This invention was made with government support under Grant Numbers 1955004 and 2011411 awarded by the National Science Foundation, and also under Grant Number FA8750-20-1-0500 awarded by the US Air Force Research Laboratories. The government has certain rights in the invention.
In a traditional communication system, control over the propagation characteristics of the electromagnetic radiation signal is generally assumed at the endpoints of the link (either at signal generation or at signal reception). The environment, or the channel, is assumed to be uncontrollable, and often considered as the detriment and limitation to signal propagation, for example in the form of obstacles blocking the signal, absorptive material causing energy loss, path loss due to distance, or any combination thereof.
While the concept of a controllable environment is a desirable trait, until recently, it was not an absolute necessity. Below the 6 GHz frequency spectrum, indoor communication is feasible without a controllable channel, with no great loss to system reliability. However, at sub-THz and THz frequencies (e.g., greater than 100 GHz), the impact of the channel may be substantial, and cannot be ignored or significantly overcome only through enhanced sophistication of the end nodes. As this frequency range is generally agreed upon to be a key part of next-generation wireless systems, the problem of an uncontrollable channel and possible solutions have attracted great attention. To this end, the utilization of intelligent reflecting surfaces (IRSs) to dynamically engineer attractive, synthetic communication links for reliable system performance is considered the most feasible solution.
The embodiments of the invention described herein are directed to an intelligent reflecting surface (IRS) that reflects electromagnetic (EM) radiation at terahertz (THz) frequencies. The IRS may be composed of a hybrid metal-graphene reflectarray structure.
Embodiments of the invention described herein may comprise a hybrid radiating element that receives incident electromagnetic (EM) radiation, continuously manipulates its phase, and re-radiates phase-modified EM radiation. The hybrid radiating element is a combination of (i) a resonant, radiating antenna and (ii) a variable-length waveguide-based phase shifter. The resonant, radiating antenna may be a metallic patch antenna, and the variable-length waveguide-based phase shifter may be a graphene-based plasmonic modulator, which is configured as a stub associated with the metallic patch. The hybrid radiating element may be situated atop a layer of dielectric material, which is deposited on an electrically conductive ground plane. A voltage applied across the graphene stub and the ground plane controls the phase-modulation characteristics of the hybrid radiating element.
Other embodiments of the invention described herein may comprise an array of hybrid radiating elements constructed and arranged to form a reflectarray structure. The arrangement of the hybrid radiating elements of the reflectarray may be arranged such that the reflect array selectively and dynamically tailors the re-radiated EM signal with respect to the incident EM signal.
Embodiments of the invention may further comprise an intelligent reflecting surface (IRS) that combines a reflectarray of hybrid radiating elements with a control system that generates a set of control voltages to drive the hybrid radiating elements. The voltages may be determined so as to create a set of hybrid radiating element characteristics that, combined, results in a specific re-radiating characteristic of the reflectarray. The set of voltages may be varied continuously so that reflectarray re-radiating characteristic is dynamic.
A graphene-based plasmonic modulator is utilized for phase control in the described embodiments. Prior art smart reflectarrays generally utilize varactor diodes, PIN diodes, capacitors, or electronically tunable ionic liquids. Such devices, however, reach operational limits at sub-THz frequencies. Additionally, at THz frequencies, such phase control elements may be physically larger than the actual radiating elements themselves. Due to these reasons, smart (controllable) reflecting surfaces in the prior art have as yet not been demonstrated at THz frequencies.
While the prior art suggests the use of graphene itself for THz reflection, the described embodiments do not utilize graphene as the active reflecting material. Graphene-based reflecting designs are known to exhibit less efficiency than their metallic counterparts. In the described embodiments, the reflecting component is a metallic patch, and the phase control component is a graphene-based waveguide. Thus, the hybrid radiating element described herein efficiently performs both tasks of an ideal IRS.
The described embodiments control the useful properties of SPP waves on graphene through electrostatic biasing, and not through chemical doping. As described herein, the potential of Fermi energy on graphene can be continuously tuned, and thus continuous phase control is achievable. This is a useful distinction with respect to the prior art, as it allows any generic wavefront to be defined, such as near-field beamfocusing and Bessel beams for example, and not just conventional beamforming.
