TEJO, F. A. F.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/8543182790642045; TEJO, Francisco de Assis Ferreira.
Resumen:
This thesis presents three variational finite element formulations for analysis of
bounded, loss-free and linear electromagnetic field problems, enclosing otherwise general
non-homogeneous and/or anisotropic media. The treatment is general and can
be applied to both static and time-harmonic fields in longitudinally homogeneous and
infinite transmission lines or waveguides.
In applying the method of finite elements (FEM) to bounded waveguides, transversely
non-homogeneous and/or anisotropic, the most suitable formulation is expressed
in terms of three components of the magnetic field H, due to the hybrid nature
of the modes in such waveguides.
In order to eliminate the spurious solutions, inherent to vector variational formulations,
one introduces the transverse penalty method w i t h selective reduced integration
on lagrangian elements (STRIP), as well as the regularized mixed method (RMM).
Some typical problems are solved and the results are compared with the ones obtained
by the selective reduced integration penalty (RIP) and edge finite element methods.
The quality of the approximations and the computational performance, confirm
the theoretical estimates of errors and convergence rates, obtained through numerical
analysis on each one of the formulations presented.
The mixed method presents a numerical stability identical to that of the RIP
method, when one uses moderately distorted elements.
One has observed that the STRIP finite element method provides more accurate
eigenvalues than the ones calculated with the edge finite element method. Unfortunately,
the same does not happen to the eigenvectors, due to the decoupling between
the transverse and longitudinal components of the magnetic field H. Although mathematically
inconsistent, the STRIP finite element method plays a rather critical role
with respect to the edge elements finite element methods, whose adepts claim that
could solve any kind of electromagnetic boundary value problem.