Performance Analysis and Optimization of Reconfigurable Multi-Functional Surface Assisted Wireless Communications
Wen Wang, Wanli Ni, Hui Tian, Naofal Al-Dhahir

TL;DR
This paper introduces a multi-functional reconfigurable intelligent surface (MF-RIS) that supports reflection, amplification, and energy harvesting, addressing key limitations of passive RISs and enhancing wireless network performance.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel MF-RIS architecture capable of multiple functions, derives its capacity, and develops robust optimization schemes for practical deployment in wireless networks.
Findings
MF-RIS outperforms self-sustainable RIS in capacity and energy efficiency.
Deployment near the transmitter yields higher spectrum efficiency.
Robust beamforming effectively mitigates channel estimation errors.
Abstract
Although reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs) can improve the performance of wireless networks by smartly reconfiguring the radio environment, existing passive RISs face two key challenges, i.e., double-fading attenuation and dependence on grid/battery. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a new RIS architecture, called multi-functional RIS (MF-RIS). Different from conventional reflecting-only RIS, the proposed MF-RIS is capable of supporting multiple functions with one surface, including signal reflection, amplification, and energy harvesting. As such, our MF-RIS is able to overcome the double-fading attenuation by harvesting energy from incident signals. Through theoretical analysis, we derive the achievable capacity of an MF-RIS-aided communication network. Compared to the capacity achieved by the existing self-sustainable RIS, we derive the number of reflective…
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