In one aspect, the invention may be a hybrid radiating element that comprises a metallic patch antenna and a graphene-based plasmonic modulator coupled to the metallic patch antenna. The graphene-based plasmonic modulator may be a graphene stub, coplanar with the metallic patch antenna and electrically coupled to the metallic patch antenna.
In another aspect, the invention may be a hybrid radiating element that comprises a dielectric substrate, an electrically conductive patch disposed on a top surface of the dielectric substrate, and a graphene stub also disposed on the top surface of the dielectric substrate. The graphene stub may be contiguous with, and electrically coupled to, the electrically conductive patch. The hybrid radiating element may further comprise an electrically conductive layer disposed on a bottom surface of the dielectric substrate.
In an embodiment, a first inlet and a second inlet may be formed in the electrically conductive patch along a first side of the electrically conductive patch, thereby forming a central stub of the electrically conductive patch between the first inlet and the second inlet. The graphene stub may be electrically coupled to the electrically conductive patch at the central stub.
The hybrid radiating element may further comprise an electrical conductor that is electrically coupled to the graphene stub. The electrical conductor may be configured to convey a control voltage to the graphene stub. The electrical conductor may extend through the dielectric substrate and the electrically conductive layer, with the electrical conductor electrically insulated from the electrically conducting layer.
The hybrid radiating element may further comprise a voltage source electrically coupled to the electrical conductor. The voltage source may be configured to apply a bias voltage through the electrical conductor to the graphene stub. The bias voltage is on the graphene stub with respect to the electrically conductive layer. The bias voltage may correspond to a specific phase delay of a surface plasmon polariton wave propagating in the graphene stub.
The thickness of the substrate may be greater than or equal to 0.0003λ0 and less than or equal to 0.05λ0, where λ0 is a free space wavelength of EM radiation to be reflected by the hybrid radiating element. The hybrid radiating element may further comprise a hexagonal boron nitride layer disposed between the dielectric substrate and the graphene stub.
In another aspect, the invention may be a hybrid reflectarray that comprises an array of hybrid radiating elements. Each of the hybrid radiating elements may comprise (i) a dielectric substrate having a thickness, a top surface and a bottom surface, (ii) an electrically conductive patch disposed on the top surface of the dielectric substrate, (iii) a graphene stub disposed on the top surface of the dielectric substrate, where the graphene stub is contiguous with, and electrically coupled to, the electrically conductive patch (iv) an electrical conductor electrically coupled to the graphene stub, and (iv) an electrically conductive layer disposed on the bottom surface of the dielectric substrate. The array of hybrid radiating elements may be arranged in a grid pattern of M rows and N columns, where an individual hybrid radiating element may be designated by (m, n) and located in an mth row and an nth column of the array.
The hybrid reflectarray may have a center-to-center separation of immediately adjacent hybrid radiating elements that is substantially equal to λ0/2, where λ0 is the desired operating wavelength of the hybrid reflectarray. As described herein, a separation that is “substantially equal to λ0/2” refers to an optimal separation of λ0/2 with a possible deviation within practical fabrication tolerances. Further, it should be understood that a different center-to-center separation distance between immediately adjacent hybrid radiating elements may alternatively be used.
The electrical conductor for each of the hybrid radiating elements may extend through the dielectric substrate and the electrically conductive layer, and is electrically insulated from the electrically conducting layer. The electrical conductors from the hybrid radiating elements may together form a codebook port of M×N electrical conductors. The hybrid reflectarray may further comprise a codebook generator coupled to the codebook port. The codebook generator may generate a bias voltage signal for each of the M×N hybrid radiating elements, thereby producing a codebook set of bias voltages Vm, n, for m from 1 to M and for n from 1 to N.
