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Optiwave software can be used in different industries and applications, including Fiber Optic Communication, Sensing, Pharma/Bio, Military & Satcom, Test & Measurement, Fundamental Research, Solar Panels, Components / Devices, etc..
OptiOmega is a collection of products specialized for photonic integrated circuit simulation. It automates the design flow for
generating compact models from device level simulations. The software package includes two solvers that can be used via
Python scripting: Vector Finite Difference (VFD) Mode Solver and Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) Electromagnetic Solvers.
Download our 30-day Free Evaluations, lab assignments, and other freeware here.Â
Optiwave software can be used in different industries and applications, including Fiber Optic Communication, Sensing, Pharma/Bio, Military & Satcom, Test & Measurement, Fundamental Research, Solar Panels, Components / Devices, etc..
OptiOmega is a collection of products specialized for photonic integrated circuit simulation. It automates the design flow for
generating compact models from device level simulations. The software package includes two solvers that can be used via
Python scripting: Vector Finite Difference (VFD) Mode Solver and Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) Electromagnetic Solvers.
Download our 30-day Free Evaluations, lab assignments, and other freeware here.Â
Home › Forums › GENERAL › Collective plasmons in anisotropic interacting array of metallic nanoparticles
Hello,
Before investing a large portion of time learning the OptiwaveFDTD 32-bit software (or any other softwares) I’d like to check that my system is feasible to model? I would like to model an anisotropic planar array of metallic nanorods (small metallic cylinders), with a tilt angle to the plane which I can specify. I want to visualise the resulting charge density waves that propogate through the system due to interactions, given some initial conditions (for example oscillating the charge density in a single nanorod at a specific frequency). I attempted a similar thing in COMSOL but it used up all the 200GB of RAM available and didn’t work. I was told that a FDTD software would be better (although I don’t really understand the difference).
Many thanks for any help,
Tom Sturges