Beamforming Design for Pinching Antenna Systems with Multiple Receive Antennas
By: Enzhi Zhou , Yue Xiao , Ziyue Liu and more
Potential Business Impact:
Improves wireless signals for better internet.
Next-generation networks require intelligent and robust channel conditions to support ultra-high data rates, seamless connectivity, and large-scale device deployments in dynamic environments. While flexible antenna technologies such as fluid and movable antennas offer some degree of adaptability, their limited reconfiguration range and structural rigidity reduce their effectiveness in restoring line-of-sight (LoS) links. As a complementary solution, pinching antenna systems (PASs) enable fine-grained, hardware-free control of radiation locations along a waveguide, offering enhanced flexibility in challenging propagation environments, especially under non-LoS (NLoS) conditions. This paper introduces a general and novel modeling framework for downlink PASs targeting users equipped with multiple receive antennas, addressing a practical yet underexplored scenario in the existing literature. Specifically, we first derive an analytical relationship between the received signal-to-noise ratio and the pinching antenna (PA) positions, and based on this, we propose a two-layer placement strategy. First, we optimize the central radiation point using large-scale channel characteristics, and then we use a heuristic compressed placement algorithm to approximate phase alignment across multiple receive antennas and select a spatially compact set of active elements. Simulation results demonstrate notable performance gains over conventional single-antenna schemes, particularly in short-range scenarios with dense PAs and widely spaced user antennas.
Similar Papers
Pinching-Antenna Systems For Indoor Immersive Communications: A 3D-Modeling Based Performance Analysis
Performance
Makes wireless signals go around corners for better games.
Pinching-Antenna System Design under Random LoS and NLoS Channels
Signal Processing
Antennas change shape to improve wireless signals.
Pinching-Antenna Systems (PASS): Power Radiation Model and Optimal Beamforming Design
Signal Processing
Makes wireless signals stronger and use less power.