A Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface at mmWave based on a binary phase tunable metasurface
Jean-Baptiste Gros, Vladislav Popov, Mikhail A. Odit, Vladimir Lenets, and Geoffroy Lerosey

TL;DR
This paper presents the design, modeling, fabrication, and experimental validation of a reconfigurable intelligent surface operating at 28.5 GHz, using a binary phase tunable metasurface with PIN diodes for efficient millimeter wave control.
Contribution
It introduces a novel binary phase RIS based on an electronically tunable metasurface, demonstrating its effectiveness for millimeter wave beamforming in various scenarios.
Findings
High phase shift and return loss over 28.5 GHz
Successful fabrication and characterization of the metasurface
Effective millimeter wave beamforming demonstrated experimentally
Abstract
Originally introduced in the early 2010's, the idea of smart environments through reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) controlling the reflections of the electromagnetic waves has attracted much attention in recent years in preparation for the future 6G. Since reconfigurable intelligent surfaces are not based on increasing the number of sources, they could indeed pave the way to greener and potentially limitless wireless communications. In this paper, we design, model and demonstrate experimentally a millimeter wave reconfigurable intelligent surface based on an electronically tunable metasurface with binary phase modulation. We first study numerically the unit cell of the metasurface, based on a PIN diode, and obtain a good phase shift and return loss for both polarizations, over a wide frequency range around 28.5 GHz. We then fabricate and characterize the unit cell and verify…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
