Darktrax
Full Member level 5
A search of the threads in this forum shows that, in far-field analysis at least RHCP and LHCP can be shown from antenna structures.
This is not actually very useful if one is needing to use a microwave port to excite a circular polarized wave into a device model, such as a polarizer, or square waveguide. The plane polarization angle at a port can be set, but this is not the same thing as having it rotate at the excitation frequency. The kit being modeled is vacuum cut out of a universe of perfect conductor. There is no place to have far-fields in it. Using a far-field source with a antenna seems a hard way to get something up a waveguide.
The one example referred to, an Ortho-Mode Transducer, is not the same thing as a polarizer. The analysis is done in two separate components, offering first a 0° plane polarized wave, then one does it all again for a 90° plane polarized wave to make it exit the other port.
Is there some way to define a port to be circularly polarized, or maybe use 2 ports at the same place, one delayed in phase by 90° ?
Maybe I have to ask some help from colleagues who can do HFSS
This is not actually very useful if one is needing to use a microwave port to excite a circular polarized wave into a device model, such as a polarizer, or square waveguide. The plane polarization angle at a port can be set, but this is not the same thing as having it rotate at the excitation frequency. The kit being modeled is vacuum cut out of a universe of perfect conductor. There is no place to have far-fields in it. Using a far-field source with a antenna seems a hard way to get something up a waveguide.
The one example referred to, an Ortho-Mode Transducer, is not the same thing as a polarizer. The analysis is done in two separate components, offering first a 0° plane polarized wave, then one does it all again for a 90° plane polarized wave to make it exit the other port.
Is there some way to define a port to be circularly polarized, or maybe use 2 ports at the same place, one delayed in phase by 90° ?
Maybe I have to ask some help from colleagues who can do HFSS