Implications of the Reciprocity Theorem for Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces
Abstract
Reciprocity between a transmitter and receiver is a foundational requirement in wireless communications. A few recent works have suggested that reciprocity is broken under reflection by reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) when the reflection phase becomes incident angle dependent. In this work, we rigorously show that these claims are based on the use of idealized reflection coefficients that ignore mutual coupling between heterogeneous unit cells, surface-truncation effects, and structura...
Description / Details
Reciprocity between a transmitter and receiver is a foundational requirement in wireless communications. A few recent works have suggested that reciprocity is broken under reflection by reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) when the reflection phase becomes incident angle dependent. In this work, we rigorously show that these claims are based on the use of idealized reflection coefficients that ignore mutual coupling between heterogeneous unit cells, surface-truncation effects, and structural scattering contributions from the RIS. Full-wave electromagnetic simulations of transmit/receive antennas and a finite-size RIS implemented via a particular unit cell design are performed to quantitatively demonstrate that reciprocity holds even in the presence of incident-angle dependent reflection phases. To show this, we calculate two-port antenna scattering parameters and evaluate the electromagnetic reciprocity integral to support our claims.
Source: arXiv:2606.14486v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.14486v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.14486v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.14486v1
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Jun 15, 2026
Chemical Engineering
Engineering
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