10 research outputs found

    Efficient Computation of Physics-Compliant Channel Realizations for (Rich-Scattering) RIS-Parametrized Radio Environments

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    Physics-compliant channel models of RIS-parametrized radio environments require the inversion of an "interaction matrix" to capture the mutual coupling between wireless entities (transmitters, receivers, RIS, environmental scattering objects) due to proximity and reverberation. The computational cost of this matrix inversion is typically dictated by the environmental scattering objects in non-trivial radio environments, and scales unfavorably with the latter's complexity. In addition, many problems of interest in wireless communications (RIS optimization, fast fading, object or user-equipment localization, etc.) require the computation of multiple channel realizations. To overcome the potentially prohibitive computational cost of using physics-compliant channel models, we i) introduce an isospectral reduction of the interaction matrix from the canonical basis to an equivalent reduced basis of primary wireless entities (antennas and RIS), and ii) leverage the fact that interaction matrices for different channel realizations only differ regarding RIS configurations and/or some wireless entities' locations.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, submitted to an IEEE Journa

    Systematic Physics-Compliant Analysis of Over-the-Air Channel Equalization in RIS-Parametrized Wireless Networks-on-Chip

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    Wireless networks-on-chip (WNoCs) are an enticing complementary interconnect technology for multi-core chips but face severe resource constraints. Being limited to simple on-off-keying modulation, the reverberant nature of the chip enclosure imposes limits on allowed modulation speeds in sight of inter-symbol interference, casting doubts on the competitiveness of WNoCs as interconnect technology. Fortunately, this vexing problem was recently overcome by parametrizing the on-chip radio environment with a reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS). By suitably configuring the RIS, selected channel impulse responses (CIRs) can be tuned to be (almost) pulse-like despite rich scattering thanks to judiciously tailored multi-bounce path interferences. However, the exploration of this "over-the-air" (OTA) equalization is thwarted by (i) the overwhelming complexity of the propagation environment, and (ii) the non-linear dependence of the CIR on the RIS configuration, requiring a costly and lengthy full-wave simulation for every optimization step. Here, we show that a reduced-basis physics-compliant model for RIS-parametrized WNoCs can be calibrated with a single full-wave simulation. Thereby, we unlock the possibility of predicting the CIR for any RIS configuration almost instantaneously without any additional full-wave simulation. We leverage this new tool to systematically explore OTA equalization in RIS-parametrized WNoCs regarding the optimal choice of delay time for the RIS-shaped CIR's peak. We also study the simultaneous optimization of multiple on-chip wireless links for broadcasting. Looking forward, the introduced tools will enable the efficient exploration of various types of OTA analog computing in RIS-parametrized WNoCs.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, submitted to an IEEE Journa

    Over-the-Air Emulation of Electronically Adjustable Rician MIMO Channels in a Programmable-Metasurface-Stirred Reverberation Chamber

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    We experimentally investigate the feasibility of evaluating multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) radio equipment under adjustable Rician fading channel conditions in a programmable-metasurface-stirred (PM-stirred) reverberation chamber (RC). Whereas within the "smart radio environment" paradigm PMs offer partial control over the channels to the wireless system, in our use case the PM emulates the uncontrollable fading. We implement a desired Rician K-factor by sweeping a suitably sized subset of all meta-atoms through random configurations. We discover in our setup an upper bound on the accessible K-factors for which the statistics of the channel coefficient distributions closely follow the sought-after Rician distribution. We also discover a lower bound on the accessible K-factors in our setup: there are unstirred paths that never encounter the PM, and paths that encounter the PM are not fully stirred because the average of the meta-atoms' accessible polarizability values is not zero (i.e., the meta-atoms have a non-zero "structural" cross-section). We corroborate these findings with experiments in an anechoic chamber, physics-compliant PhysFad simulations with Lorentzian vs "ideal" meta-atoms, and theoretical analysis. Our work clarifies the scope of applicability of PM-stirred RCs for MIMO Rician channel emulation, as well as electromagnetic compatibility test.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, submitted to an IEEE Journa

    Experimentally realized physical-model-based wave control in metasurface-programmable complex media

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    The reconfigurability of radio environments with programmable metasurfaces is considered a key feature of next-generation wireless networks. Identifying suitable metasurface configurations for desired wireless functionalities requires a precise setting-specific understanding of the intricate impact of the metasurface configuration on the wireless channels. Yet, to date, the relevant short and long-range correlations between the meta-atoms due to proximity and reverberation are largely ignored rather than precisely captured. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that a compact model derived from first physical principles can precisely predict how wireless channels in complex scattering environments depend on the programmable-metasurface configuration. The model is calibrated using a very small random subset of all possible metasurface configurations and without knowing the setup's geometry. Our approach achieves two orders of magnitude higher precision than a deep learning-based digital-twin benchmark while involving hundred times fewer parameters. Strikingly, when only phaseless calibration data is available, our model can nonetheless retrieve the precise phase relations of the scattering matrix as well as their dependencies on the metasurface configuration. Thereby, we achieve coherent wave control (focusing or enhancing absorption) and phase-shiftkeying backscatter communications without ever having measured phase information. Finally, our model is also capable of retrieving the essential properties of scattering coefficients for which no calibration data was ever provided. These unique generalization capabilities of our pure-physics model significantly alleviate the measurement complexity. Our approach is also directly relevant to dynamic metasurface antennas, microwave-based signal processors as well as emerging in situ reconfigurable nanophotonic, optical and room-acoustical systems

    Systematic Physics-Compliant Analysis of Over-the-Air Channel Equalization in RIS-Parametrized Wireless Networks-on-Chip

