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Branchline Coupler

Revision as of 09:05, 10 August 2019 by Hessm (talk | contribs)


Description

A branchline coupler (see xx--CrossReference--dft--fig:branch--xx) is a microwave semiconductor device, which is simulated by the time-harmonic Maxwell's equation. A 2-section branchline coupler consists of four strip line ports, coupled to each other by two transversal bridges. The energy excited at one port is coupled almost in equal shares to the two opposite ports, when considered as a MIMO-system. Here, only the SISO case is considered. The branchline coupler with 0.05mm thickness is placed on a substrate with 0.749mm thickness and relative permittivity  \epsilon_r = 2.2 and zero-conductivity  \sigma = 0 S/m . The simulation domain is confined to a  23.6 \times 22 \times 7 mm^3 box. The metallic ground plane of the device is represented by the electric boundary condition. The magnetic boundary condition is considered for the other sides of the structures. The discrete input port with source impedance 50 \Omega imposes 1 A current as the input. The voltage along the coupled port at the end of the other side of the coupler is read as the output.

Figure 1: Branchline Coupler Model[1]

Considered parameters are the frequency \omega and the relative permeability  \mu_r .

The affine form  a(u, v; \omega, \mu_r) = \sum_{q=1}^Q \Theta^q(\omega, \mu_r) a^q(u, v) can be established using  Q = 2 affine terms.

The discretized bilinear form is  a(u, v; \omega, \mu_r) = \sum_{q=1}^Q \Theta^q(\omega, \mu_r) A^q , with matrices  A^q .

The matrices corresponding to the bilinear forms  a^q( \cdot , \cdot ) as well as the input and output forms and the H(curl) inner product matrix have been assembled using the Finite Element Method, resulting in 27679 degrees of freedom, after removal of boundary conditions.

The coefficient functions are given by:

 \Theta^1(\omega, \mu_r) = \frac{1}{\mu_r}
 \Theta^2(\omega, \mu_r) = -\omega^2.

The parameter domain of interest is  \omega \in [1.0, 10.0] * 10^9 Hz, where the factor of  10^9 has already been taken into account while assembling the matrices, while the material variation occurs between  \mu_r \in [0.5, 2.0] . The input functional also has a factor of  \omega .

Data

The files are numbered according to their appearance in the summation and can be found here: Matrices.tar.gz Part1 Media:branchline_coupler_MORwiki_matrices.7z.001 Part2 Media:branchline_coupler_MORwiki_matrices.7z.002 Part3 Media:branchline_coupler_MORwiki_matrices.7z.003


Origin

The models have been developed within the MoreSim4Nano project.

Citation

To cite this benchmark, use the following references:

  • For the benchmark itself and its data:
The MORwiki Community, Branchline Coupler. MORwiki - Model Order Reduction Wiki, 2018. http://modelreduction.org/index.php/Branchline_Coupler
@MISC{morwiki_branchcouple,
  author =       {{The MORwiki Community}},
  title =        {Branchline Coupler},
  howpublished = {{MORwiki} -- Model Order Reduction Wiki},
  url =          {http://modelreduction.org/index.php/Branchline_Coupler},
  year =         {2013}
}
  • For the background on the benchmark:
   @ARTICLE{morHesB13,
     author =		 {M.~W. Hess and P. Benner},
     title =		 {Fast Evaluation of Time-Harmonic {M}axwell's
                     Equations Using the Reduced Basis Method},
     journal =		 {{IEEE} Trans. Microw. Theory Techn.},
     year =		 2013,
     volume =		 61,
     number =		 6,
     pages =		 {2265--2274},
     doi =		 {10.1109/TMTT.2013.2258167}
   }

References

  1. M. W. Hess, P. Benner, "Fast Evaluation of Time-Harmonic Maxwell's Equations Using the Reduced Basis Method", IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 61(6): 2265--2274, 2013.

Contact

Martin Hess