SORIS: A Self-Organized Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface Architecture for Wireless Communications
Evangelos Koutsonas, Alexandros-Apostolos A. Boulogeorgos, Stylianos E. Trevlakis, George C. Alexandropoulos, Theodoros A. Tsiftsis, Rui Zhang

TL;DR
This paper introduces SORIS, a self-organized reconfigurable intelligent surface architecture that uses a microcontroller and machine learning to estimate channels and reconfigure itself for improved wireless communication without external connections.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel self-organized RIS architecture with integrated channel estimation and reconfiguration capabilities using machine learning, reducing complexity and wiring requirements.
Findings
Effective channel estimation using transmission mode elements
Neural network predicts channel coefficients for remaining elements
Simulation results validate the proposed architecture's feasibility
Abstract
In this paper, a new reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) hardware architecture, called self-organized RIS (SORIS), is proposed. The architecture incorporates a microcontroller connected to a single-antenna receiver operating at the same frequency as the RIS unit elements, operating either in transmission or reflection mode. The transmitting RIS elements enable the low latency estimation of both the incoming and outcoming channels at the microcontroller's side. In addition, a machine learning approach for estimating the incoming and outcoming channels involving the remaining RIS elements operating in reflection mode is devised. Specifically, by appropriately selecting a small number of elements in transmission mode, and based on the channel reciprocity principle, the respective channel coefficients are first estimated, which are then fed to a low-complexity neural network that,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies · Electromagnetic Scattering and Analysis
