Experimentally realized physical-model-based wave control in metasurface-programmable complex media
J\'er\^ome Sol, Hugo Prod'homme, Luc Le Magoarou, Philipp del Hougne

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a physics-based model that accurately predicts wireless channel behavior in complex environments with programmable metasurfaces, enabling precise wave control and communication without extensive calibration.
Contribution
The authors develop a compact, physics-derived model that outperforms deep learning benchmarks in predicting metasurface effects on wireless channels with minimal calibration data.
Findings
Model achieves two orders of magnitude higher precision than deep learning benchmarks.
Can retrieve phase relations and scattering properties with limited calibration data.
Enables coherent wave control and phase-shift-keying communication without phase measurements.
Abstract
The reconfigurability of radio environments with programmable metasurfaces is considered a key feature of next-generation wireless networks. Identifying suitable metasurface configurations for desired wireless functionalities requires a precise setting-specific understanding of the intricate impact of the metasurface configuration on the wireless channels. Yet, to date, the relevant short and long-range correlations between the meta-atoms due to proximity and reverberation are largely ignored rather than precisely captured. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that a compact model derived from first physical principles can precisely predict how wireless channels in complex scattering environments depend on the programmable-metasurface configuration. The model is calibrated using a very small random subset of all possible metasurface configurations and without knowing the setup's…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Antenna Design and Analysis · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
