Pulse-Driven Self-Reconfigurable Meta-Antennas
Abstract
Wireless communications and sensing have notably advanced thanks to the recent developments in both software and hardware. Although various modulation schemes have been proposed to efficiently use the limited frequency resources by exploiting several degrees of freedom, antenna performance is essentially governed by frequency only. Here, we present a new antenna design concept based on metasurfaces to manipulate antenna performances in response to the time width of electromagnetic pulses. We numerically and experimentally show that by using a proper set of spatially arranged metasurfaces loaded with lumped circuits, ordinary omnidirectional antennas can be reconfigured by the incident pulse width to exhibit directional characteristics varying over hundreds of milliseconds or billions of cycles, far beyond conventional performance. We demonstrate that the proposed concept can be applied for sensing, selective reception under simultaneous incidence and mutual communications as the first step to expand existing frequency resources based on pulse width.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2209.00818,
title = {Pulse-Driven Self-Reconfigurable Meta-Antennas},
author = {Daiju Ushikoshi and Riku Higashiura and Kaito Tachi and Ashif Aminulloh Fathnan and Suhair Mahmood and Hiroki Takeshita and Haruki Homma and Muhammad Rizwan Akram and Stefano Vellucci and Jiyeon Lee and Alessandro Toscano and Filiberto Bilotti and Christos Christopoulos and Hiroki Wakatsuchi},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2209.00818},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
61 pages, 6 figures, 26 supplementary figures