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Search Results (1,367)

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27 pages, 729 KB  
Article
RSMA-Assisted Fluid Antenna ISAC via Hierarchical Deep Reinforcement Learning
by Muhammad Sheraz, Teong Chee Chuah and It Ee Lee
Telecom 2026, 7(2), 41; https://doi.org/10.3390/telecom7020041 - 9 Apr 2026
Abstract
Integrated sensing and communications (ISAC) requires tight coordination between spatial signal design and multiple-access strategies to balance communication throughput and sensing accuracy under shared spectral and hardware constraints. However, existing ISAC frameworks with rate-splitting multiple access (RSMA) typically rely on fixed antenna arrays [...] Read more.
Integrated sensing and communications (ISAC) requires tight coordination between spatial signal design and multiple-access strategies to balance communication throughput and sensing accuracy under shared spectral and hardware constraints. However, existing ISAC frameworks with rate-splitting multiple access (RSMA) typically rely on fixed antenna arrays and decoupled optimization, which fundamentally limit their ability to adapt to fast channel variations and dynamic sensing requirements. This paper introduces a fluid antenna-enabled RSMA-assisted ISAC architecture, in which movable antenna ports are exploited as a new spatial degree of freedom to enhance adaptability in both communication and sensing operations. Fluid antenna systems (FAS) are deployed at both the base station and user terminals, allowing dynamic port selection that reshapes the effective channel and sensing beampattern in real time. We formulate a joint sum-rate maximization problem subject to explicit sensing-quality constraints, capturing the coupled impact of antenna port selection, RSMA rate allocation, and multi-beam transmit design. The proposed framework maximizes the communication sum-rate while ensuring that the sensing functionality satisfies a predefined sensing quality constraint. This constraint-based ISAC formulation guarantees that sufficient sensing power is directed toward the target while optimizing communication performance. The resulting optimization involves strongly coupled discrete and continuous decision variables, rendering conventional optimization methods ineffective. To address this challenge, a hierarchical deep reinforcement learning (HDRL) framework is developed, where an upper-layer deep Q-network (DQN) determines discrete antenna port selection and a lower-layer twin delayed deep deterministic policy gradient (TD3) algorithm optimizes continuous beamforming and rate-splitting parameters. Numerical results demonstrate that the proposed approach significantly improves system performance, achieving higher communication sum-rate while satisfying sensing requirements under dynamic propagation conditions. Full article
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18 pages, 6676 KB  
Article
Joint Phase and Power Optimization in RIS-Aided Multi-User Systems Using Deep Reinforcement Learning
by Qian Guo, Anming Dong, Sufang Li, Jiguo Yu and You Zhou
Electronics 2026, 15(8), 1564; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15081564 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 209
Abstract
Reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) have emerged as a promising technology for enhancing wireless communication by intelligently shaping the propagation environment. However, non-line-of-sight (NLoS) blockage between the access point (AP) and user equipment (UE) can still significantly degrade communication performance. This paper investigates the [...] Read more.
Reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) have emerged as a promising technology for enhancing wireless communication by intelligently shaping the propagation environment. However, non-line-of-sight (NLoS) blockage between the access point (AP) and user equipment (UE) can still significantly degrade communication performance. This paper investigates the channel degradation caused by NLoS blockage in a single-antenna AP and multi-antenna UE system and proposes a joint power allocation and phase optimization scheme based on RIS and deep reinforcement learning (DRL). Under a composite channel model with direct and RIS-reflected links, the objective is to maximize the weighted sum rate subject to total power constraints, unit-modulus constraints on RIS elements, and quality of service (QoS) requirements. Due to the coupled variables and the non-convex unit-modulus constraint, conventional alternating optimization (AO) and convex approximation methods usually incur high complexity and yield suboptimal solutions. To address this issue, a DRL algorithm based on an Actor–Critic architecture is developed to learn adaptive power allocation and reflection coefficient adjustment policies through interaction with the environment, without requiring full global channel state information (CSI). Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves higher signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) and throughput while providing faster convergence and better generalization than existing methods. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue AI-Driven Intelligent Systems in Energy, Healthcare, and Beyond)
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21 pages, 4667 KB  
Article
Vibration Suppression and Dynamic Optimization of Multi-Layer Motors for Direct-Drive VICTS Antennas
by Xinlu Yu, Aojun Li, Pingfa Feng and Jianghong Yu
Aerospace 2026, 13(4), 346; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13040346 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 158
Abstract
Weight reduction and dynamic performance optimization are critical for airborne direct-drive VICTS satellite communication antennas, which require lightweight, high-speed, and high-precision rotation. Traditional vibration suppression methods, such as uniform support layout and added damping, rely heavily on empirical trial and error, lack targeted [...] Read more.
