Variational, stable, and self-consistent coupling of 3D electromagnetics to 1D transmission lines in the time domain
•Multiscale method with applications to power-flow on pulsed power devices.•Circuit coupling imposed as constraints and relaxed with Lagrange multipliers.•Model and discretization have provable energy estimates.•Describes and demonstrates portably performant implementation.•Presents code verificatio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of computational physics 2022-02, Vol.451, p.110856, Article 110856 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Multiscale method with applications to power-flow on pulsed power devices.•Circuit coupling imposed as constraints and relaxed with Lagrange multipliers.•Model and discretization have provable energy estimates.•Describes and demonstrates portably performant implementation.•Presents code verification with a transient and steady state problem.
This work presents a new multiscale method for coupling the 3D Maxwell's equations to the 1D telegrapher's equations. While Maxwell's equations are appropriate for modeling complex electromagnetics in arbitrary-geometry domains, simulation cost for many applications (e.g. pulsed power) can be dramatically reduced by representing less complex transmission line regions of the domain with a 1D model. By assuming a transverse electromagnetic (TEM) ansatz for the solution in a transmission line region, we reduce the Maxwell's equations to the telegrapher's equations. We propose a self-consistent finite element formulation of the fully coupled system that uses boundary integrals to couple between the 3D and 1D domains and supports arbitrary unstructured 3D meshes. Additionally, by using a Lagrange multiplier to enforce continuity at the coupling interface, we allow for an absorbing boundary condition to also be applied to non-TEM modes on this boundary. We demonstrate that this feature reduces non-physical reflection and ringing of non-TEM modes off of the coupling boundary. By employing implicit time integration, we ensure a stable coupling, and we introduce an efficient method for solving the resulting linear systems. We demonstrate the accuracy of the new method on two verification problems, a transient O-wave in a rectilinear prism and a steady-state problem in a coaxial geometry, and show the efficiency and weak scalability of our implementation on a cold test of the Z-machine MITL and post-hole convolute. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9991 1090-2716 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jcp.2021.110856 |