ANSYS Releases HFSS 12.0 Engineering Simulation Software

Industry-Standard RF & Microwave Simulation Solution Delivers Significant New Domain Decomposition Technology for High-Performance Computing

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ANSYS today announced the release of HFSS 12.0 software, the industry-leading technology for 3-D full-wave electromagnetic field simulation. The product, part of the Ansoft suite, helps engineers design, simulate and validate the behavior of complex high-performance radio frequency (RF), microwave and millimeter-wave devices in next-generation wireless communication and defense systems. A key high-performance computing (HPC) enhancement, domain decomposition, allows engineers to simulate and design at a scale and speed never before possible. Users of this latest version of HFSS software can achieve a dramatic reduction in development time and costs while at the same time realizing increased reliability and design optimization. Antenna on jet aircraft simulated using domain decomposition method in HFSS software. Using 16 cores, the speedup in solution time was greater than 17 times, with overall memory reduction of 30 percent.

With the release of HFSS 12.0, ANSYS follows through on its commitment to deliver technology with unequalled depth and unparalleled breadth. HFSS 12.0 is a major step forward for three-dimensional full-wave electromagnetic field simulation. The software includes key updates in mesh generation, solver technologies, and enhancements to the user interface and the modeler. A new, faster and more robust meshing algorithm generates higher-quality, more efficient tetrahedral meshes. The most significant solver technology enhancement is domain decomposition, a technique that allows HFSS to exploit HPC capabilities to solve electromagnetic field problems of unprecedented size and scope. Other important enhancements include mixed element orders, curvilinear elements, and adjoint derivative computation. Ease of use and automation in the user interface have been improved and include additional modeler capabilities such as sheet wrapping and imprinting. These advances in HFSS 12.0 enable electrical engineers to expand their solution capability, exploit HPC hardware and fully integrate electromagnetics analysis into their Simulation Driven Product Development processes.

"HFSS 12.0 is a breakthrough in high-frequency electromagnetic field simulation," said Zol Cendes, chief technology officer and general manager at Ansoft. "For the first time, engineers are able to solve vast electromagnetic field problems with speed, efficiency and accuracy. Because of domain decomposition, microwave and electronics engineers now have the opportunity to successfully address a new range of problems containing hundreds of millions of unknowns that previously could not be addressed by simulation. The ANSYS focus on developing simulation technology that takes full advantage of modern computer hardware solutions means that customers will have future capabilities that, today, we can only imagine."

The new domain decomposition technology in HFSS 12.0 software allows efficient and highly scalable parallelized simulations across multiple computer cores including networked cores.

Curvilinear elements and mixed element orders allow for higher accuracy and more efficient distribution of computational resources. Curvilinear elements model the fields exactly on curved surfaces and in these cases provide higher accuracy even with a coarser mesh discretization. Mixed element orders allows for an automated and judicious localized application of element order. Smaller features are solved more efficiently by lower-order elements while large homogenous regions benefit from higher-order elements, all element orders being automatically and appropriately "mixed" in one mesh.

Molex Incorporated was among the organizations that participated in beta testing the new release. The company investigated a number of features, including the new TAU volumetric meshing technique, whose robust tet mesh elements reduce the overall load on the solver. "The new TAU meshing and mixed element orders technology in HFSS 12.0 will allow Molex engineers to more accurately and efficiently simulate and design," said Dave Dunham, engineering director at Molex. "We have more than doubled productivity with the implementation of HFSS 12.0 in our design flow."

Adjoint derivative computation provides a highly efficient and accurate procedure to evaluate the derivatives of S-parameters with respect to geometric and material model parameter variations. This technique provides sensitivity information for use in device tuning, tolerance evaluation and optimization. These derivatives are employed to speed up the sequential nonlinear programming (SNLP) optimizer included with the Optimetrics add-on program.

New features in HFSS 12.0 software include:

  • New TAU meshing technology
  • Domain decomposition solver technology
  • Curvilinear elements
  • Mixed element orders
  • Adjoint derivative computation
  • Update to ACIS R19.2
  • Improved link with ANSYS DesignXplorer software