SYSYMar 31

Beam Squint Mitigation in Wideband Hybrid Beamformers: Full-TTD, Sparse-TTD, or Non-TTD?

arXiv:2506.193819.51 citationsh-index: 17
Predicted impact top 33% in SY · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
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It addresses a fundamental challenge in wireless communication systems requiring ultra-wide bandwidth and high directional beams, offering incremental analysis of existing mitigation strategies.

This paper tackles the problem of beam squint in wideband hybrid beamforming for mmWave and THz systems by comparing Full-TTD, Sparse-TTD, and Non-TTD architectures, analyzing their performance and cost trade-offs to guide selection based on fractional bandwidth regimes.

Beam squint poses a fundamental challenge in wideband hybrid beamforming, particularly for mmWave and THz systems that demand both ultra-wide bandwidth and high directional beams. While conventional phase shifter-based beamformers may offer partial mitigation, True Time Delay (TTD) units provide a fundamentally more effective solution by enabling frequency-independent beam steering. However, the high cost of TTD units has recently driven much interest in Sparse-TTD architectures, which combine a limited number of TTDs with a higher number of conventional PSs to balance performance and cost. This paper provides a critical examination of beam squint mitigation strategies in wideband hybrid beamformers, comparing Full-TTD, Sparse-TTD, and Non-TTD architectures. We analyze recent Non-TTD approaches, specifically the scheme leveraging the wideband beam gain (WBBG) concept, evaluating their performance and cost characteristics against TTD-based solutions. A key focus is placed on the practical limitations of Sparse-TTD architectures, particularly the often-overlooked requirement for wideband PSs operating alongside TTDs, which can significantly impact performance and implementation cost in real-world scenarios, especially for ultra-wideband applications. Finally, we conduct a cost-performance analysis to examine the trade-offs inherent in each architecture and provide guidance on selecting the most suitable hybrid beamforming structure for various fractional bandwidth regimes.

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