Weight reduction and dynamic performance optimization are critical for airborne direct-drive VICTS satellite communication antennas, which require lightweight, high-speed, and high-precision rotation. Traditional vibration suppression methods, such as uniform support layout and added damping, rely heavily on empirical trial and error, lack targeted modal control, and cannot balance lightweight design with dynamic stiffness. To address these issues, this paper proposes a wave-theory-based dynamic modeling and rapid optimization method for multi-layer rotating components in direct-drive VICTS antennas. The kinematic model of the rotating ring and ball revolution excitation are derived using the annular wave equation and bearing kinematics. A Modal Blocking Mechanism is established: placing support balls at positions satisfying the half-wavelength constraint suppresses target mode shapes via wave interference, achieving vibration attenuation at the source. A homogenization equivalent method based on RVE is developed for irregular cross-section rings, yielding analytical expressions for in-plane equivalent elastic modulus and out-of-plane equivalent shear modulus. These parameters are integrated into the wave equation to analytically solve vibration modes, avoiding iterative finite element computations. A rapid multi-objective optimization framework is then constructed, minimizing the structural weight and maximizing the modal separation interval under dynamic stiffness and excitation frequency constraints. Numerical simulations, FE analysis, and prototype tests validate the method: the maximum analytical error is only 3.1%. Compared with uniform support designs, the optimized structure achieves a 40% weight reduction, a 40% increase in minimum modal separation, and a 65% reduction in the RMS tracking error. This work provides an efficient, deterministic dynamic design method for large-diameter ring structures, transforming vibration control from empirical adjustment into a precise, physics-informed optimization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Astronautics & Space Science)
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13 pages, 1075 KB  
Article
A Geometry-Based Deterministic Framework for Directional Antenna Alignment in Digital Terrestrial Television
by Konstantinos Zarkadas and George Dimitrakopoulos
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(7), 3561; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16073561 - 6 Apr 2026
Viewed by 215
Abstract
This study presents a deterministic geospatial methodology for the alignment of directional television receiving antennas using publicly available broadcast-sector parameters. The proposed approach relies exclusively on geometric computations derived from user geolocation (WGS84 coordinates) and transmitter site information, including sector azimuth and beamwidth [...] Read more.
This study presents a deterministic geospatial methodology for the alignment of directional television receiving antennas using publicly available broadcast-sector parameters. The proposed approach relies exclusively on geometric computations derived from user geolocation (WGS84 coordinates) and transmitter site information, including sector azimuth and beamwidth characteristics. By computing the geodesic bearing between receiver and transmitter locations, the method evaluates angular deviation relative to sector orientation and provides an interpretable alignment assessment framework. The methodology operates without requiring empirical signal measurements, propagation modeling, or machine-learning techniques, thereby ensuring transparency, reproducibility, and low computational complexity. The approach is particularly suitable for scenarios where line-of-sight conditions dominate signal propagation. Under such assumptions, the proposed framework offers a lightweight and explainable solution for antenna pointing and orientation guidance while explicitly acknowledging the limitations imposed by simplified geometric modeling. Full article
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29 pages, 1107 KB  
Article
Secure Uplink Transmission in UAV-Assisted Dual-Orbit SAGIN over Mixed RF-FSO Links
by Zhan Xu and Chunshuai Ma
Aerospace 2026, 13(4), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13040341 - 4 Apr 2026
Viewed by 176
Abstract
To meet the need for global coverage, space–air–ground integrated networks (SAGINs) are crucial, but the openness of wireless links makes communications vulnerable to eavesdropping. This paper investigates the physical layer security (PLS) of uplink transmissions in a cooperative dual-hop SAGIN. The system comprises [...] Read more.