The bias voltage signal for each of the M×N hybrid radiating elements may represent a weight Wn, m, associated with the hybrid radiating element in the nth column and the mth row and the of the array of hybrid radiating elements. The codebook set of bias voltages Vm, n may comprise a set of beamforming weights. The set of beamforming weights may be of the form (beamforming weights)∈[1ei0, 1e82π]. The codebook set of bias voltages Vm, n may comprise a phase transformation matrix. The phase transformation matrix may be configured to generate a desired wavefront. The phase transformation matrix may be configured to generate beamfocusing in the near-field. The phase transformation matrix may be configured to generate Bessel-beams.
The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawings will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
The foregoing will be apparent from the following more particular description of example embodiments, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating embodiments.
A description of example embodiments follows.
The teachings of all patents, published applications and references cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
A reflectarray is a passive antenna array that can receive and re-transmit electromagnetic (EM) radiation. The reflectarray intercepts an incident beam with a particular wavefront, and is utilized to transcribe a desired wavefront before reflecting the wave. For example, a reflectarray may intercept an incident beam from a particular angle of incidence, and re-radiate the same in another, predetermined, angle of reflection. Thus, reflectarrays can be used to facilitate Non-Line of Sight (NLoS) links, which are extremely important at terahertz (THz) frequencies. As future generation wireless standards are expected to operate at THz frequencies, a fully functional reflectarray at these frequencies is vital for overall system performance. For full functionality, a reflectarray should be able to dynamically intercept and transmit electromagnetic radiation from (and to) arbitrary angles of orientation.
Instead of (or in addition to) modifying the orientation of the reflected beam, the reflectarray may modify certain operational characteristics of the reflected beam. For example, the reflectarray may facilitate beamforming, beam focusing, and Bessel beams.
The ability to dynamically reconfigure communication links will be a necessary requirement in a mobile, varying network. To this end, dynamic phase shifters are required to tune the reflectarray response. Conventional tuning techniques that have been utilized at other frequencies (for example the mmWave domain) are not adaptable at THz frequencies, due to operational limits, size constraints, and limited tuning potential. The rising interest in plasmonic-physics governed devices, that operate intrinsically in the THz band, has been studied as a possible solution. However, while plasmonic devices at THz frequencies have gained increasing attention due to their intrinsic tunability, the reflection and radiation efficiency of plasmonic devices is far less than that of metallic devices, at THz frequencies.
In addition to reflectarray designs, metasurface designs have been considered as potential candidates for replacing/complementing reflectarrays for enabling environmental control. However, metasurfaces are generally trial and error solutions. While no solutions as of yet exist at the THz band that can perform dynamic link generation, proposed designs are notoriously limited in that a metasurface design is independent of any governing theory—changing any design parameter, such as the operating frequency, for example, could render the functionality of a design and derived operation null. Further, there is no clear metric for determining how the response of metasurface elements affects the operation of the entire metasurface as a whole—this induces a trial and error approach that is inefficient.
To overcome the above-mentioned limitations, the described embodiments comprise a hybrid metal/plasmonic device, constructed and arranged to be generalized to any required frequency within the THz band. Operation of a reflectarray, constructed and arranged using the hybrid metal/plasmonic device of the described embodiments as a basic building block, may be captured by deterministic equations and codebook application. The reflectarray of the described embodiments may be designed by a spatial distribution of the radiating elements, with center-to-center spacing of half a free-space wavelength (λ0/2).
The advantages of the described embodiments stem from the hybrid approach. The features outperform the individual design prospects of both standalone metallic and plasmonic devices.
Demonstrated reflectarrays at THz frequencies, using standalone metallic designs, are “fixed” orientation designs. After fabrication, both the incident as well as the reflected angle cannot be changed. While this may be useful for feasibility studies and for studying the effects on the channel, the actual deployment of such reflecting surfaces of to stabilize the channel has limited usefulness. Any change in the link configuration, due to mobile node(s), will render the design and functionality redundant. In contrast, the hybrid design of the described embodiments can be configured to operate for any particular angle of incidence and serve any angle of reflection. Thus, the deployment of the device serves the requirements for a dynamic link setting.
