Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging

Development of modern high-frequency components and circuits is heavily based on full-wave electromagnetic (EM) simulation tools. Some phenomena, although important from the point of view of the system performance, e.g., EM cross-coupling effects, feed radiation in antenna arrays, substrate anisotro...

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Main Authors: Slawomir Koziel, Anna Pietrenko-Dabrowska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9225026/
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spelling doaj-0d9948e4cb304e75b83531ae31e076d22021-03-30T04:08:54ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-01818932618934210.1109/ACCESS.2020.30313699225026Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested KrigingSlawomir Koziel0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9063-2647Anna Pietrenko-Dabrowska1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2319-6782Department of Engineering, Engineering Optimization and Modeling Center, Reykjavik University, Reykjavik, IcelandFaculty of Electronics, Telecommunications, and Informatics, Gdansk University of Technology, Gdansk, PolandDevelopment of modern high-frequency components and circuits is heavily based on full-wave electromagnetic (EM) simulation tools. Some phenomena, although important from the point of view of the system performance, e.g., EM cross-coupling effects, feed radiation in antenna arrays, substrate anisotropy, cannot be adequately accounted for using simpler means such as equivalent network representations. Consequently, the involvement of EM analysis, especially for tuning of geometry parameters, has become imperative in high-frequency electronics. Notwithstanding, excessive computational costs associated with massive full-wave simulations required by these procedures and even more by tasks such as uncertainty quantification or multi-criterial optimization, constitute a practical bottleneck. Repetitive evaluations of a structure can be facilitated by the use of fast replacement models (surrogates). Among available methods, approximation models are by far the most popular due to their flexibility and accessibility. Unfortunately, surrogate modeling of high-frequency structures is hindered by the curse of dimensionality and nonlinearity of system responses, primarily frequency characteristics. The recently proposed performance-driven techniques attempt to address this issue by appropriate confinement of the model domain to focus the modeling process only on the relevant part of the parameter space, i.e., containing the designs that are of high quality from the point of view the assumed performance figures. The nested kriging framework is perhaps the most advanced of these methods and allows for constructing reliable surrogates over broad ranges of the system parameters and operating conditions. This article summarizes the recent developments of the technique, including the basic formulation and several advancements aiming at the improvement of the surrogate predictive power or lowering the computational cost of training data acquisition. These include the incorporation of sensitivity data, as well as dimensionality reduction through principal component analysis. The problem of uniform data sampling in confined domains is also discussed. Our considerations are comprehensively illustrated using several examples of antennas and microwave circuits.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9225026/High-frequency designelectromagnetic simulationsurrogate modelingperformance-driven modelingdomain confinementnested kriging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Slawomir Koziel
Anna Pietrenko-Dabrowska
spellingShingle Slawomir Koziel
Anna Pietrenko-Dabrowska
Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging
IEEE Access
High-frequency design
electromagnetic simulation
surrogate modeling
performance-driven modeling
domain confinement
nested kriging
author_facet Slawomir Koziel
Anna Pietrenko-Dabrowska
author_sort Slawomir Koziel
title Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging
title_short Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging
title_full Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging
title_fullStr Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging
title_full_unstemmed Recent Advances in High Frequency Modeling by Means of Domain Confinement and Nested Kriging
title_sort recent advances in high frequency modeling by means of domain confinement and nested kriging
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Development of modern high-frequency components and circuits is heavily based on full-wave electromagnetic (EM) simulation tools. Some phenomena, although important from the point of view of the system performance, e.g., EM cross-coupling effects, feed radiation in antenna arrays, substrate anisotropy, cannot be adequately accounted for using simpler means such as equivalent network representations. Consequently, the involvement of EM analysis, especially for tuning of geometry parameters, has become imperative in high-frequency electronics. Notwithstanding, excessive computational costs associated with massive full-wave simulations required by these procedures and even more by tasks such as uncertainty quantification or multi-criterial optimization, constitute a practical bottleneck. Repetitive evaluations of a structure can be facilitated by the use of fast replacement models (surrogates). Among available methods, approximation models are by far the most popular due to their flexibility and accessibility. Unfortunately, surrogate modeling of high-frequency structures is hindered by the curse of dimensionality and nonlinearity of system responses, primarily frequency characteristics. The recently proposed performance-driven techniques attempt to address this issue by appropriate confinement of the model domain to focus the modeling process only on the relevant part of the parameter space, i.e., containing the designs that are of high quality from the point of view the assumed performance figures. The nested kriging framework is perhaps the most advanced of these methods and allows for constructing reliable surrogates over broad ranges of the system parameters and operating conditions. This article summarizes the recent developments of the technique, including the basic formulation and several advancements aiming at the improvement of the surrogate predictive power or lowering the computational cost of training data acquisition. These include the incorporation of sensitivity data, as well as dimensionality reduction through principal component analysis. The problem of uniform data sampling in confined domains is also discussed. Our considerations are comprehensively illustrated using several examples of antennas and microwave circuits.
topic High-frequency design
electromagnetic simulation
surrogate modeling
performance-driven modeling
domain confinement
nested kriging
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9225026/
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