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2D axisymmetric numeric port settings

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Dear all,

I am trying to model EM wave propagation through a tapered step-index fiber. Because of the large size of my geometry and the symmetry of the problem I use the 2D axisymmetric settings. My fiber has a numeric port on one end and a small opening at the other. My problem is that the mode index and the e-field distribution at the port side i find with respectively the boundary mode analysis and the frequency domain study do not match the results I find when I run a mode analysis study in regular 2D on the port side of the geometry.
For example in the axisymmetric case I find a lower effective mode index from the boundary mode analysis study and I find a much more spread out mode with. Does anybody know how to setup a numeric port in the 2d axisymmetric case? Or how to properly compute the effective mode index for what is basically a line in the 2 axisymmetric case using the boundary mode analysis study?

Cheers!

Boris

6 Replies Last Post 12 gen 2014, 12:04 GMT-5
Ivar KJELBERG COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)

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Posted: 1 decade ago 23 mag 2011, 08:57 GMT-4
Hi

I do not follow you when you say that the 2D-axi and the standard 2D differs, for me this is normal, as 2D has an "infinite" or "per meter " depth along Z, while the 2D axis has a loop length worth 2*pi*r. This is a radically different topology , hence different mode shapes

normally the 2D-axi takes care of the r=0 (by multiplying many of the formulas by "r" and then normalising back the results. But one should not forget that a 2D-axi symmetry means really that the axis remains fixed and that all phenomena are radially symmetric

--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi I do not follow you when you say that the 2D-axi and the standard 2D differs, for me this is normal, as 2D has an "infinite" or "per meter " depth along Z, while the 2D axis has a loop length worth 2*pi*r. This is a radically different topology , hence different mode shapes normally the 2D-axi takes care of the r=0 (by multiplying many of the formulas by "r" and then normalising back the results. But one should not forget that a 2D-axi symmetry means really that the axis remains fixed and that all phenomena are radially symmetric -- Good luck Ivar

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Posted: 1 decade ago 23 mag 2011, 09:58 GMT-4


Dear Ivar,

Apologies for not phrasing the problem clearly and thanks for your fast reply! In the regular 2d case I study a circle that should have the same dimensions as the the port that I defined as a line from r=0 in the 2D axisymmetric case (if I unstand the 2D axisymmetry correcly).
Do I not correctly assume that applying a mode analysis to the regular 2D circle should yield the same effective mode index as the a boundary mode analysis to this 'line' from r=0 in the 2D axisymmetric case?

Boris
Dear Ivar, Apologies for not phrasing the problem clearly and thanks for your fast reply! In the regular 2d case I study a circle that should have the same dimensions as the the port that I defined as a line from r=0 in the 2D axisymmetric case (if I unstand the 2D axisymmetry correcly). Do I not correctly assume that applying a mode analysis to the regular 2D circle should yield the same effective mode index as the a boundary mode analysis to this 'line' from r=0 in the 2D axisymmetric case? Boris

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Posted: 1 decade ago 23 mag 2011, 10:19 GMT-4
For clarity, these are the geometries I use (in the 2D axisymmetric case my port is at z=0)
For clarity, these are the geometries I use (in the 2D axisymmetric case my port is at z=0)


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Posted: 1 decade ago 28 feb 2012, 06:31 GMT-5
Shouldn't the 'dif' half circles on the top of your 2D-axi actually be rectangle-shaped? Because this revolves around the r=0 axis and the circular fiber profile would be created automatically...
Shouldn't the 'dif' half circles on the top of your 2D-axi actually be rectangle-shaped? Because this revolves around the r=0 axis and the circular fiber profile would be created automatically...

Clenilson Rodrigues da Silveira

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Posted: 1 decade ago 19 lug 2012, 15:09 GMT-4
Hi! I'm a new user of Comsol. I got an evaluation trial license. I need to model a tapered fiber. So firstly, I decided to run simple examples contained in model library. I ran RF/step_index_fiber. I tried to follow the same steps contained in this example but in 2D axisymmetric and 3D model. But unfortunately I did not get the same results. In 3D model I couldn't get any distribution of electrical field. I realized that it is a common problem but anyone was able to appropriately answer those kind of questions. Is it a problem related to excitation? Thanks in advance.
Hi! I'm a new user of Comsol. I got an evaluation trial license. I need to model a tapered fiber. So firstly, I decided to run simple examples contained in model library. I ran RF/step_index_fiber. I tried to follow the same steps contained in this example but in 2D axisymmetric and 3D model. But unfortunately I did not get the same results. In 3D model I couldn't get any distribution of electrical field. I realized that it is a common problem but anyone was able to appropriately answer those kind of questions. Is it a problem related to excitation? Thanks in advance.

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Posted: 1 decade ago 12 gen 2014, 12:04 GMT-5
I've come across exactly the same question just as you did. I want to simulate a model that a continuous wave pass through a fiber taper with different diameters at the two ends. Firstly, I want to simulate a Single Mode Fiber as a test, but it doesn't work either. Have you solve it yet?
I've come across exactly the same question just as you did. I want to simulate a model that a continuous wave pass through a fiber taper with different diameters at the two ends. Firstly, I want to simulate a Single Mode Fiber as a test, but it doesn't work either. Have you solve it yet?

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