Plasmonic only devices exploit the intrinsic tunability of graphene. Both reflectarray as well as metasurface designs have been proposed. However, plasmonic only devices work on plasmonic physics, which are governed by the manifestation of surface plasmon polariton (SPP) waves. SPP waves propagate at much lower velocities than regular EM waves at the same frequency, so the inherent mismatch between the SPP-EM wave velocity, as well as the miniaturized size of plasmonic only devices, makes them inefficient in passive, reflection-like settings. In contrast, the hybrid design of the described embodiments utilizes the plasmonic functionality of the graphene waveguide only in phase control, and thus the main reflection efficiency is unaffected.
The hybrid radiating element of an embodiment of the invention can be described as a combination of (i) a resonant, radiating antenna and (ii) a variable-length waveguide-based phase shifter, jointly designed for optimal performance. Independently, the resonant antenna may be considered as a metallic patch antenna, and the waveguide as a graphene-based plasmonic modulator. The jointly designed metallic patch and plasmonic waveguide are placed atop a layer of dielectric material, which is deposited on a metallic ground plane. The resonant properties of the metallic patch antenna facilitate interaction with the EM radiation, and the plasmonic waveguide provides continuous phase control. A reflectarray formed by a collection of such radiating elements may be used to implement any desired phase distribution across the reflectarray surface. The reflection efficiency of the described embodiments is much stronger than that of plasmonic-only devices, and complete phase control is possible, in contrast to metal-only devices.
The operation of the metallic patch antenna may be derived by classical EM theory, and the plasmonic waveguide operation may be derived by the dispersion equation, which relates the complex conductivity of graphene to the corresponding plasmonic wavelength. Graphene is a two-dimensional carbon material, with electrical properties that make it very well suited for propagating extremely high frequency signals. In addition, THz-frequency surface plasmon polariton (SPP) waves, which are key to the operation of the described embodiments, can propagate on graphene. SPP waves are highly confined EM waves generated at the interface of a conductor and dielectric, with wavelengths as much as orders of magnitude smaller than their free-space EM counterparts. Further, the properties of the SPP waves can be dynamically tuned by changing the conductivity of graphene. The use of graphene alone as a reflector is not feasible, because a mismatch between the momentum of SPP waves on graphene and the free-space EM waves leads to weak reflection strength of graphene elements, and ultimately poorly performing reflecting strategies.
The metallic patch receives an incident EM wave and converts it to an electrical signal, which generates SPP waves across the graphene waveguide surface. The SPP waves are reflected back at the open end of the waveguide, and the entire process is repeated in reverse, with the reflected wave being phase-tuned by the effective properties of the SPP waves. As the properties of the SPP waves are easily controlled, the phase of the reflected EM wave is also easily controlled.
The hybrid radiating element 100 may comprise a metallic patch 102 and a graphene stub 104 situated on a dielectric layer 106. In the example embodiment, the metallic patch 102 is rectangular, although other shapes suitable for a patch antenna may alternatively be used. The dielectric layer 106 is disposed on an electrically conductive layer 108 (e.g., a ground plane). In this example embodiment, the metallic patch 102 is gold, although alternative embodiments may employ a patch 102 that consists of a different electrically conductive material or alloy of electrically conductive materials. The ground plane 108 in the example embodiment shown is copper, although other electrically conductive materials may alternatively be used. The dielectric layer 106 in the example embodiment is silicon dioxide (SiO2), although other dielectric materials known in the art may also be used.
