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An Interior Penalty Discontinuous Galerkin Time Domain Method for Nanophotonic Applications | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

An Interior Penalty Discontinuous Galerkin Time Domain Method for Nanophotonic Applications


Abstract:

In this work, an interior penalty discontinuous galerkin time domain method is developed for the discretization of the 3D time-domain Maxwell's equations coupled to a Dru...Show More

Abstract:

In this work, an interior penalty discontinuous galerkin time domain method is developed for the discretization of the 3D time-domain Maxwell's equations coupled to a Drude dispersion model for nanophotonic applications. High order hierarchical vector basis and high order explicit Low-Storage Runge-Kutta scheme is applied for the space and time discretization, respectively. Numerical experiment is implemented to demonstrate the accuracy of the proposed method.
Date of Conference: 26-28 March 2018
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 18 October 2018
ISBN Information:
Conference Location: Chengdu, China
References is not available for this document.

I. Introduction

Nanophotonics is concerned with the study of the behavior of light at the nanometer scale in interaction with sub-wavelength particles or devices. The numerical study of electromagnetic wave propagation in interaction with nanostructures generally relies on the solution of the system of time-domain Maxwell's equations and taking into account an appropriate physical dispersion model, such as the Drude or Drude-Lorentz models, for characterizing the material properties of the involved nanostructures at optical frequencies [1]. For the numerical solution of the time-domain Maxwell's equations, plenty of methods are developed, such as finite difference time domain (FDTD) methods, finite element time domain (FETD) methods. The FDTD methods are very popular because of their simplicity and their non-dissipative nature. While for realistic nanophotonic applications, the FDTD methods suffer from several important limitations, essentially due to the use of a cartesian discretization grid [2]. Although the FETD methods are more flexible for capturing complex geometric structures, they have to solve linear systems of equations within each time step, which is very expensive in realistic problems. In the last ten years, the Discontinuous-Galerkin Time-Domain (DGTD) methods [3] gain more and more attentions in the purpose of simulating complex realistic problems. DGTD methods accommodate elements of various types and shapes, irregular non-matching grids, and even locally varying polynomial order, and hence offer great flexibility for modeling complex problems. Thus the DGTD methods are very promising for modeling complex problems like the nanophotonic applications. In this work, an interior penalty discontinuous galerkin time domain (IPDGTD) [4] method is developed for solving time-domain Maxwell's equations in Drude-like media.

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1.
S. A. Maier, "Plasmonics: Fundamentals and Applications", Springer Berlin, vol. 52, no. 11, pp. 49-74, 2014.
2.
R. Léger, J. Viquerat, C. Durochat, C. Scheid and S. Lanteri, "A parallel non-conforming multi-element DGTD method for the simulation of electromagnetic wave interaction with metallic nanoparticles", Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics, vol. 270, no. 6, pp. 330-342, 2014.
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J. S. Hesthaven and T. Warburton, Nodal discontinuous Galerkin methods: algorithms analysis and applications, NY:Springer Science Business Media, 2007.
4.
H. Wang, L. Xu, B. Li, S. Descombes and S. Lanteri, "A New Family of Exponential-Based High-Order DGTD Methods for Modeling 3-D Transient Multiscale Electromagnetic Problems", IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, vol. 65, no. 11, pp. 5960-5974, 2017.
5.
P. Drude, "Zur elektronentheorie der metalle", Annalen der Physik, vol. 306, pp. 566-613, 1900.

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References

References is not available for this document.