Publication in conference proceedings Q4
Reconfigurable intelligent surfaces for THz: Hardware impairments and switching technologies
Sérgio Matos (Matos, S.); Yihan Ma (Yihan Ma); Qi Luo (Qi Luo); Jonas Deuermeier (Deuermeier, J.); Luca Lucci (Lucci, L.); Panagiotis Gavriilidis (Gavriilidis, P.); Asal Kiazadeh (Kiazadeh, A.); Verónica Lain-Rubio (Lain-Rubio, V.); Tung D. Phan (Phan, T.); Ping Jack Soh (Soh, P.); Antonio Clemente (Clemente, A.); Luis Manuel Pessoa (Pessoa, L.); George C. Alexandropoulos (Alexandropoulos, G.); et al.
Proceedings of the International Conference on Electromagnetics in Advanced Applications, ICEAA
Year (definitive publication)
2024
Language
English
Country
United States of America
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Abstract
The demand for unprecedented performance in the upcoming 6 G wireless networks is fomenting the research on THz communications empowered by Reconfigurable Inteligent Surfaces (RISs). A wide range of use cases have been proposed, most of them, assuming high-level RIS models that overlook some of the hardware impairments that this technology faces. The expectation is that the emergent reconfigurable THz technologies will eventually overcome its current limitations. This disassociation from the hardware may mask nonphysical assumptions, perceived as hardware limitations. In this paper, a top-down approach bounded by physical constraints is presented, distilling from system-level specifications, hardware requirements, and upper bounds for the RIS-aided system performance. We consider D-band indoor and outdoor scenarios where a more realistic assessment of the state-of-the-art solution can be made. The goal is to highlight the intricacies of the design procedure based on sound assumptions for the RIS performance. For a given signal range and angular coverage, we quantify the required RIS size, number of switching elements, and maximum achievable bandwidth and capacity.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
Reconfigurable intelligent surfaces,Hardware impairments,Beam squint,Switches,D-band,Unit cell design,Use cases
  • Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering - Engineering and Technology
Funding Records
Funding Reference Funding Entity
No 101097101 European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme

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