Abstract:This work investigates a practical reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS)-aided integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) system, where a subset of RIS elements fail to function properly and reflect incident signals randomly towards unintended directions, thereby degrading system performance. To date, no study has addressed such impairments caused by faulty RIS elements in ISAC systems. This work aims to fill the gap. First, to quantify the impact of faulty elements on ISAC performance, we derive the misspecified Cram\'er-Rao bound (MCRB) for sensing parameter estimation and signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR) for communication quality. Then, to mitigate the performance loss caused by faulty elements, we jointly design the remaining functional RIS phase shifts and transmit beamforming to minimize the MCRB, subject to the communication SINR and transmit power constraints. The resulting optimization problem is highly non-convex due to the intricate structure of the MCRB expression and constant-modulus constraint imposed on RIS. To address this, we reformulate it into a more tractable form and propose a block coordinate descent (BCD) algorithm that incorporates majorization-minimization (MM), successive convex approximation (SCA), and penalization techniques. Simulation results demonstrate that our proposed approach reduces the MCRB performance loss by 24.36% on average compared to the case where the presence of faulty elements is ignored. Furthermore, the performance gain becomes more evident as the number of faulty elements increases.
Abstract:The reflecting antenna elements in most reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs) use semiconductor-based (e.g., positive-intrinsic-negative (PIN) diodes and varactors) phase shifters. Although effective, a drawback of this technology is the high power consumption and cost, which become particularly prohibitive in millimeter-wave (mmWave)/sub-Terahertz range. With the advances in Liquid Crystals (LCs) in microwave engineering, we have observed a new trend in using LC for realizing phase shifter networks of RISs. LC-RISs are expected to significantly reduce the fabrication costs and power consumption. However, the nematic LC molecules are sensitive to temperature variations. Therefore, implementing LC-RIS in geographical regions with varying temperatures requires temperature-resilient designs. The mentioned temperature variation issue becomes more significant at higher temperatures as the phase shifter range reduces in warmer conditions, whereas it expands in cooler ones. In this paper, we study the impact of temperature on the operation of LC-RISs and develop a temperature-resilient phase shift design. Specifically, we formulate a max-min signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio optimization for a multi-user downlink mmWave network that accounts for the impact of temperature in the LC-RIS phase shifts. The simulation results demonstrate a significant improvement for the considered set of parameters when using our algorithm compared to the baseline approach, which neglects the temperature effects.
Abstract:Liquid crystal (LC) technology enables low-power and cost-effective solutions for implementing the reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS). However, the phase-shift response of LC-RISs is temperature-dependent, which, if unaddressed, can degrade the performance. This issue is particularly critical in applications such as secure communications, where variations in phase-shift response may lead to significant information leakage. In this paper, we consider secure communication through an LC-RIS and developed a temperature-aware algorithm adapting the RIS phase shifts to thermal conditions. Our simulation results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm significantly improves the secure data rate compared to scenarios where temperature variations are not accounted for.