ABSTRACT

Computational Electrodynamics is a vast research field with a wide variety of tools. In physics the principle of gauge invariance plays a pivotal role as a guide towards a sensible formulation of the laws of nature as well as computing the properties of elementary particles using the lattice formulation of gauge theories, yet the gauge principle has played a much less pronounced role in performing computation in classical electrodynamics. In this work the author will demonstrate that starting from the gauge formulation of electrodynamics using the electromagnetic potentials leads to computational tools that can very well compete with the conventional electromagnetic field-based tools. Once accepting the formulation based on gauge fields, the computational code is very transparent due to the mimetic mapping of the electrodynamic variables on the computational grid. Although the illustrations and applications originate from microelectronic engineering, the method has a much larger range of applicability. Therefore this book is of interest to everyone having interest in computational electrodynamics. The volume is organized as follows: In part 1, a detailed introduction and overview is presented of the Maxwell equations as well as the derivation of the current and charge densities is different materials. Semiconductors are responding to electromagnetic fields in a non-linear way and the induced complications are discussed in detail. In part 2, the transition of the theory of electrodynamics, using the gauge potentials, to a formulation that can serve as the gateway to computational code is presented. In part 3, the feasibility and success of the methods of part 2 are demonstrated by a collection of microelectronic device designs. Part 4 focuses on a set of topical themes that brings the reader to the frontier of research in building the simulation tools using the gauge principle in computational electrodynamics. Technical topics discussed in the book include:Electromagnetic Field EquationsConstitutive RelationsDiscretization and Numerical AnalysisFinite Element and Finite Volume MethodsDesign of Integrated Passive Components

part I|113 pages

Introduction to Electromagnetism

chapter 1|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|9 pages

The Microscopic Maxwell Equations

chapter 3|5 pages

Potentials and Fields and the Lagrangian

chapter 4|22 pages

The Macroscopic Maxwell Equations

chapter 5|23 pages

Wave Guides and Transmission Lines

chapter 8|10 pages

Gauge Conditions

chapter 9|9 pages

The Geometry of Electrodynamics

chapter 10|7 pages

Integral Theorems

part II|112 pages

Discretization Methods for Sources and Fields

chapter 11|3 pages

The Finite Difference Method

chapter 12|8 pages

The Finite Element Method

part III|207 pages

Applications

chapter 15|52 pages

Simple Test Cases

chapter 16|13 pages

Evaluation of Coupled Inductors

chapter 18|10 pages

EM-TCAD Solving from 0–100 THz