Abstract:Sub-terahertz (sub-THz) multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MU-MIMO) systems unlock immense bandwidth for 6G wireless communications. However, practical deployment of wireless systems in sub-THz bands faces critical challenges such as increased atmospheric absorption, reduced channel coherence time due to increased Doppler spread at higher carrier frequencies, and hardware bottlenecks as low-loss sub-THz phase shifters are difficult to realize. To overcome the hardware and channel estimation challenges of sub-THz systems, this paper proposes a hybrid beamforming (BF) framework that integrates reconfigurable liquid crystal (LC) antennas with a liquid neural network (LNN) for transmitter. Specifically, we employ an LC antenna as the analog BF stage of a hybrid BF architecture, exploiting its voltage-driven permittivity tunability to achieve high-gain beam steering without the need for lossy phase shifters. For digital BF, we utilize an ordinary differential equations-defined LNN to learn temporal channel dynamics, and use a manifold optimization technique to compress the search space. We validated the proposed method on simulated site-specific 108 GHz ray-tracing channels in an urban scenario using NYURay, a ray-tracing simulator validated against 142 GHz propagation measurements. The 108 GHz carrier frequency matches the operating band of the LC antenna hardware. The proposed method achieves an 88.6\% spectral efficiency (SE) gain and higher robustness to imperfect channel estimation compared to the learning-aided gradient descent and gated recurrent unit machine learning baselines, and 1.9 times higher SE than the 3GPP TR~38.901 standard antenna model, highlighting the potential of LC-based hardware for sub-THz communications.