    No full text
    Wireless networks-on-chip (WNoCs) are an enticing complementary interconnect technology for multi-core chips but face severe resource constraints. Being limited to simple on-offkeying modulation, the reverberant nature of the chip enclosure imposes limits on allowed modulation speeds in sight of intersymbol interference, casting doubts on the competitiveness of WNoCs as interconnect technology. Fortunately, this vexing problem was recently overcome by parametrizing the on-chip radio environment with a reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS). By suitably configuring the RIS, selected channel impulse responses (CIRs) can be tuned to be (almost) pulse-like despite rich scattering thanks to judiciously tailored multi-bounce path interferences. However, the exploration of this "over-theair" (OTA) equalization is thwarted by (i) the overwhelming complexity of the propagation environment, and (ii) the nonlinear dependence of the CIR on the RIS configuration, requiring a costly and lengthy full-wave simulation for every optimization step. Here, we show that a reduced-basis physics-compliant model for RIS-parametrized WNoCs can be calibrated with a single fullwave simulation. Thereby, we unlock the possibility of predicting the CIR for any RIS configuration almost instantaneously without any additional full-wave simulation. We leverage this new tool to systematically explore OTA equalization in RIS-parametrized WNoCs regarding the optimal choice of delay time for the RISshaped CIR's peak. We also study the simultaneous optimization of multiple on-chip wireless links for broadcasting. Looking forward, the introduced tools will enable the efficient exploration of various types of OTA analog computing in RIS-parametrized WNoCs

    Experimentally realized physical-model-based wave control in metasurface-programmable complex media

    No full text
    The reconfigurability of radio environments with programmable metasurfaces is considered a key feature of next-generation wireless networks. Identifying suitable metasurface configurations for desired wireless functionalities requires a precise setting-specific understanding of the intricate impact of the metasurface configuration on the wireless channels. Yet, to date, the relevant short and long-range correlations between the meta-atoms due to proximity and reverberation are largely ignored rather than precisely captured. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that a compact model derived from first physical principles can precisely predict how wireless channels in complex scattering environments depend on the programmable-metasurface configuration. The model is calibrated using a very small random subset of all possible metasurface configurations and without knowing the setup's geometry. Our approach achieves two orders of magnitude higher precision than a deep learning-based digital-twin benchmark while involving hundred times fewer parameters. Strikingly, when only phaseless calibration data is available, our model can nonetheless retrieve the precise phase relations of the scattering matrix as well as their dependencies on the metasurface configuration. Thereby, we achieve coherent wave control (focusing or enhancing absorption) and phase-shiftkeying backscatter communications without ever having measured phase information. Finally, our model is also capable of retrieving the essential properties of scattering coefficients for which no calibration data was ever provided. These unique generalization capabilities of our pure-physics model significantly alleviate the measurement complexity. Our approach is also directly relevant to dynamic metasurface antennas, microwave-based signal processors as well as emerging in situ reconfigurable nanophotonic, optical and room-acoustical systems

    RIS-Based Over-the-Air Channel Equalization in Resource-Constrained Wireless Networks

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    International audienceRich scattering yields long channel impulse responses (CIRs) with many taps that thwart communications in resource-constrained wireless networks limited to simple on-off-keying: the modulation rate must be throttled to avoid inter-symbol interference. Relevant examples include Internet-of-Things (IoT) networks and wireless networks-on-chips (WNoCs). If the radio environment is parametrized by a reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS), the RIS configuration can be optimized to tailor the CIR between selected antenna pairs and make it (almost) pulse-like despite rich scattering by judiciously engineering the interferences of the multi-bounce paths. Thereby, the channel is equalized “over the air” in the physical domain, unlike conventional pre- and/or post-coding strategies. Here, using a physics-compliant model of a RIS-parametrized rich-scattering environment, we explore how the optimal choice of the time delay at which the CIR is shaped to have its most significant tap depends on the amount of reverberation in the environment and the latter's specific geometry

    Systematic Physics-Compliant Analysis of Over-the-Air Channel Equalization in RIS-Parametrized Wireless Networks-on-Chip

    No full text
    International audienceWireless networks-on-chip (WNoCs) are an enticing complementary interconnect technology for multi-core chips but face severe resource constraints. Being limited to simple on-off-keying modulation, the reverberant nature of the chip enclosure imposes limits on allowed modulation speeds in sight of inter-symbol interference, casting doubts on the competitiveness of WNoCs as interconnect technology. Fortunately, this vexing problem was recently overcome by parametrizing the on-chip radio environment with a reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS). By suitably configuring the RIS, selected channel impulse responses (CIRs) can be tuned to be (almost) pulse-like despite rich scattering thanks to judiciously tailored multi-bounce path interferences. However, the exploration of this "over-the-air" (OTA) equalization is thwarted by (i) the overwhelming complexity of the propagation environment, and (ii) the non-linear dependence of the CIR on the RIS configuration, requiring a costly and lengthy full-wave simulation for every optimization step. Here, we show that a reduced-basis physics-compliant model for RIS-parametrized WNoCs can be calibrated with a single full-wave simulation. Thereby, we unlock the possibility of predicting the CIR for any RIS configuration almost instantaneously without any additional full-wave simulation. We leverage this new tool to systematically explore OTA equalization in RIS-parametrized WNoCs regarding the optimal choice of delay time for the RIS-shaped CIR's peak. We also study the simultaneous optimization of multiple on-chip wireless links for broadcasting and conduct a performance evaluation in terms of the bit error rate. Looking forward, the introduced tools will enable the efficient exploration of various types of OTA analog computing in RIS-parametrized WNoCs

    Spectral Model of Non-linear Phenomena in a Power-over-Fiber System

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    International audienceWe developed a spectral model of non-linear optical phenomena for a simultaneous transmission of power over fiber and data signal in single optical fiber over 10 km. Experimental results confirm the accuracy of the implemented model
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