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A Hybrid Modelling Approach for Evaluating the Emissions from a Powertrain
Gennaro Di Mambro1, Sarah Sibilia1,2, Damiano Capraro1,2, Andrea Gaetano Chiariello3, Domenico Capriglione1, Antonio Maffucci1
1Dept. of Electrical and Information Engineering, University of Cassino and Southern Lazio, Italy; 2E-lectra, Cassino, Italy; 3Dept. of Engineering, University of Campania "L. Vanvitelli", Italy
The paper deals with the analysis of the electromagnetic emission from a powertrain for automotive applications. A hybrid modelling approach is presented, based on the assumption that only the cable subsystem of the powertrain is known, whereas all the other components such as drives, inverters, and batteries are only known in terms of their nominal behavior. The hybrid approach is based on the experimental characterization of the components and on the full-wave simulation of the cable subsystem. All the subsystems are then represented in term of equivalent circuital multiport and a system-level circuital simulation is carried out to derive the high-frequency currents and voltages. These quantities are finally used to estimate the emissions from the powertrain. Benchmark with alternative models and with the experimental results show the effectiveness of the proposed methodology.
Hybridization of full-wave FDTD solver with a Multilevel Multiconductor Transmission Line solver with ngspice Interconnections
Alberto Gascón1, Luis D. Angulo1, Carlos J. Ramos-Salas1, Ferran Silva2, Marcos Quílez2, Salvador G. García1, Enrique Pascual3
1Universidad de Granada, Spain; 2Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain; 3Airbus DS, Madrid
This article presents the hybridization of a 3D full-wave Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) solver with a multilevel multiconductor transmission line (MTL) solver, using the circuit simulator ngspice to treat TL interconnections. This schema is intended to study the electromagnetic response of 3D systems where networks of shielded cables are present. The MTL solver can simulate networks of shielded cable bundles with arbitrary topology. Bundles interconnects and terminations are described using ngspice. Interaction between different levels in the bundle is described by means of the transfer impedance of the cable shields.
Common mode coupling of 3D-FDTD and MTL methods for in-situ cable bundle modeling
Christophe Guiffaut1, Alain Reineix1, Thomas Strub2
1CNRS, France; 2AxesSim
The Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) method is widely used in EMC simulation of structures composed of complex conducting surfaces and volumes. In addition, the thin wire formalism provides to the FDTD method the ability to efficiently deal with complex wire network. In this paper, we propose a new full hybrid FDTD – MTL method to deal with cable bundles in their realistic environment, taking into account the complexity of the return current path by the FDTD method. The voltage reference of the cable cannot be equivalent between both methods: the in-cell FDTD coupling for the thin wire formalism and a classical reference ground plane into MTL method. Therefore, we introduce a new technique to do the reference change of the common mode in MTL method in order to let the FDTD method solve the common mode current in its complex structure modeling.
Accurate and Efficient Modelling of Wideband Wire Crosstalk With the Method of Moments
William R. Dommisse1, Matthys M. Botha1, Thomas Rylander2, Jan Carlsson3
1Stellenbosch University, South Africa; 2Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; 3Provinn AB, Sweden
We present an accurate and efficient method for the modelling of wideband wire crosstalk. Our method is based on a macro basis function (MBF) scheme for the method of moments (MoM), to model electrically thin wires that are subject to proximity effects, where the proximity effects imply that the surface current density deviate substantially from the approximations typically used in the literature. We test our method on two crosstalk problems with wires above an infinite ground plane. We demonstrate that the method compares very well with the reference solution computed by a Rao-Wilton-Glisson (RWG) basis MoM solver for general surface geometries. In comparison to the RWG MoM, our method is capable of reducing the total number of degrees of freedom by roughly a factor of four. Also, we demonstrate that the conventional thin-wire MoM and transmission line theory (TLT) yield rather poor results for the test cases considered.