Two-Layer Stacked Intelligent Metasurfaces: Balancing Performance and Complexity
This work addresses the problem of excessive complexity in SIMs for 6G wireless systems, offering incremental improvements in design efficiency.
The paper tackles the trade-off between performance and complexity in stacked intelligent metasurfaces (SIMs) for wireless systems by proposing two-layer architectures, showing they reduce power loss and optimization burden while maintaining good signal processing performance in case studies.
Stacked intelligent metasurfaces (SIMs) have emerged as a powerful paradigm for wave-domain signal processing, enabling fine-grained control over electromagnetic (EM) propagation in next-generation wireless systems. However, conventional multi-layer SIMs often suffer from excessive structural complexity, high computational overhead, and significant power attenuation across layers, limiting their performance. In this paper, we first characterize SIMs from the perspectives of functionality, application, and layer configuration, revealing the inherent trade-offs between signal processing flexibility and power efficiency. Then, two representative 2-layer architectures, the meta-fiber-connected SIM (MF-SIM) and the flexible intelligent layered metasurface (FILM), are introduced, each advocating a distinct 2-layer SIM design philosophy. Moreover, we identify several open challenges in topology optimization for MF-SIM, shape control for FILM, and hybrid 2-layer architectures. Finally, case studies considering 2-layer MF-SIM and FILM assisted point-to-point multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) and multi-user communication systems validate that properly designed 2-layer SIMs can significantly reduce power loss and optimization burden while maintaining good signal processing performance, offering a promising pathway toward practical SIM-enabled 6G systems.