A verification study of a semi-implicit energy-conserving electrostatic particle-in-cell algorithm is presented. The algorithm relaxes the time-step and mesh-size constraints that require resolution of the plasma period and Debye length associated with traditional explicit momentum-conserving particle-in-cell algorithms. Physical implications and applicability of using the semi-implicit scheme for modeling high-density plasmas are discussed. Where possible, numerical results are compared against analytical solutions. The simulation results indicate that the algorithm is stable at time steps larger than twice the inverse plasma frequency and cell sizes larger than the Debye length. It is found that the algorithm gives adequate results, provided that the distribution function and the spatiotemporal scales dictating the physics of the problem are resolved. As such, the algorithm may provide a robust method for kinetic modeling of high-density plasmas at scale.
Hedlof et al. (Fri,) studied this question.