Benefits of Mutual Coupling in Dynamic Metasurface Antennas
Hugo Prod'homme, Jean Tapie, Luc Le Magoarou, Philipp del Hougne

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that mutual coupling in dynamic metasurface antennas enhances control over radiation patterns, enabling better tailoring for wireless applications, supported by theoretical, numerical, and experimental evidence.
Contribution
It reveals that increasing mutual coupling in DMAs improves radiation pattern control, challenging the conventional approach of suppressing coupling.
Findings
Mutual coupling increases radiation pattern sensitivity.
Enhanced control improves wireless functionality customization.
Experimental results confirm theoretical predictions.
Abstract
Dynamic metasurface antennas (DMAs) are a promising embodiment of next-generation reconfigurable antenna technology to realize base stations and access points with reduced cost and power consumption. A DMA is a thin structure patterned on its front with reconfigurable radiating metamaterial elements (meta-atoms) that are excited by waveguides or cavities. Mutual coupling between the meta-atoms can result in a strongly non-linear dependence of the DMA's radiation pattern on the configuration of its meta-atoms. However, besides the obvious algorithmic challenges of working with physics-compliant DMA models, it remains unclear how mutual coupling in DMAs influences the ability to achieve a desired wireless functionality. In this paper, we provide theoretical, numerical and experimental evidence that strong mutual coupling in DMAs increases the radiation pattern sensitivity to the DMA…
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