Topology optimization for three-dimensional electromagnetic waves using an edge element-based finite-element method

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Abstract

This paper develops a topology optimization procedure for three-dimensional electromagnetic waves with an edge element-based finite-element method. In contrast to the two-dimensional case, three-dimensional electromagnetic waves must include an additional divergence-free condition for the field variables. The edge element-based finiteelement method is used to both discretize the wave equations and enforce the divergence-free condition. For wave propagation described in terms of the magnetic field in the widely used class of nonmagnetic materials, the divergence-free condition is imposed on the magnetic field. This naturally leads to a nodal topology optimization method. When wave propagation is described using the electric field, the divergence-free condition must be imposed on the electric displacement. In this case, the material in the design domain is assumed to be piecewise homogeneous to impose the divergencefree condition on the electric field. This results in an element-wise topology optimization algorithm. The topology optimization problems are regularized using a Helmholtz filter and a threshold projection method and are analysed using a continuous adjoint method. In order to ensure the applicability of the filter in the element-wise topology optimization version, a regularization method is presented to project the nodal into an element-wise physical density variable.

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Deng, Y., & Korvink, J. G. (2016). Topology optimization for three-dimensional electromagnetic waves using an edge element-based finite-element method. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 472(2189). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2015.0835

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