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The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics

Jian-Ming Jin
TLDR
The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics, Third Edition as discussed by the authors is a leading textbook on the finite element method, incorporating major advancements and further applications in the field of electromagnetic engineering.
Abstract
A new edition of the leading textbook on the finite element method, incorporating major advancements and further applications in the field of electromagneticsThe finite element method (FEM) is a powerful simulation technique used to solve boundary-value problems in a variety of engineering circumstances. It has been widely used for analysis of electromagnetic fields in antennas, radar scattering, RF and microwave engineering, high-speed/high-frequency circuits, wireless communication, electromagnetic compatibility, photonics, remote sensing, biomedical engineering, and space exploration.The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics, Third Edition explains the methods processes and techniques in careful, meticulous prose and covers not only essential finite element method theory, but also its latest developments and applicationsgiving engineers a methodical way to quickly master this very powerful numerical technique for solving practical, often complicated, electromagnetic problems.Featuring over thirty percent new material, the third edition of this essential and comprehensive text now includes:A wider range of applications, including antennas, phased arrays, electric machines, high-frequency circuits, and crystal photonicsThe finite element analysis of wave propagation, scattering, and radiation in periodic structuresThe time-domain finite element method for analysis of wideband antennas and transient electromagnetic phenomenaNovel domain decomposition techniques for parallel computation and efficient simulation of large-scale problems, such as phased-array antennas and photonic crystalsAlong with a great many examples, The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics is an ideal book for engineering students as well as for professionals in the field.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Spectral radiative properties of three-dimensionally ordered macroporous ceria particles

TL;DR: In this article, the radiative properties of 3D macroporous (3D) cerium dioxide (ceria) particles are numerically predicted in the spectral range 290-10,000 nm.
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A Quadratic Eigenvalue Solver of Linear Complexity for 3-D Electromagnetics-Based Analysis of Large-Scale Integrated Circuits

TL;DR: This paper successfully solves a quadratic eigenvalue problem of over 2.5 million unknowns associated with a large-scale 3-D on-chip circuit embedded in inhomogeneous materials in 40 min on a single 3 GHz 8222SE AMD Opteron processor.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Modeling electromagnetic fields in the presence of casing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a simulation of electromagnetic phenomena for realistic earth scenarios with the emergence of either staggered grid finite difference techniques Haber et al. (2000), Newman and Commer (2005), Weiss and Newman (2003), Haber and Ascher (2001), and edge-based finite element methods Schwarzbach and Haber (2011); Jin (1993); Key and Ovall (2011) as preferable methods for simulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Time-Harmonic Discontinuous Galerkin Method as a Robust Forward Solver for Microwave Imaging Applications

TL;DR: In this article, the Discontinuous Galerkin Method (DGM) forward solver with a number of features that aim to benefit tomographic microwave imaging algorithms is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of Plasmonic Bragg Reflectors with Graphene-Based Silicon Grating

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that SPP modes on graphene exhibit a stopband around the Bragg wavelengths, and a defect resonance mode is formed inside the stopband by introducing a nano-cavity into the PBR.