42.1ITApr 2
Mutual Coupling in Continuous Aperture Arrays: Physical Modeling and Beamforming DesignZhaolin Wang, Kuranage Roche Rayan Ranasinghe, Giuseppe Thadeu Freitas de Abreu et al.
The phenomenon of mutual coupling in continuous aperture arrays (CAPAs) is studied. First, a general physical model for the phenomenon that accounts for both polarization and surface dissipation losses is developed. Then, the unipolarized coupling kernel is characterized, revealing that polarization induces anisotropic coupling and invalidates the conventional half-wavelength spacing rule for coupling elimination. Next, the beamforming design problem for CAPAs with coupling is formulated as a functional optimization problem, leading to the derivation of optimal beamforming structures via the calculus of variations. To address the challenge of inverting the coupling kernel in the optimal structure, two methods are proposed: 1) the kernel approximation method, which yields a closed-form solution via wavenumber-domain transformation and GaussLegendre quadrature, and 2) the conjugate gradient method, which addresses an equivalent quadratic functional optimization problem iteratively. Furthermore, the optimal array gain and beampattern are analyzed at the large-aperture limit. Finally, the proposed continuous mutual coupling model is extended to spatially discrete arrays (SPDAs), and comprehensive numerical results are provided, demonstrating that: 1) coupled SPDA performance correctly converges to the CAPA limit, while uncoupled models are shown to violate physics, 2) polarization results in anisotropic array gain behavior, and 3) the coupled beampattern exhibits higher directivity than the uncoupled beampattern.
18.1ITMay 13
Electromagnetic Signal and Information Theory: A Continuous-Aperture Array PerspectiveZhaolin Wang, Chongjun Ouyang, Kuranage Roche Rayan Ranasinghe et al.
Emerging wireless systems are evolving toward larger, denser, higher-frequency, and more reconfigurable apertures, which motivates the study of continuous-aperture arrays (CAPAs). Unlike conventional spatially discrete arrays (SPDAs), CAPAs are more naturally modeled as spatially continuous electromagnetic apertures and therefore call for a fundamental shift in both signal processing and information-theoretic analysis. In particular, the underlying channels, signals, and beamformers are no longer finite-dimensional vectors and matrices, but continuous fields and operators governed by Maxwell's equations. This paper provides a tutorial overview of CAPA systems from the perspective of electromagnetic signal and information theory (ESIT), with an emphasis on the transition from discrete array models to physics-consistent continuous-aperture formulations. We review the electromagnetic foundations of CAPAs, practical hardware implementations, line-of-sight and multipath channel modeling, continuous-space beamforming and channel estimation, and the fundamental degrees of freedom and capacity limits of CAPA systems. We also highlight how tools such as wavenumber-domain methods, functional analysis, and compressive sensing can transform challenging infinite-dimensional problems into tractable finite-dimensional ones while preserving the essential physical structure of the channel. Overall, this tutorial aims to clarify the key principles, analytical tools, and open challenges that shape CAPA-enabled wireless communications.