To meet the need for global coverage, space–air–ground integrated networks (SAGINs) are crucial, but the openness of wireless links makes communications vulnerable to eavesdropping. This paper investigates the physical layer security (PLS) of uplink transmissions in a cooperative dual-hop SAGIN. The system comprises a ground source with a directional antenna, an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) relay cluster, and a low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite. Utilizing stochastic geometry, we model the spatial randomness of terrestrial eavesdroppers and the multi-layered dual-orbital LEO destination. To combat mixed radio-frequency (RF) and free-space optical (FSO) fading, multiple relay selection and maximum ratio combining (MRC) are integrated into the UAV cluster. We analytically derive the piecewise probability density function for the FSO link distance, obtaining exact closed-form expressions for the end-to-end secrecy outage probability (SOP). Monte Carlo simulations strictly validate the derivations. The results demonstrate that while increasing available relays and antennas enhances PLS via spatial diversity, a security bottleneck restricts the RF-FSO architecture under high-transmit power regimes, generating asymptotic secrecy floors. These findings provide explicit theoretical guidelines for the secure design and parameter optimization of future SAGINs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Astronautics & Space Science)
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28 pages, 5004 KB  
Article
High-Precision Spoofing Detection Using an Auxiliary Baseline Three-Antenna Configuration for GNSS Systems
by Jiajia Chen, Xing’ao Wang, Zhibo Fang, Ming Gao and Ying Xu
Aerospace 2026, 13(4), 339; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13040339 - 3 Apr 2026
Viewed by 287
Abstract
As Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) underpin safety-critical infrastructure, their vulnerability to sophisticated spoofing attacks poses severe physical layer security risks. To address the limitations of existing single-antenna defense mechanisms, this paper proposes a rigorous instantaneous spoofing detection framework utilizing a novel “one-primary-two-auxiliary” [...] Read more.
As Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) underpin safety-critical infrastructure, their vulnerability to sophisticated spoofing attacks poses severe physical layer security risks. To address the limitations of existing single-antenna defense mechanisms, this paper proposes a rigorous instantaneous spoofing detection framework utilizing a novel “one-primary-two-auxiliary” three-antenna configuration. By embedding the rigid baseline length as a hard geometric constraint into the Integer Least Squares (ILS) model, we derive a specialized constrained LAMBDA algorithm that significantly shrinks the ambiguity search space. A rigorous hypothesis testing mechanism is established based on the Sum of Squared Residuals (SSR), analytically deriving the detection threshold from the central Chi-square distribution and analyzing the sensitivity via the non-central parameter. Through conducting field experiments using commercial receivers and professional GNSS signal simulators, the proposed method was validated using both single-satellite spoofing and full-constellation spoofing scenarios. Results demonstrate that the system achieves a Minimum Detectable Deviation (MDD) of spatial direction as low as 0.33 and maintains an empirical detection rate of >99% with a negligible false alarm rate. Notably, the method exhibits instantaneous response capabilities, effectively identifying both single-satellite and full-constellation spoofing attacks within a single epoch without requiring prior attitude information or external aiding. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Astronautics & Space Science)
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21 pages, 4565 KB  
Article
An Array Antenna-Based Attitude Determination Method for GNSS Spoofing Mitigation in Power System Timing Applications
by Wenxin Jin, Sai Wu, Guangyao Zhang, Ruochen Si, Ling Teng, Wei Chen, Huixia Ding and Chaoyang Zhu
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(7), 3289; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16073289 - 28 Mar 2026
Viewed by 288
Abstract
Accurate GNSS timing is fundamental to Power Time Synchronization Systems (PTSS). However, conventional substation infrastructures remain vulnerable to sophisticated spoofing attacks. In this research, a sensing-assisted array antenna-based spoofing mitigation method is proposed. The proposed architecture operates at the signal front-end and incorporates [...] Read more.
