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Research PaperResearchia:202603.06031[Chemical Engineering > Engineering]

On Dual-Fed Pinching Antenna Systems with In-Waveguide Attenuation

Ximing Xie

Abstract

Pinching antenna systems (PAS) have recently emerged as a promising architecture for flexible and reconfigurable wireless communications. However, their performance is fundamentally constrained by in-waveguide attenuation, which is non-negligible in practical dielectric waveguides and can severely degrade the achievable data rate, particularly for long waveguides. To overcome this limitation, we propose a dual-fed PAS (DF-PAS), in which each waveguide is equipped with two feed points located at the two ends, enabling dynamic feed-point selection based on user locations. This design effectively shortens the in-waveguide propagation distance and mitigates attenuation-induced power loss without modifying the waveguide structure or the PA actuation mechanism. We investigate the DF-PAS in both single- and multi-waveguide scenarios. For the single-waveguide case, we derive closed-form high-SNR approximations of the ergodic rate and obtain closed-form solutions for the optimal PA position and feed-point selection under time-division multiple access (TDMA). We then extend DF-PAS to a multi-waveguide scenario, where we first derive closed-form high-SNR approximations of the ergodic rate and then formulate a joint optimization problem over feed-point selection, PA placement, and beamforming under general orthogonal multiple access (OMA). To solve this problem efficiently, we develop a two-phase optimization framework that integrates greedy feed-point switching, gradient-based PA placement, and WMMSE-based beamforming. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed DF-PAS consistently outperforms conventional single-fed PAS (SF-PAS) across various network configurations, validating its effectiveness as a practical and scalable solution for mitigating in-waveguide attenuation in PAS-enabled wireless networks.


Source: arXiv:2603.05251v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05251v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2603.05251v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05251v1

Submission:3/6/2026
Comments:0 comments
Subjects:Engineering; Chemical Engineering
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arXiv: This paper is hosted on arXiv, an open-access repository
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