Title :
Interfacing unstructured tetrahedron grids to structured-grid FDTD
Author :
Riley, Douglas ; Turner, C. David
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiat. & Electromagn. Anal., Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fDate :
9/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Finite-element unstructured tetrahedron grids provide considerable modeling flexibility but can give rise to an extremely large number of cells when solving open-region problems. The finite-volume hybrid-grid (FVHG) algorithm enables unstructured grids to be combined with traditional structured-grid, rectangular-cell, finite-difference time-domain (FDTD), thereby considerably reducing the unstructured-mesh overhead in surrounding space. In this letter, a simple technique to interface free-meshed, tetrahedron grids with FDTD is described. The two grids are directly coupled without the need for spatial interpolation. The tetrahedron mesh is defined to terminate on a rectangular surface that may be located very close to the geometry under study. Absorbing boundary conditions are easily applied in the surrounding FDTD grid. This technique provides finite-element modeling flexibility with the benefits of explicit time differencing and limited unstructured-mesh overhead. Multimaterial regions can be solved. The FVHG algorithm has been found to be accurate and generally stable for the long-term, even with complex free meshes generated by advanced solid-modeling software
Keywords :
electromagnetism; finite difference time-domain analysis; EM analysis; EM computations; absorbing boundary conditions; finite-difference time-domain method; finite-element modeling flexibility; finite-volume hybrid-grid algorithm; free-meshed grids; multimaterial regions; open-region problems; rectangular-cell FDTD; structured-grid FDTD; unstructured tetrahedron grids; Boundary conditions; Computational fluid dynamics; Finite difference methods; Finite element methods; Geometry; Interpolation; Mesh generation; Partitioning algorithms; Stability; Time domain analysis;
Journal_Title :
Microwave and Guided Wave Letters, IEEE