ITSPITMar 13

Rethinking Mutual Coupling in Movable Antenna MIMO Systems

arXiv:2603.1281732.61 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses a specific bottleneck in wireless communication systems for improving MIMO capacity, though it appears incremental in its method development.

The paper tackles the problem of mutual coupling effects in movable antenna MIMO systems, which were previously ignored, and shows that exploiting these effects through a novel optimization algorithm leads to significant capacity gains, as demonstrated by simulation results.

Movable antenna (MA) systems have emerged as a promising technology for future wireless communication systems. The movement of antennas gives rise to mutual coupling (MC) effects, which have been previously ignored and can be exploited to enhance the capacity of multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems. To this end, we first model an MA-enabled point-to-point MIMO communication system with MC effects using a circuit-theoretic framework. The capacity maximization problem is then formulated as a non-concave optimization problem and solved via a block coordinate ascent (BCA)-based algorithm. The subproblem of optimizing MA positions is challenging due to the presence of the analytically intractable MC matrices. To overcome this difficulty, we develop a trust region method (TRM)-based algorithm to optimize MA positions, wherein Sylvester equations are employed to compute the derivatives of the inverse square roots of the MC matrices. Simulation results show significant capacity gains from leveraging MC effects, primarily due to customizable MC matrices and superdirectivity.

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