RIS Partitioning Based Scalable Beamforming Design for Large-Scale MIMO: Asymptotic Analysis and Optimization
Chang Cai, Xiaojun Yuan, Ying-Jun Angela Zhang

TL;DR
This paper proposes a scalable RIS partitioning framework for large-scale MIMO systems, enabling efficient phase shift optimization through asymptotic analysis and adaptive sub-surface design to balance performance and complexity.
Contribution
It introduces a novel RIS partitioning approach with asymptotic analysis, simplifying the optimization problem for large-scale MIMO systems and providing practical algorithms for implementation.
Findings
Achieves a favorable tradeoff between system performance and computational complexity.
Provides asymptotic insights into the fundamental performance limits of RIS partitioning.
Develops an efficient 1D grid search algorithm for approximate optimal solutions.
Abstract
In next-generation wireless networks, reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS)-assisted multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems are foreseeable to support a large number of antennas at the transceiver as well as a large number of reflecting elements at the RIS. To fully unleash the potential of RIS, the phase shifts of RIS elements should be carefully designed, resulting in a high-dimensional non-convex optimization problem that is hard to solve. In this paper, we address this scalability issue by partitioning RIS into sub-surfaces, so as to optimize the phase shifts in sub-surface levels to reduce complexity. Specifically, each subsurface employs a linear phase variation structure to anomalously reflect the incident signal to a desired direction, and the sizes of sub-surfaces can be adaptively adjusted according to channel conditions. We formulate the achievable rate maximization…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Antenna Design and Analysis · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
