Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces and Metamaterials: The Potential of Wave Propagation Control for 6G Wireless Communications
George C. Alexandropoulos, Geoffroy Lerosey, Merouane Debbah and, Mathias Fink

TL;DR
This paper reviews the potential of Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces (RISs) for controlling wave propagation to enhance 6G wireless communications, highlighting recent experiments, hardware architectures, and future research challenges.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of RIS technology, recent experimental results, and discusses open challenges and future directions for RIS-enabled 6G networks.
Findings
Passive RISs can achieve precise spatiotemporal EM wave focusing.
RISs can enrich multipath scattering to boost communication throughput.
Recent indoor trials demonstrate RIS feasibility at 2.47GHz.
Abstract
The future 6G of wireless communication networks will have to meet multiple requirements in increasingly demanding levels, either individually or in combinations in small groups. This trend has spurred recent research activities on transceiver hardware architectures and novel wireless connectivity concepts. Among the emerging wireless hardware architectures belong the Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces (RISs), which are artificial planar structures with integrated electronic circuits that can be programmed to manipulate an incoming ElectroMagnetic (EM) field in a wide variety of functionalities. Incorporating RISs in wireless networks has been recently advocated as a revolutionary means to transform any naturally passive wireless communication environment to an active one. This can be accomplished by deploying cost-effective and easy to coat RISs to the environment's objects (e.g.,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Metamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
