Near-field Boundary Distance in mmWave and THz Communications with Misaligned Antenna Arrays
Peng Zhang, Vitaly Petrov, Emil Bj\"ornson

TL;DR
This paper develops a mathematical framework to accurately determine the near-field boundary in mmWave and THz communications considering realistic antenna misalignments, which is crucial for high-data-rate wireless systems.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized framework and closed-form expressions for near-field boundary distances accounting for array misalignments in mmWave and THz systems.
Findings
A misalignment can significantly alter the near-field boundary.
Closed-form expressions are derived for various antenna configurations.
Numerical results highlight the impact of misalignment on near-field regions.
Abstract
Wireless communications in the millimeter wave (mmWave) and terahertz (THz) spectrum allow harnessing large frequency bands, thus achieving ultra-high data rates. However, the inherently short wavelengths of mmWave and THz signals lead to an extended radiative near-field region, where certain canonical far-field assumptions fail. Most prior works aimed to characterize this radiative near-field region either do not consider antenna arrays on both communicating nodes or, if they do, assume perfect alignment between the arrays. However, such assumptions break down in many realistic deployments, where both sides must employ large-scale mmWave/THz antenna arrays to maintain the desired communication range, while perfect antenna alignment cannot be guaranteed particularly under nodes mobility. In this work, a generalized mathematical framework is presented to characterize the radiative…
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