Abstract:
Gaussian-elimination based shooting-Newton methods, a commonly used approach for computing steady-state solutions, grow in computational complexity like N/sup 3/, where N...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
Gaussian-elimination based shooting-Newton methods, a commonly used approach for computing steady-state solutions, grow in computational complexity like N/sup 3/, where N is the number of circuit equations. Just using iterative methods to solve the shooting-Newton equations results in an algorithm which is still order N/sup 2/ because of the cost of calculating the dense sensitivity matrix. Below, a matrix-free Krylov-subspace approach is presented, and the method is shown to reduce shooting-Newton computational complexity to that of ordinary transient analysis. Results from several examples are given to demonstrate that the matrix-free approach is more than ten times faster than using iterative methods alone for circuits with as few as 400 equations.
Published in: 32nd Design Automation Conference
Date of Conference: 12-16 June 1995
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 19 December 2006
Print ISBN:0-89791-725-1
Print ISSN: 0738-100X