Polarforming for Wireless Communications: Modeling and Performance Analysis
This paper presents, for the first time, the concept of \textit{polarforming} for wireless communications. Polarforming refers to a novel technique that enables dynamic adjustment of antenna polarization using reconfigurable polarized antennas (RPAs). It can fully leverage polarization diversity to...
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper presents, for the first time, the concept of \textit{polarforming}
for wireless communications. Polarforming refers to a novel technique that
enables dynamic adjustment of antenna polarization using reconfigurable
polarized antennas (RPAs). It can fully leverage polarization diversity to
improve the performance of wireless communication systems by aligning the
effective polarization state of the incoming electromagnetic (EM) wave with the
antenna polarization. To better demonstrate the benefits of polarforming, we
propose a general RPA-aided system that allows for tunable antenna
polarization. A wavefront-based channel model is developed to properly capture
depolarization behaviors in both line-of-sight (LoS) and non-line-of-sight
(NLoS) channels. Based on this model, we provide a detailed description of
transmit and receive polarforming on planes of polarization (PoPs). We also
evaluate the performance gains provided by polarforming under stochastic
channel conditions. Specifically, we derive a closed-form expression for the
relative signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) gain compared to conventional
fixed-polarization antenna (FPA) systems and approximate the cumulative
distribution function (CDF) for the RPA system. Our analysis reveals that
polarforming offers a diversity gain of two, indicating full utilization of
polarization diversity for dual-polarized antennas. Furthermore, extensive
simulation results validate the effectiveness of polarforming and exhibit
substantial improvements over conventional FPA systems. The results also
indicate that polarforming not only can combat depolarization effects caused by
wireless channels but also can overcome channel correlation when scattering is
insufficient. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.07771 |