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Product category: Design and Development Software
News Release from: Comsol | Subject: RF Module
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial Team on 18 August 2006

Software looks at RF design from all
angles

Software enables novel simulation capabilities for the design of sophisticated RF, microwave and photonics components.

The RF Module for Comsol Multiphysics enables novel simulation capabilities for the design of today's sophisticated RF, microwave, and photonics components, and in general the software makes it easier than ever to study components and systems that deal with propagating electromagnetic waves With it users can design and prototype devices for the transmission, guiding, receiving and filtering/processing of electromagnetic waves in applications where the range of frequencies spans from radio to optical

With the module, users can consider all sorts of multiphysics effects including the interconnection of electromagnetics phenomena with heat transfer, structural mechanics, and more.

For instance, it is possible to see the effects of heating on the frequency response of a microwave filter.

Users can also see in high-power microwave waveguides or switches how close a design gets to safety margins before electric breakdown of air or a gas occurs.

They can then experiment with the software on a better physical design or choice of materials to increase safety margins.

To make such analyses easier, the module provides a ready-made multiphysics coupling for microwave heating.

Here users no longer have to determine which physics they must select to solve this problem and then struggle to decide which boundaries couple them together; the software automates this process with a few mouse clicks.

A key feature in the RF Module is the characterisation of S-parameters/reflection-transmission coefficients.

For a given geometry and set of physics, users can determine such values over a wide range of frequencies.

This S-parameter analysis is ideal for waveguides, antennas, filters, directional couplers, switches, microwave amplifiers, transmission lines, and impedance-matching networks.

The module also serves to help scientists learn more about a fascinating new field called metamaterials, also known as left-handed or negative-index materials - in which the permeability and permittivity are simultaneously negative.

These materials create all sorts of unusual phenomena: They break the diffraction limit to improve resolution in optical devices such as microscopes, they reverse the Doppler effect, and they can create very low reflectance, which is useful in stealth technology.

With the RF Module scientists can analyse the frequency-dependent properties of such materials and learn how to build optical or microwave components.

An important emerging technology in electromagnetic-wave engineering is the transmission of terahertz rays.

These so-called T-rays are well suited for applications such as the detection of explosives or contraband, defect analysis, moisture monitoring, medical diagnostics, trace-gas detection, and biomedical imaging.

Comments Dr Jason Deibel of the Mittleman Terahertz Research Group at Rice University: "Comsol Multiphysics can be effectively and efficiently used to model engineering problems and phenomena associated with terahertz wave propagation".

Specifically, he successfully used this software to evaluate the design of a radial photoconductive terahertz antenna.

Using these and other features, the RF Module is well suited for a wide range of applications including the design and analysis of: antennas, microwave waveguides, coplanar waveguides (CPWs) and microstrips, cavity filters, high-power microwave components, scattering problems in lasers and optics, magneto-optical storage devices, dielectric mirrors, Bragg gratings, terahertz waveguides, optical waveguides and filters, and photonic-crystal waveguides.

To help users learn how to apply the RF Module to these and other application areas, the software comes with a model library with more than 25 real-world examples.

One typical example optimises the design of a microwave filter by accounting for material and geometric shape changes induced by thermal strains; another examines the operation of a microwave oven with heat dissipation in food.

Each model has a detailed technical description of the underlying physics along with step-by-step instructions on how to create the model.

In this way users not only leverage the knowledge of Comsol's engineering staff to learn how to apply the software to a particular application, they also can open these models to gain a valuable head-start in their modelling work.

The RF Module starts shipping on 1st September 2006.

A single-user licence for RF Module costs GBP 1995 and requires Comsol Multiphysics. Request a free brochure from Comsol ...

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