ITITMay 14

Joint Transmit and Receive Antenna Orientation Design for Secure MIMO Communications

arXiv:2605.142728.3
Predicted impact top 22% in IT · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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For wireless security in 6G networks, this work addresses the limitation of fixed-orientation antennas by introducing dynamic orientation optimization, offering a new degree of freedom for physical layer security.

This paper proposes a rotatable antenna (RA)-aided secure MIMO system that jointly optimizes transmit beamforming, artificial noise, and antenna orientations to maximize secrecy rate. Simulations show significant secrecy rate gains over fixed-orientation schemes.

Physical layer security (PLS) is a promising paradigm for safeguarding 6G wireless networks by exploiting the inherent characteristics of wireless channels. However, the efficiency of conventional PLS is often limited by fixed orientation antennas. This paper investigates a rotatable antenna (RA)-aided secure multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication system, where both the transmitter and the receiver are equipped with RAs in the presence of an eavesdropper. By dynamically optimizing the orientations of RAs, we can proactively reshape the effective MIMO channels to enhance legitimate transmission while simultaneously suppressing information leakage to the eavesdropper. We formulate a secrecy rate maximization problem by jointly optimizing the transmit beamforming, artificial noise (AN) covariance matrix, and the transmit/receive RA orientations, subject to the transmit power budget and antenna orientation constraints. To tackle the resulting highly coupled and non-convex problem, we first study a simplified single-input single-output (SISO) case to reveal the structure of the optimal RA orientation. For the general MIMO case, we develop an alternating optimization algorithm by reformulating the original problem through the minimum mean-square error framework. In particular, the transmit beamforming and AN covariance matrix are derived in semi-closed forms, while the RA orientations are updated via the Riemannian Frank-Wolfe method. The proposed design is further extended to the multi-receiver secure transmission scenario. Simulation results show that the proposed scheme converges rapidly and achieves significant secrecy rate gains over the conventional fixed-orientation scheme.

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