The metallic patch 102 works as a broadside emitter on the basis of radiating slots. For optimal design efficiency at the desired frequency, the thickness of the substrate is in the range of 0.003λ0-0.05λ0, where λ0, is the free space wavelength of the reflected EM radiation. The reflection coefficient, or the S ii parameter, is the accepted performance metric for a patch antenna, where the lower the S11 in transmission, the higher the efficiency. By the reciprocity principle, a good transmitting patch is also a good receiver. Since a reflectarray element is required to be a good receiver as well as a good transmitter, the metallic patch 102 so designed is a resonant reflectarray element. The dimensions of the metallic patch 102 are modelled from the cavity model equations (1), (2) and (3) below:
Here, W and L are the width and the length, respectively, of the metallic patch 102 for operation at a desired frequency of f0, h is the thickness of the dielectric substrate 106. εr represents the dielectric constant of the substrate 106, and εeff represents the effective dielectric constant. Because the electric fields of the metallic patch antenna 102 undergo fringing at the boundary of the substrate, εeff may be given by:
Phase control is implemented through a graphene-based stub 104, which acts as a waveguide with an active graphene layer. The properties of the SPP waves generated in this waveguide are captured by the complex wave vector kspp. More specifically, the plasmonic wavelength λspp is dependent on the real part [kspp], while the decay length DL is dependent on the imaginary part
[kspp]:
The complex wave vector, as per the dispersion equation for SPP waves on graphene, is:
In equation (6), σg is the conductivity of graphene, ε1 is the relative permittivity of the dielectric above graphene (air), ε2 is the relative permittivity of the dielectric below graphene (silicon dioxide), and d is the separation between graphene stub 104 and the metallic ground plane 108. The conductivity model for graphene is given by equations (7) through (10):
σg=σintrag+σinterg. (7)
At THz frequencies, the major contribution is through σintrag, given as:
Which can be further simplified to be:
In equations (7) through (9), ω=2πf0 is angular frequency of the reflected radiation, h is the reduced Planck's constant, e is the electron charge, kB is the Boltzmann constant, T is the temperature, EF refers to the Fermi energy of the graphene sheet, and τg is the relaxation time of electrons in graphene. The intrinsic properties of graphene, among them the relaxation time, are set as per numerous experimental characterizations of graphene known in the art.
An electrostatic bias is used to change the Fermi energy of the graphene layer, thereby modifying the SPP wave propagation speed. The change in propagation speed leads to a change in the phase of the SPP wave at the output of the stub. The total possible phase difference depends on both the actual physical length L of the stub, as well as the range of Fermi energy considered. This is seen in equation (10) below, where, for a physical length L of the stub, we derive the relative phase difference Φ12 between two SPP waves with different plasmonic wavelengths, the reference at λspp
The hybrid radiating element 100 is obtained by combining the metallic patch 102 and the graphene stub 104. The metallic patch 102 converts the resonant incident wave to an electrical current, generating SPP waves which propagate across the graphene stub 104. The SPP wave travels across the length of the graphene stub 104 and back towards the metallic patch 102, before being radiated out as an EM wave. Following the transmission line theory of graphene, it is understood that changing the Fermi energy of graphene nano-ribbons causes a change in the characteristic impedance. Accordingly, a mismatch at the metal-graphene interface is expected. In the absence of active port elements, the mismatch cannot be studied and accounted for, so a numerical analysis is conducted to determine the jointly optimized design. The resulting example hybrid radiating is depicted in
In an example embodiment of the hybrid radiating element 100, metal may be excised from the patch 102, along one side of the patch 102, to form two inlets 110a, 110b, thereby resulting in two outer stubs 112a, 112b, and a center stub 114. The center stub 114 is the same width as the graphene stub, and is contiguous with and electrically coupled to the graphene stub 104. The dimensions of the example embodiment of a hybrid radiating element 100 are summarized in Table I:
The hybrid reflectarray 200 may be excited by an external radiation source. Each element 100 of the hybrid reflectarray 200 is designed to have a certain beamforming weight, assigned through the application of a codebook. The resultant beam from the complete superposition of all the weighted elements is steered to the desired direction (θ, ϕ). For the planar hybrid reflectarray 200 shown in
ΦRA=k0(Ri−d sin θ(xi cos ϕ+yi sin ϕ)). (11)
The correction term k0Ri is added to account for the incremental inherent phase delay from the incidence angle of the beam. When the incoming wave is broadside, the correction term is rendered void.
