Document Actions

EMC analysis

Log-periodic antenna
Far-field radiated by a logarithmic
periodic antenna operating at the
centre frequency.

Base station antenna
BSA in FF (small)
Near-field computation for a GSM
base station antenna.

Car with internal E-fields
Car field plane
Near field inside automobile. GSM
antenna in rear-view mirror.

EM shielding effectivity
Slot box
Box field peaks
Distribution of the electric
near-field inside the box in a
cut-plane.

Cable coupling analysis
Plate with wires
Two transmission lines close to
metallic ground plane.

Radiation Patterns and Antenna Factors

The FEKO solution engine employs the Method of Moments (MoM) which makes FEKO ideally suited to the analysis of typical EMC antennas. The power of the MoM approach lies in the fact that only problem elements where currents flow are discretised (e.g. wires, metallic surfaces, dielectric body surfaces). Free-space regions are not discretised and no absorbing boundary conditions (ABCs) have to be set in the simulation. Array patterns or specified near-field values are directly computed from the resulting MoM currents, resulting in a highly efficient computational process.

Near-fields for Radiation Hazard Analysis

Radiation hazard analysis is customisable to suit the user's requirements. Near-fields can be specified on Cartesian, cylindrical or spherical coordinate systems to enable easy visualisation of the near-fields around any particular structure of interest. Isosurfaces can be drawn from computed near-field blocks to visualise the shape of a hazardous radiation boundary around an antenna.

Electrically large problems

Computational resource requirements scale rapidly as the electrical size of a geometry increases and requirements can easily outstrip available resources for electrically large problems. FEKO provides the following solution features for such problems:

  • An efficient out-of-core solver that swops matrix blocks to hard disk during processing, allowing the solution of large problems on computers with less main memory than the problem normally requires.
  • A highly efficient parallel processing implementation for multiprocessor computers.
  • The Multilevel Fast Multipole Method (MLFMM) which greatly reduces computational resource requirements over the conventional MoM.
  • Approximation techniques hybridised with the MoM, e.g. Physical Optics (PO).


Shielding

FEKO can compute electric and magnetic shielding factors for metallic or dielectric enclosures of arbitrary shape with arbitrary openings cut into them. Shielding effectiveness is typically tested for two scenarios:

  • The enclosure shields internal cables or components from outside radiation. In this case a plane wave may be directed at the enclosure and field values computed inside the enclosure to test its effectiveness.
  • The enclosure shields the external environment from internally generated radiation. In this case the internal radiating components are modelled to acceptable levels of detail (e.g. simple dipoles, patch antennas) and the near- or far-field levels outside the box are computed.

Imperfections in screening material, e.g. skin effects or radiation penetration through walls of finite conductivity, may be taken into account.

Coupling problems

Transmission lines are often the source of complex radiation problems involving cross-talk, external energy coupling into cables or cables radiating unwanted radiation to the surrounding environment. Simple cables, of which the transfer impedance is known, can be solved with FEKO's own cable analysis capability. Complex cable harnesses can be solved through an interface between FEKO and codes that have such (transmission line) analysis capabilities.  FEKO's rigorous MoM treatment of the environment surrounding the cables augments the dedicated cable modelling expertise to result in an elegant and accurate modelling solution for complicated aerospace or automotive applications.


Broad-Band Applications

EMC analysis (e.g. computing the shielding factor of an enclosure) typically has to be done over a wide frequency band. Frequency domain solvers (such as FEKO) that employ standard linear or logarithmic frequency stepping take prohibitively long to execute for such problems. FEKO features Adaptive Frequency Sampling (AFS) to adaptively scan the frequency band of interest in fewer frequency points, while still resolving all resonances and other characteristics of the problem.

Other applications

FEKO has many features that make it attractive for a variety of EMC simulations in addition to the examples listed here. Examples of these features and solution abilities include:

  • Real ground (earth) can be modelled with a reflection coefficient approximation or a rigorous Sommerfeld formulation.
  • PCB whether simple or multilayered, with or without ground planes can be modelled with special stratified media Green's function formulations.
  • Dielectric or magnetic bodies of arbitrary shape can be modelled with an equivalent surface discretisation (e.g. multiple homogenous bodies) or a volumetric mesh (e.g. highly inhomogeneous bodies).
  • Several hybrid extensions for higher frequency ranges allow simulations where the traditional MoM fails due to excessive computational resource requirements.