Note: This discussion is about an older version of the COMSOL Multiphysics® software. The information provided may be out of date.
Discussion Closed This discussion was created more than 6 months ago and has been closed. To start a new discussion with a link back to this one, click here.
Port boundary condition: what's relation between "port input power" and "E field amplitude"?
Posted 14.04.2015, 08:28 GMT-4 RF & Microwave Engineering Version 4.4 6 Replies
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
The port boundary condition is quite useful for exciting the model with an EM wave. However, the description of the port boundary condition's "Port Mode Settings - User Defined" in "RF Module: User's Guide" is quite unclear:
"The mode field can be entered with an arbitrary amplitude and is normalized internally."
Which means, no matter what value I use in the "Port Mode Settings - Input quantity (e.g. Magnetic field) - Magnetic mode field H0", COMSOL will only adopt the direction of the H0 value but normalize its amplitude with other parameters (am I right?). But what's the detail of the normalization?
Fortunately, I found a blog discussing it a little bit:
srdjancomsol.weebly.com/port-boundary-condition-2d.html
srdjancomsol.weebly.com/setting-excitation-in-3d.html
According to the author, for a 3D case, we will have
P=0.5*n*IEI^2*S*cos(θ)/η0
where P is the port input power, |E| is the amplitude of the electric field, S is the area of the port, η0=sqrt(μ0/ε0), and according to my guess, n may be the refractive index, and θ may be the port phase θin.
However, still, the relation between the Pin and E field amplitude is not clear. I realize a very simple 3D example to explore this relation: there is only one block, the top is a port, and 4 walls are perfect electric conductor and perfect magnetic conductor as we know the electric field will be perpendicular to two walls and the magnetic field will be perpendicular to other two walls. By changing the area of the port, I get different |E|, but the problem is, I can't obtain the relation P=0.5*n*IEI^2*S*cos(θ)/η0:
With Pin=1[W], θin=0[rad], H0=(0 1000 0),
width(=depth) [um] Port area [um^2] E [V/m]
0.1 0.01 8.0e6
0.2 0.04 2.0e6
0.3 0.09 1.1e6
0.4 0.16 8.5e5
0.5 0.25 6.7e5
0.6 0.36 5.4e5
0.7 0.49 4.4e5
Can anyone help me? Thank you!
"The mode field can be entered with an arbitrary amplitude and is normalized internally."
Which means, no matter what value I use in the "Port Mode Settings - Input quantity (e.g. Magnetic field) - Magnetic mode field H0", COMSOL will only adopt the direction of the H0 value but normalize its amplitude with other parameters (am I right?). But what's the detail of the normalization?
Fortunately, I found a blog discussing it a little bit:
srdjancomsol.weebly.com/port-boundary-condition-2d.html
srdjancomsol.weebly.com/setting-excitation-in-3d.html
According to the author, for a 3D case, we will have
P=0.5*n*IEI^2*S*cos(θ)/η0
where P is the port input power, |E| is the amplitude of the electric field, S is the area of the port, η0=sqrt(μ0/ε0), and according to my guess, n may be the refractive index, and θ may be the port phase θin.
However, still, the relation between the Pin and E field amplitude is not clear. I realize a very simple 3D example to explore this relation: there is only one block, the top is a port, and 4 walls are perfect electric conductor and perfect magnetic conductor as we know the electric field will be perpendicular to two walls and the magnetic field will be perpendicular to other two walls. By changing the area of the port, I get different |E|, but the problem is, I can't obtain the relation P=0.5*n*IEI^2*S*cos(θ)/η0:
With Pin=1[W], θin=0[rad], H0=(0 1000 0),
width(=depth) [um] Port area [um^2] E [V/m]
0.1 0.01 8.0e6
0.2 0.04 2.0e6
0.3 0.09 1.1e6
0.4 0.16 8.5e5
0.5 0.25 6.7e5
0.6 0.36 5.4e5
0.7 0.49 4.4e5
Can anyone help me? Thank you!
Attachments:
6 Replies Last Post 16.06.2015, 16:46 GMT-4