On geometry parameterization for simulation-driven design closure of antenna structures
Slawomir Koziel,Anna Pietrenko-Dabrowska +1 more
- 26 Jul 2021
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the approach to arranging the structure parameterization (e.g., the use of absolute or relative parameters) may have a major effect of the optimization outcome of the simulation-based design closure process.
read more
Abstract:
Full-wave electromagnetic (EM) simulation tools have become ubiquitous in antenna design, especially final tuning of geometry parameters. From the reliability standpoint, the recommended realization of EM-driven design is through rigorous numerical optimization. It is a challenging endeavor with the major issues related to the high computational cost of the process, but also the necessity of handling several objectives and constraints over often highly-dimensional parameter spaces. From the numerical perspective, making decisions about the formulation of the optimization problem, the approach to handling the design constraints, but also parameterization of the antenna geometry, are all non-trivial. At the same time, these issues are interleaved, and may play an important role in the performance and reliability of the simulation-based design closure process. This paper demonstrates that the approach to arranging the structure parameterization (e.g., the use of absolute or relative parameters) may have a major effect of the optimization outcome. Our investigations are carried out using three broadband monopole antennas optimized under different scenarios and using different parameterizations. In particular, the results indicate that relative parameterization is preferred for optimization of input characteristics, whereas absolute parameterization is more suitable for size reduction.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Multi-functional metasurface architecture for amplitude, polarization and wavefront control
Alexandros Pitilakis,Manuel Seckel,Anna C. Tasolamprou,A.I. Deltsidis,Dionysios Manessis,Andreas Ostmann,Nikolaos V. Kantartzis,Christos Liaskos,C. Soukoulis,S. Tretyakov,Maria Kafesaki,Odysseas Tsilipakos +11 more
- 08 Apr 2022
TL;DR: In this paper , a multi-functional and recon-gurable metasurface architecture for the microwave regime is proposed, where variable loads are connected behind the backplane to recon-gurably shape the complex surface impedance.
References
•Book
Trust Region Methods
Andrew R. Conn,Nicholas I. M. Gould,Philippe L. Toint +2 more
- 01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: This chapter discusses Trust-Region Mewthods for General Constained Optimization and Systems of Nonlinear Equations and Nonlinear Fitting, and some of the methods used in this chapter dealt with these systems.
3K
A MIMO Dielectric Resonator Antenna With Improved Isolation for 5G mm-Wave Applications
TL;DR: In this paper, a multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) dielectric resonator antenna with enhanced isolation is proposed for future 5G millimeter (mm)-wave applications.
322
Compact UWB Monopole Antenna for Automotive Communications
TL;DR: In this paper, a bandwidth-enhanced, compact, monopole antenna with modified ground plane for modern automotive ultra wideband (UWB) applications is presented, where the ground plane of the fundamental radiator is curved and defected to improve the VSWR bandwidth.
284
Fast simulation-driven antenna design using response-feature surrogates
TL;DR: A computationally efficient procedure for electromagnetic (EM)‐simulation‐driven design of antennas is presented, based on local approximation models of the antenna response, established using a set of suitably selected characteristic features rather than the entire response.
178