}
  • For the background on the benchmark:
@ARTICLE{morLieRK06,
  author =       {J. Lienemann and E.B. Rudnyi and J.G. Korvink},
  title =        {{MST} {MEMS} model order reduction: Requirements and benchmarks},
  journal =      {Journal of Biomechanics},
  volume =       {415},
  number =       {2--3},
  pages =        {469--498},
  year =         {2006},
  doi =          {10.1016/j.laa.2005.04.002}
}

References

  1. L. Silverberg, L. Weaver, Jr., Dynamics and Control of Electrostatic Structures, Journal of Applied Mechanics, Vol. 63, p. 383--391, 1996.
  2. J.G. Korvink, E.B. Rudnyi, Oberwolfach Benchmark Collection, Dimension Reduction of Large-Scale Systems, Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering, vol 45: 311--315, 2005.
  3. W. Weaver, Jr., S.P. Timoshenko, D.H. Young, Vibration problems in engineering, 5th ed., Wiley, 1990.
  4. J. Lienemann, B. Salimbahrami, B. Lohmann, J.G. Korvink, A File Format for the Exchange of Nonlinear Dynamical ODE Systems, Dimension Reduction of Large-Scale Systems, Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering, vol 45: 317--326, 2005.
  5. J. Lienemann, E.B. Rudnyi, J.G. Korvink, MST MEMS model order reduction: Requirements and benchmarks, Linear Algebra and its Applications, 415(2--3): 469--498 , 2006.