averaging of material properties;
biological media;
curved and "sloped" interfaces;
FDTD method;
flux-related fields;
interface conditions;
layered spheres;
linear interpolations;
Mie series solutions;
D O I:
10.1109/22.734576
中图分类号:
TM [电工技术];
TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号:
0808 ;
0809 ;
摘要:
In recent years, the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method has found numerous applications in the field of computational electromagnetics. One of the strengths of the method is the fact that no elaborate grid generation specifying the content of the problem is necessary-the medium is specified by assigning parameters to the regularly spaced cubes. However, this can be a weakness, especially when the interfaces between neighboring media are curved or "sloped" and do not exactly fit the cubic lattice. Since the E- and H-fields are only calculated at the regular intervals, sharp field discontinuities at the interfaces are often missed. Furthermore, the averaging of the material properties often leads to significant errors. In this paper, a post-processing method is presented, which approximates the correct held behavior at the interfaces by interpolating between the FDTD calculated values, splitting them into the components normal and tangential to the interfaces, and then enforcing the interface conditions for each of these components separately.