Accurate GNSS timing is fundamental to Power Time Synchronization Systems (PTSS). However, conventional substation infrastructures remain vulnerable to sophisticated spoofing attacks. In this research, a sensing-assisted array antenna-based spoofing mitigation method is proposed. The proposed architecture operates at the signal front-end and incorporates a dedicated spoofing sensing path to estimate the Direction-of-Arrival (DoA) of malicious signals, enabling adaptive null steering while preserving authentic satellite reception. To provide reliable spatial reference for DoA estimation, a unified high-precision attitude determination method is developed for compact 10 cm-scale array antennas under single-frequency and environmental error conditions. The method integrates the Constrained Least-squares AMBiguity Decorrelation Adjustment (C-LAMBDA)-based constrained ambiguity resolution, redundant antenna element-based vertical accuracy enhancement, and iterative refinement to mitigate centimeter-level environmental biases. Semi-simulated experiments demonstrate that the proposed method achieves baseline vector Root Mean Square Errors (RMSE) below 5 mm in horizontal components and approximately 10 mm in vertical components. The resulting attitude accuracies reach 2° in heading, 6° in pitch, and 4° in roll, while eliminating over 80% of systematic environmental phase errors with an average convergence within 6 iterations. These results satisfy the spatial accuracy requirements for effective spoofing suppression and front-end signal purification. Consequently, a robust technical approach is established for enhancing the anti-spoofing capabilities of PTSS without modifying existing infrastructure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced GNSS Technologies: Measurement, Analysis, and Applications)
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22 pages, 3896 KB  
Article
Experimental Validation of an SDR-Based Direction of Arrival Estimation Testbed
by Nikita Sheremet and Grigoriy Fokin
Information 2026, 17(4), 313; https://doi.org/10.3390/info17040313 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 299
Abstract
Advanced mobile communication standards of the fifth and subsequent generations widely use beamforming technology. While many publications on this topic rely on simulation tools, some work has been dedicated to experimental testing using software-defined radio (SDR) platforms. These platforms are often expensive and [...] Read more.
Advanced mobile communication standards of the fifth and subsequent generations widely use beamforming technology. While many publications on this topic rely on simulation tools, some work has been dedicated to experimental testing using software-defined radio (SDR) platforms. These platforms are often expensive and require significant expertise to configure. This paper proposes a novel cost-effective method for combining a pair of dual-channel Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) B210 boards into a four-element antenna array direction of arrival estimation testbed using Metronom synchronization devices. The hardware and developed software implementation is detailed, including the antenna layout and software modules, based on USRP Hardware Driver, that provide the frequency and time synchronization necessary for amplitude-phase processing. Experimental validation of the testbed using the MUltiple SIgnal Classification (MUSIC) algorithm demonstrates high stability of angle of arrival estimates, with a standard deviation not exceeding 0.4°. The algorithm achieved a resolution of 16.1° for two sources, which surpasses the half-power beamwidth of 25.6°. The theoretical significance of this work lies in the scientific validation of combining SDR devices with the precise synchronization required for beamforming. Its practical value is in enabling the experimental testing of beamforming without the need for costly multichannel SDR hardware. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Wireless Technologies)
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17 pages, 3495 KB  
Article
Spectral-Efficient End-to-End Beamforming for 6G XL-MIMO: Synergizing Channel Sensing and Spatial–Frequency Sparsity with Deep Learning
by Ya Wen, Xiaoping Zeng and Xin Xie
Sensors 2026, 26(7), 2012; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26072012 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 413
Abstract
Extremely Large-Scale Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (XL-MIMO) is positioned as a transformative technology for sixth-generation (6G) networks, effectively turning base stations into high-resolution sensing and communication hubs. However, the practical deployment of XL-MIMO is hindered by the “curse of dimensionality,” specifically the prohibitive overhead associated [...] Read more.