To implement the required phase delay of each element at position n, m radiating element of the hybrid reflectarray 200 in
Wcodebook∈[1ei0,1ei2π]. (12)
The application of the derived codebook to the reflectarray 200 results in the reflection of the incident wave in the particular desired direction. In the hybrid reflectarray 200, the codebook is applied by varying the Fermi energy of the graphene stub EFstub
Wn,mEFstub
To implement the codebook, the relationship between the Fermi energy of the stub and the relative phase delay is required. To develop this, the variation of the electric field amplitude at the output of the stub is found as a function of the Fermi energy of the graphene stub, through full wave analysis of a single hybrid element, under transmission mode. This relation is presented in
Operation of the reflectarrays of the described embodiments is equivalent to an aperture system that intercepts an incident wave and transcribes a desired wavefront on it. Thus, in the absence of active elements, with dynamic phase control of the hybrid reflectarray as described herein, the hybrid reflectarray of the described embodiments acts as a dynamically adjustable phase transformation matrix.
The reflectarray of the disclosed embodiments may operate, for example, in three modes of operation as described below. Referring to
Bessel beams possess extremely interesting properties. Among others, the power and information carried in each ring of the Bessel beam, and the central spot size, is the same (with a much greater intensity within the central spot than any of the rings). Thus, even if an obstruction compromises portions of the beam profile, the information and propagation of the Bessel beam remain largely unaffected, which is why Bessel beams are also referred to as self-healing beams. In addition, higher order Bessel beams contain orbital angular momentum (OAM), which is one of the most widely researched topics for increasing data rates and spectrum efficiency due to the natural orthogonality between different OAM modes.
The potential benefits Bessel beams are that, unlike beamforming, Bessel beams can operate within the near field, and, unlike beamfocusing, Bessel beams are valid across an axis of propagation. The gain from the Bessel beam can be estimated by considering the number of concentric rings that the RX target, depending on its size, may receive. At the least, by ensuring that the central spot size is designed wide enough to have, at minimum, the power required to provide the threshold signal to noise ratio (SNR) for a desired bit error rate (BER) communication scheme, robust performance will be guaranteed. Additionally, the limited propagation distance can be leveraged to add a self-sufficient layer of security, since eavesdroppers not focused within the central spot would need to intercept divergent, ring-like wavefronts, clearly a non-trivial task.
The following paragraphs present a performance comparison between the above-referenced modes of operation of the described embodiments, dependent on the link distance and carrier frequency.
For a given TX→reflectarray→RX link distance and frequency dependent propagation loss, the SNR value at the RX depends on the input power, the noise power spectral density and bandwidth, the gain at the end nodes, and the number of elements and efficiency of the reflectarray. The reflectarray efficiency can be succinctly described as a measure of how well the applied codebook compensates for the actual phase differences between individual wavefronts of every individual reflectarray element, the sum total of which governs the reception (transmission) from (to) the TX (RX). The reflectarray efficiency factor, EFIRS, is then found as the norm of the reflectarray steering factor generated by the codebook, coupled to the actual path distances that it is intended to account for, normalized to the reflectarray size. In this manner, the effects of both the TX→reflectarray and IRS→reflectarray codebook implementations are completely captured. By its definition, the maximum value of EFIRS is 1, at highest efficiency. The Bessel beam characteristics can be generated to ensure that the RX will receive, at minimum, the power needed for error-free communication within the central spot, and the maximum central spot size is the size of the RX. Owing to the relation between the central spot size and the non-diffracting nature of Bessel beam propagation, the EFIRS in the case of Bessel beams is then valid up till Zmax, the maximum distance over which the beam is non-diffracting.
To adequately elaborate upon the complex relationships between communication requirements, reflectarray design, codebook efficiency, and corresponding beamwidth, a setup is defined as follows: For characterizing the trend across the entire THz band, three design frequencies are established—130 GHz, 300 GHz and 1 THz. Further, a large indoor setting is considered whereby, for simplicity, the TX is assumed to be at a distance of 12 m from the reflectarray—a reasonable distance. The reflectarray→RX distance is then adjusted to incorporate a changing cascaded link distance, with no direct line of sight (LoS) between TX and RX. The TX→reflectarray and reflectarray→RX links are assumed feasible. The following three scenarios are considered to determine the reflectarray size and the remaining design parameters that then follow:
The combined gain of the end nodes and the corresponding required reflectarray gain under the scenarios outlined above are summarized in Table III.
