Hewlett-Packard develops and markets a family of
computer-aided engineering products used by high-frequency
designers to model the signal path in contemporary communications
systems. As design frequencies, clock speeds and packaging
densities continue to increase, more designers are finding
that system and circuit simulation products need to be
complemented by electromagnetic simulation software to
develop models for basic circuit functionality or to characterize
and compensate undesired parasitic effects. The HP High-Frequency
Structure Simulator (HP HFSS) is a frequency-domain, finite
element-based simulator, which enables engineers to characterize
high-frequency behavior in 2D (transmission lines) and
arbitrary 3D structures. Links with mechanical computer
aided design (CAD) software have also become more important
as the 3D structures to be analyzed by HP HFSS can involve
packaging parasitics when the housing in which the electrical
circuitry is enclosed becomes an influence on the signal
path. Depending upon the complexity of the structure to
be analyzed, HP HFSS can require hundreds of Mbytes of
RAM and disk during automated adaptive solution convergence
processes which determine field and circuit parameter solution
results to user-specified accuracies. Although computer
resource requirements will always be an important consideration
for users of this type of product, another important situation
to address for the future involves the exchange of data
between the different simulation and modelling tools required
to take design from concept through simulation to manufacture.
The introduction of physical simulation tools into the
traditional circuit simulation arena changes the design
process flow and increases the demand for improved integration
and interoperability of circuit simulators, numerical EM
simulators, and mechanical CAD software. This paper provides
an overview of data exchange issues in high-frequency
electrical–physical–mechanical design processes.