Extremely Large-Scale Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (XL-MIMO) is positioned as a transformative technology for sixth-generation (6G) networks, effectively turning base stations into high-resolution sensing and communication hubs. However, the practical deployment of XL-MIMO is hindered by the “curse of dimensionality,” specifically the prohibitive overhead associated with Channel State Information (CSI) sensing and feedback, alongside the computational latency of massive antenna arrays. To resolve the conflict between high-resolution sensing requirements and limited bandwidth resources, this paper proposes a novel two-stage beamforming architecture that synergizes physics-aware dimensionality reduction with deep learning. First, by exploiting the inherent sparsity of XL-MIMO channels in the angle-delay domain, we design a Spatial–Frequency Concentration Block (SFCB). This module functions as a hard-attention sensing mechanism, performing efficient source-end dimensionality reduction on raw CSI at the User Equipment (UE) via precise feature extraction and adaptive energy truncation. Second, we develop a highly adaptable Direct Integrated Precoding Network (DIP-I). Departing from the conventional “sense-reconstruct-then-precode” paradigm, DIP-I learns end-to-end mapping to directly regress the optimal precoding matrix at the Base Station (BS). Comprehensive simulations utilizing the COST 2100 and QuaDRiGa hybrid channel models demonstrate that, under a massive 512-antenna configuration, the proposed framework achieves exceptional beamforming gain. Furthermore, it significantly reduces sensing data overhead and inference latency, offering a superior trade-off between spectral efficiency and hardware resource consumption for future 6G sensing-communication integrated systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sensor Networks)
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19 pages, 8960 KB  
Article
Recovery of Weak Ambient Backscattered Signals from Off-the-Shelf PCB Under Dominant Self-Interference
by Gosa Feyissa Degefa and Jae-Young Chung
Electronics 2026, 15(6), 1215; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15061215 - 14 Mar 2026
Viewed by 197
Abstract
Ambient backscatter systems enable passive sensing and information transfer by utilizing the reflection and modulation of incident radio-frequency (RF) signals. However, in real-world scenarios involving non-cooperative targets such as off-the-shelf printed circuit boards (PCBs), the backscattered signal is extremely weak and often obscured [...] Read more.
Ambient backscatter systems enable passive sensing and information transfer by utilizing the reflection and modulation of incident radio-frequency (RF) signals. However, in real-world scenarios involving non-cooperative targets such as off-the-shelf printed circuit boards (PCBs), the backscattered signal is extremely weak and often obscured by strong direct-path self-interference (SI) at the receiver. This issue becomes even more severe when unintentional PCB structures act as radiating elements. In this work, we explore ambient backscatter leakage from a compromised PCB using a realistic measurement setup that includes separated transmit and receive antennas and a direct-conversion Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP)-based receiver. We demonstrate that residual carrier frequency offset (CFO), caused by oscillator mismatch and hardware imperfections, can spread the dominant SI in the baseband and completely mask the weak backscattered signal. To solve this problem, a software-based post-processing framework is applied. This method leverages the complex baseband representation enabled by the homodyne receiver to jointly manage the carrier and SI components without relying on intermediate-frequency processing or prior knowledge of the target signal parameters. Experimental results show that this approach significantly improves the detectability of weak backscattered baseband information that would otherwise be concealed within the raw I/Q data. This study emphasizes the importance of CFO-aware digital processing in ambient backscatter systems and offers new insights into unintended electromagnetic leakage mechanisms from commercial PCB platforms. Full article
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24 pages, 6557 KB  
Article
Ka-Band 16-Channel T/R Module Based on MMIC with Low Cost and High Integration
by Mengyun He, Qinghua Zeng, Xuesong Zhao, Song Wang, Yan Zhao, Pengfei Zhang, Gaoang Li and Xiao Liu
Electronics 2026, 15(6), 1185; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15061185 - 12 Mar 2026
Viewed by 415
Abstract
Based on monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC) technology, this paper presents the design and implementation of a low-cost, highly integrated Ka-band sixteen-channel transmit/receive (T/R) module, specifically tailored to meet the application requirements of phased array antennas in airborne and spaceborne radar systems, satellite [...] Read more.
