Experimental Study of Underwater Acoustic Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces with Synthetic Reflection
Yu Luo, Lina Pu, Aijun Song

TL;DR
This study introduces an underwater acoustic reconfigurable intelligent surface (UA-RIS) that uses synthetic reflection to improve long-range, high-speed communication in ocean environments, with experimental validation showing significant range and SNR improvements.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel UA-RIS design with synthetic reflection control, demonstrating effective beam steering and communication enhancements in underwater settings through extensive experiments.
Findings
Extends underwater communication range by up to 66%.
Increases SNR by up to 4.2 dB with UA-RIS deployment.
Effectively directs reflected waves with minimized side lobes.
Abstract
This paper presents an underwater acoustic reconfigurable intelligent surface (UA-RIS) designed for long-range, high-speed, and environmentally friendly communication in oceanic environments. The proposed UA-RIS comprises multiple pairs of acoustic reflectors that utilize a synthetic reflection scheme to flexibly control the amplitude and phase of reflected waves. This capability enables precise beam steering to enhance or attenuate sound levels in specific directions. A prototype UA-RIS with 4*6 acoustic reflection units is constructed and tested in both tank and lake environments to evaluate performance. Experimental results using a continuous wave (CW) as the source signal demonstrate that the prototype is capable of effectively pointing reflected waves to targeted directions while minimizing side lobes through synthetic reflection. Field tests reveal that deploying the UA-RIS on the…
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