A hybrid reduced-order and high-fidelity discontinuous Galerkin Spectral Element framework for large-scale PMUT array simulations

Keywords

High Performance Computing
Advanced Numerical Methods for Scientific Computing
SC4I/Digitization, Innovation, and Competitiveness of the Production System
Code:
27/2026
Title:
A hybrid reduced-order and high-fidelity discontinuous Galerkin Spectral Element framework for large-scale PMUT array simulations
Date:
Monday 9th March 2026
Author(s):
Antonietti, P. F.; Abdalla, O. M. O.; Garroni, M. G.; Mazzieri, I.; Parolini, N.
Download link:
Abstract:
Piezoelectric Micromachined Ultrasonic Transducers (PMUTs) are essential for next-generation ultrasonic sensing and imaging due to their bidirectional electromechanical behavior, compact design, and compatibility with low-voltage electronics. As PMUT arrays grow in size and complexity, efficiently modeling their coupled electromechanical-acoustic behavior becomes increasingly challenging. This work presents a novel computational framework that combines model order reduction with a Discontinuous Galerkin Spectral Element Method (DGSEM) paradigm to simulate large PMUT arrays. Each PMUT’s mechanical behavior is represented using a reduced set of vibration modes, which are coupled to an acoustic domain model to describe the full array. To further improve efficiency, a secondary acoustic domain is connected via DG interfaces, enabling non-conforming mesh refinement, with variable approximation order, and accurate wave propagation. The framework is implemented in the SPectral Elements in Elastodynamics with Discontinuous Galerkin (SPEED) software, an open-source, parallelized platform leveraging domain decomposition, high-order polynomials, METIS graph partitioning, and MPI for scalable performance. The proposed methodology addresses key challenges in meshing, supporting high-fidelity simulations for both PMUT transmission and reception phases. Numerical results demonstrate the framework’s accuracy, scalability, and efficiency for large PMUT array simulations.