Minimal domain size necessary to simulate the field enhancement factor numerically with specified precision
Thiago A. de Assis, Fernando F. Dall'Agnol

TL;DR
This paper derives formulas for the minimal simulation domain size needed to accurately compute the local field enhancement factor in numerical models of field emitters, balancing precision and computational efficiency.
Contribution
It provides explicit minimum domain dimensions relative to emitter height for different configurations, enhancing simulation accuracy and efficiency in field emission studies.
Findings
Derived formulas for minimal domain size for isolated emitters.
Provided dimensions for arrays and capacitor configurations.
Achieved high numerical accuracy in FEF simulations.
Abstract
In the literature about field emission, finite elements and finite differences techniques are being increasingly employed to understand the local field enhancement factor (FEF) via numerical simulations. In theoretical analyses, it is usual to consider the emitter as isolated, i.e, a single tip field emitter infinitely far from any physical boundary, except the substrate. However, simulation domains must be finite and the simulation boundaries influences the electrostatic potential distribution. In either finite elements or finite differences techniques, there is a systematic error () in the FEF caused by the finite size of the simulation domain. It is attempting to oversize the domain to avoid any influence from the boundaries, however, the computation might become memory and time consuming, especially in full three dimensional analyses. In this work, we provide the minimum…
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