The information in Table III reveals an interesting insight. The total gain (TX+reflectarray+RX) required for high data-rate error-free communication increases with the design frequency. However, under certain conditions, with increased end-node(s) complexity, the reflectarray requirement may be less demanding for higher frequencies. This is evident in the reflectarray requirements under Scenario 1, for 130 GHz and 300 GHz.
Dependent on the requirements of the gain, the corresponding beamwidth and spot size under the different modes of operation can be evaluated and compared. These can be defined through the 3-dB beamwidth for beamforming, the Abbe resolution limit for beamfocusing, and the predetermined central spot size for Bessel beams.
Scenario 1: Under the considerations of Scenario 1, the end nodes exhibit higher gain at larger design frequencies. The reflectarray is designed following the methodology described herein, and the parameters are presented in Table III. The efficiency of an IRS (EFIRS) of each reflectarray design under the beamforming, beamfocusing, and Bessel Beam modes of operation discussed herein are presented in
Scenario 2: As evidenced by the corresponding parameters in Table III, the brunt of the required gain in this scenario is borne by the reflectarray. The requirement of very high gain at higher frequencies relates to a significantly increased reflectarray size, and a much larger far-field range. The EFIRS for the same modes of operation as in Scenario 1 are shown in
Scenario 3: With the reflectarray far-field distance fixed to 12 m, the generated reflectarray parameters at the design frequencies are again presented in Table III. The corresponding EFIRS for the modes of operation is presented in
The tuning speed of the plasmonic waveguide is governed by the charge time of the equivalent graphene-metal capacitor. Thus, the tuning time is on the order of picoseconds, and perfectly suited for real-time scenarios. To this end, other mechanical and temperature-based methods of phase control work at the millisecond range. During operation, the phase tuning should match possible environmental changes, and thus the speed of a few milliseconds is also sufficient to be considered real-time. However, the faster speed at which the plasmonic waveguide can be tuned is an advantage when calibration or beam-scanning has to be performed.
The reflectarray according to the described embodiments can be utilized as a cornerstone of intelligent reflecting surfaces (IRS), which utilize a passive array of elements for control of a communication environment. The reflectarray can be utilized to dynamically define NLoS links for increasing multipath and diversity gains for any communication link. The reflectarray can be utilized to act as an “off-the-chip” antenna array, for delivering high gain to compensate for the path loss in low-complexity and low-cost devices, where sophisticated beamforming architecture cannot be guaranteed at the end devices themselves. With continuous phase control, it is possible to operate the reflectarray within the near-field and define arbitrary wavefronts that may outperform conventional beamforming.
Even at frequencies other than the THz band, the design promises interesting merits. Other applicable materials that exhibit the graphene-based plasmonic waveguide characteristics could alternatively be used to achieve the same desired properties that the reflectarray described herein exhibits, at other design frequencies. The reflectarray response described herein can serve as a benchmark for comparing with such alternative solutions.
The reflectarray device described herein can be implemented as an intelligent reflecting surface (IRS). Next generation wireless standards and applications require very low latency, high data-rates and are expected to operate at (sub) THz-frequencies. The very high path losses and possibility of link outages due to blockage make the implementation of IRS an absolute necessity to guarantee acceptable performance. As evidenced by the massive thrust in both device design and channel studies, IRS devices are expected to be a key enabling technology for opening the door for high-frequency wireless communications.
Embodiments of the invention may be used to enhance security. In the same way that IRS s can be used to enhance signals in a particular direction, they can also be used to cancel signals in a given direction, thereby preventing eavesdropping or creating a denial-of-service situation to users.
While example embodiments have been particularly shown and described, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the embodiments encompassed by the appended claims.
This invention was made with government support under Grant Numbers 1955004 and 2011411 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20100283687 | Ehelen | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20180315880 | Jadidi | Nov 2018 | A1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20220393363 A1 | Dec 2022 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63195031 | May 2021 | US | |
63242550 | Sep 2021 | US |