ITSPITMay 1

Enabling Smart Radio Environments in the Frequency Domain With Movable Signals

arXiv:2511.0938493.93 citationsh-index: 14
AI Analysis

For wireless communication researchers, this work introduces a new paradigm for smart radio environments that avoids hardware complexity, potentially easing commercialization.

The paper proposes movable signals in the frequency domain to enable smart radio environments without reconfigurable hardware, showing that in MISO systems under LoS conditions they outperform quantized EGT, and under NLoS with fixed intelligent surfaces they achieve up to 4x the received power of RIS-aided systems.

Smart radio environments (SREs) enhance wireless communications by allowing control over the channel. They have been enabled through surfaces with reconfigurable electromagnetic (EM) properties, known as reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs), and through flexible antennas, which can be viewed as realizations of SREs in the EM domain and space domain, respectively. However, these technologies rely on electronically reconfigurable or movable components, introducing implementation challenges that could hinder commercialization. To overcome these challenges, we propose a new domain to enable SREs, the frequency domain, through the concept of movable signals, where the signal spectrum can be dynamically moved along the frequency axis. We first analyze movable signals in multiple-input single-output (MISO) systems under line-of-sight (LoS) conditions, showing that they can achieve higher average received power than quantized equal gain transmission (EGT). We then study movable signals under non-line-of-sight (NLoS) conditions, showing that they remain effective by leveraging reflections from surfaces made of uniformly spaced elements with fixed EM properties, denoted as fixed intelligent surfaces (FISs). Analytical results reveal that a FIS-aided system using movable signals can achieve up to four times the received power of a RIS-aided system using fixed-frequency signals.

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