absorbing materials in hfss
I was just wondering if any of you have ever tried, and successfully, modelled absorbers (absorbing materials) in HFSS?
I was told that assigning PMLs would do it, but I would prefer if it is done as a 'single layer' of lossy dielectric material. Have any of you HFSS users ever tried to accomplish that in your simulations? Please do upload your HFSS file if you did.
Else, if any of you have an inkling, or read about it in papers/e-books/articles, or have a general know-how in my request, please do enlighten me. :)
Many thanks in advance and best regards,
David
I just have the same question
If you want to design an absorber (real, physical), look for something else. PML is non-physical. Single, homogeneouse layer of any real material is unlikely to perform well as a "general" purpose absorber.
To Loucy and fellow readers,
I think you mis-intepreted the question, or I didn't explain myself too informatively. I'm NOT designing absorbers. :) I am, indeed, referring to those commercial RF/microwave absorbers. But I'm HOPING *fingers crossed* that some readers here might have successfully modelled such, as a layer in their HFSS simulations. I'm hoping that some readers who do radar arrays might have used absorbers in their design.
Yes, I do know a PML is non-physical. Yes, I do know that a single homogenous layer of any real material is unlikely to perform well as a general purpose absorber. I do however have to point out that, a HFSS representative himself did say their PMLs could be used as a 'pseudo-absorbing material'. It makes sense in a certain way, but I'm unsure of how to correctly assigning them as a single layer of desired tweaked properties.
Hope this is clear. Many thanks.
Best regards,
David