06月07日 美国伊利诺伊大学香槟校区Jian-Ming Jin教授学术报告

发布时间:2018-06-04   浏览次数:189

报 告 人:Jian-Ming Jin 教授(美国伊利诺伊大学香槟校区)

报告题目:Multiphysics Modeling of Electromagnetic-Plasma Interactions

报告时间:2018年6月7日(周四)15:00

报告地点:静远楼大数据实验室204会议室

报告人简介:

  Jian-Ming Jin is Y. T. Lo Chair Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering and Director of the Electromagnetics Laboratory and Center for Computational Electromagnetics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He has authored and co-authored over 250 papers in refereed journals and over 20 book chapters. He has also authored The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics, Electromagnetic Analysis and Design in Magnetic Resonance Imaging, and Theory and Computation of Electromagnetic Fields, co-authored Computation of Special Functions, Finite Element Analysis of Antennas and Arrays, and Fast and Efficient Algorithms in Computational Electromagnetics. His name often appeared in the University of Illinois’s List of Excellent Instructors. He was elected by ISI among world’s most cited authors in 2002. He is a Fellow of IEEE, Applied Computational Electromagnetics Society (ACES), and Electromagnetics Academy. Recently, he received the 2014 ACES Technical Achievement Award, 2015 IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society Chen-To Tai Distinguished Educator Award, 2016 ACES Computational Electromagnetics Award, and 2017 IEEE APS Harrington-Mittra Computational Electromagnetics Award.

报告摘要:

  Multiphysics modeling is critical in the development of novel electronic multifunctional devices. However, the modeling is extremely challenging because it must model several different, but closely coupled, physical phenomena, such as electric and magnetic fields, thermal field, and charged particles, in a seamless manner. Due to their strong coupling, these physics must be simulated self-consistently and solved simultaneously. But in the meantime, these different physical phenomena are characterized by drastically different spatial and temporal scales, which render their simulation extremely computationally intensive. Our group has been developing novel computational approaches that are highly capable of simulating multiphysics problems with an excellent accuracy, efficiency, and flexibility. In this presentation, we present our work on the development of a numerical approach for the multiphysics modeling of electromagnetic-plasma interactions based on the discontinuous Galerkin time-domain (DGTD) method with an adaptive Cartesian mesh (ACM) or adaptive basis functions. With the favorable DGTD features, this numerical approach is highly accurate, flexible, and scalable. With ACM or adaptive basis functions, the grid size or the order of basis functions in the computational domain can be adjusted in real time to achieve a desired resolution and an excellent efficiency.