Robert Koslover
                                                                                                                                                    Certified Consultant
                                                         
                            
                         
                                                
    
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                                                Posted:
                            
                                9 years ago                            
                            
                                2016年5月27日 GMT+8 23:56                            
                        
                        
                                                    I'm not an expert on this subcategory of ports, but I suggest to you that the key insight here follows from the physics:  Lumped-ports are only approximations to reality if/when used over any extended space, so the key is to use them in such a way that the approximation involved is not too severe.  E.g., if you really need to model the "thickness" in the lumped-port region to get accurate results, then you should probably be modeling most/all of that particular region instead as a regular part of your FE problem, rather than as a lumped port.  Again, remember that a "lumped-port" is not a truly physical thing, in contrast to including an actual transmission-line (TL) and a physical junction.  The "real-world" part of your problem of interest presumably includes an actual TL junction, with a distribution of real-world currents on/in it and fields on/around it. If that real-world junction to your antenna is sufficiently small and simple, and if the TL that feeds it does not otherwise interfere/interact with the antenna's currents and fields, then you may be able to drop the details of the TL from the problem and represent its presence via a simple "lumped-port" instead.  But if not, then you really need to model the junction itself in some greater level of detail.
So, I suggest you take another look at the physical problem you are trying to represent with your model. There may still exist a better-possible representation which still takes advantage of using a lumped-port, but one in which the lumped-port's specification can be made to be independent of your dipole's thickness.
                                                
                                                
                            I'm not an expert on this subcategory of ports, but I suggest to you that the key insight here follows from the physics:  Lumped-ports are only approximations to reality if/when used over any extended space, so the key is to use them in such a way that the approximation involved is not too severe.  E.g., if you really need to model the "thickness" in the lumped-port region to get accurate results, then you should probably be modeling most/all of that particular region instead as a regular part of your FE problem, rather than as a lumped port.  Again, remember that a "lumped-port" is not a truly physical thing, in contrast to including an actual transmission-line (TL) and a physical junction.  The "real-world" part of your problem of interest presumably includes an actual TL junction, with a distribution of real-world currents on/in it and fields on/around it. If that real-world junction to your antenna is sufficiently small and simple, and if the TL that feeds it does not otherwise interfere/interact with the antenna's currents and fields, then you may be able to drop the details of the TL from the problem and represent its presence via a simple "lumped-port" instead.  But if not, then you really need to model the junction itself in some greater level of detail.
So, I suggest you take another look at the physical problem you are trying to represent with your model. There may still exist a better-possible representation which still takes advantage of using a lumped-port, but one in which the lumped-port's specification can be made to be independent of your dipole's thickness.
                        
                                                
                                                                                                            
                                             
                        
                        
                                                
    
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                                                Posted:
                            
                                9 years ago                            
                            
                                2016年5月30日 GMT+8 22:14                            
                        
                        
                                                    Thanks for your help. I will try to do what you told me.                                                
                                                
                            Thanks for your help. I will try to do what you told me.