Exploiting Structural Flexibility in SIM-Enabled Communications: From Adaptive Inter-Layer Spacing to Fully Morphable Layers
Ahmed Magbool, Vaibhav Kumar, Marco Di Renzo, Mark F. Flanagan

TL;DR
This paper explores flexible stacked intelligent metasurfaces (SIMs) with morphable layers and optimized interlayer spacing, significantly enhancing wireless communication performance and overcoming limitations of rigid SIM designs.
Contribution
It introduces two flexible SIM architectures, DSIM and SFIM, and develops an optimization framework to maximize system sum rate considering various practical constraints.
Findings
Flexibility gains scale approximately linearly with morphing range.
Flexible SIMs mitigate performance saturation as layers increase.
Flexible designs achieve notable transmit power savings.
Abstract
Stacked intelligent metasurfaces (SIMs) have recently emerged as a promising metasurface-based physical-layer paradigm for wireless communications, enabling wave-domain signal processing through multiple cascaded metasurface layers. However, conventional SIM designs rely on rigid planar layers with fixed interlayer spacing, which constrain the propagation geometry and can lead to performance saturation as the number of layers increases. This paper investigates the potential of introducing structural flexibility into SIM-enabled communication systems. Specifically, we consider two flexible SIM architectures: distance-adaptive SIM (DSIM), where interlayer distances are optimized, and stacked flexible intelligent metasurface (SFIM), where each metasurface layer is fully morphable. We jointly design the meta-atom positions and responses together with the transmit beamformer to maximize the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies · Metamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications
