PACE: Pacing Operator Learning to Accurate Optical Field Simulation for Complicated Photonic Devices

Published: 25 Sept 2024, Last Modified: 06 Nov 2024NeurIPS 2024 posterEveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-NC 4.0
Keywords: AI for Scienece, Optical simulation, Neural opeartor, AI for PDE
Abstract: Electromagnetic field simulation is central to designing, optimizing, and validating photonic devices and circuits. However, costly computation associated with numerical simulation poses a significant bottleneck, hindering scalability and turnaround time in the photonic circuit design process. Neural operators offer a promising alternative, but existing SOTA approaches, Neurolight, struggle with predicting high-fidelity fields for real-world complicated photonic devices, with the best reported 0.38 normalized mean absolute error in Neurolight. The interplays of highly complex light-matter interaction, e.g., scattering and resonance, sensitivity to local structure details, non-uniform learning complexity for full-domain simulation, and rich frequency information, contribute to the failure of existing neural PDE solvers. In this work, we boost the prediction fidelity to an unprecedented level for simulating complex photonic devices with a novel operator design driven by the above challenges. We propose a novel cross-axis factorized PACE operator with a strong long-distance modeling capacity to connect the full-domain complex field pattern with local device structures. Inspired by human learning, we further divide and conquer the simulation task for extremely hard cases into two progressively easy tasks, with a first-stage model learning an initial solution refined by a second model. On various complicated photonic device benchmarks, we demonstrate one sole PACE model is capable of achieving 73% lower error with 50% fewer parameters compared with various recent ML for PDE solvers. The two-stage setup further advances high-fidelity simulation for even more intricate cases. In terms of runtime, PACE demonstrates 154-577x and 11.8-12x simulation speedup over numerical solver using scipy or highly-optimized pardiso solver, respectively. We open-sourced the code and *complicated* optical device dataset at [PACE-Light](https://github.com/zhuhanqing/PACE-Light).
Primary Area: Machine learning for physical sciences (for example: climate, physics)
Submission Number: 472
Loading