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Rotating Mode Stirrer in Room excited by log-periodic antenna
Posted 2020年6月4日 GMT-4 08:13 RF & Microwave Engineering, Geometry 4 Replies
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Dear Sir/Madame,
I am looking into the effect of adding a mode stirrer to a room excited by a Log-periodic antenna on the electric field in the room. I would like to see how the electric field would change between two stirrer positions. However I am experiencing difficulties adding the mode stirrer and getting two solutions (I start with turning the mode stirrer 180 degrees).
I created the geometry of the mode stirrer by defining a workplane and specifying rectangles in this workplane which I then manipulate such that they form the form of the mode stirrer. This stirrer is then considered infinitely thin to ease the computational requirements. I then try to add boundary conditions to this geometry (PEC/Impedance) but they are not applicable. I added a screenshot for clarification.
If I use very thin rectangular blocks instead of the planes I can apply the boundary conditions however the mesh becomes incredibly fine because of the thinness of the blocks causing very large computation times which I want to avoid as much as possible.
Also I would like to model the electric field in the room for two different stirrer rotations. I have had no succes in finding a way to do this. The most similar problem I found was a microwave heating problem with a rotating dish on the bottom which used identity pairs and a rotating domain (https://www.comsol.com/forum/thread/234941/applying-moving-mesh-rotating-domain-in-microwave-heating). Though I dont think I can use this as my mode stirrer does not have overlapping faces that form identity pairs. The ugly solution would be to save the system in different files for every stirrer position and solve the models seperately. Though comparing the solutions would be more tiresome.
Any help with the boundary conditions and the rotation of the mode stirrer would be much appreciated. Thanks in advance, Gijs Mast
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