Based on monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC) technology, this paper presents the design and implementation of a low-cost, highly integrated Ka-band sixteen-channel transmit/receive (T/R) module, specifically tailored to meet the application requirements of phased array antennas in airborne and spaceborne radar systems, satellite communications, and 5G/6G millimeter-wave networks. The proposed module employs an MMIC-based single-channel dual-chip discrete architecture, optimally integrating amplitude-phase multifunction chips and transmit-receive multifunction chips in terms of both fabrication process and performance characteristics, achieving a favorable balance between high performance and high-integration density. Using low-cost, low-temperature co-fired ceramic (LTCC) substrates, full-silver conductive paste, and a nickel–palladium–gold plating process, a novel “back-to-back” thin-slice packaging technique is presented to improve integration, lower manufacturing costs, and boost long-term reliability. Furthermore, the design incorporates glass insulators and a direct array interconnection scheme, which significantly minimizes transmission losses and reduces interface dimensions. The final module measures 70.3 mm × 26.2 mm × 10.9 mm and weighs only 34 g. Experimental results demonstrate a transmit output power of at least 23 dBm, a receive gain exceeding 26 dB, and a noise figure below 3.5 dB, achieving a 22.5–58% reduction in volume per channel while maintaining competitive RF performance. To improve testing effectiveness and guarantee data consistency, an automated radio frequency (RF) test system based on Python 3.11.5 was also developed. This work provides a practical technical approach for the engineering realization of Ka-band phased array systems. Full article
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18 pages, 14037 KB  
Article
Optimizing the Design of a Low-Profile Phased-Array-Fed Lens Antenna Based on Genetic Algorithms
by Yuyang Lu, Jing-Ya Deng and Jian Ren
Electronics 2026, 15(6), 1145; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15061145 - 10 Mar 2026
Viewed by 386
Abstract
To address the stringent cost and performance requirements of commercial Satellite-on-the-Move (SOTM) terminals, we propose a Genetic Algorithm (GA)-based design for a millimeter-wave Phased-Array-Fed Lens (PAFL). This antenna is specifically intended to be the electronic scanning module within a hybrid mechanical–electronic steering architecture. [...] Read more.
To address the stringent cost and performance requirements of commercial Satellite-on-the-Move (SOTM) terminals, we propose a Genetic Algorithm (GA)-based design for a millimeter-wave Phased-Array-Fed Lens (PAFL). This antenna is specifically intended to be the electronic scanning module within a hybrid mechanical–electronic steering architecture. In this hybrid configuration, wide-angle coverage is handled by mechanical positioning, while the PAFL is responsible for high-precision fine tracking and jitter compensation within a critical ±15° field of view. By utilizing a small-scale active array to illuminate a large passive planar lens, this design significantly reduces hardware costs compared to full phased arrays. To mitigate phase aberrations and gain loss inherent in such compact focal-to-diameter (F/D) systems, a two-stage co-optimization strategy is introduced. It globally optimizes the lens phase distribution and subsequently synthesizes feed excitation codebooks to dynamically correct residual errors. A Ka-band prototype comprising an 8 × 8 active feed and a 28 × 28 transmitarray lens was fabricated. Measurements demonstrated stable scanning within the required ±15° range with a gain variation of less than 1.5 dB, achieving a peak directivity of 28.9 dBi and sidelobe levels below −12 dB. Full article
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23 pages, 4832 KB  
Article
Investigation of Printed Slot Antenna for Non-Invasive Glucose Sensing Using FR4 Substrate Material
by Yaqeen S. Mezaal
Micromachines 2026, 17(3), 335; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17030335 - 10 Mar 2026
Viewed by 324
Abstract
This paper provides a feasibility study of a non-invasive microwave-based glucose-sensing system based on a small printed slot antenna with etched step-impedance resonators (SIRs) on an FR4 substrate in the ground plane at approximately 5.7 GHz. The sensor proposed takes advantage of the [...] Read more.
This paper provides a feasibility study of a non-invasive microwave-based glucose-sensing system based on a small printed slot antenna with etched step-impedance resonators (SIRs) on an FR4 substrate in the ground plane at approximately 5.7 GHz. The sensor proposed takes advantage of the effect of the antenna resonant frequency and reflection coefficient (S11) perturbation due to the dielectric loading of a human finger placed in the antenna near field. Instead of declaring direct glucose specificity, this paper is dedicated to understand whether the measures of RF can be translated to the invasive glucose values under the condition of controlled positioning. A vector network analyzer was used to measure the experimental values where resonant frequency and S11 magnitude were obtained at the point of peak sensitivity due to fixed finger placement at the point. These RF properties were associated with invasively measured glucose values using three modeling methods: a simple analytical linear formula, a second-degree Polynomial Ridge regression model, and a Random Forest machine learning model. The comparative analysis has established that nonlinear data-driven models outperform the analytical formulations significantly with the highest predictive accuracy being the Random Forest model (R2 = 0.72, RMSE = 10.57 mg/dL, MAE = 5.16 mg/dL). The findings affirm that the impacts of antenna loading control the raw measurements, but the trend related to glucose can be extracted upon machine learning calibration under controlled conditions. The research provides a methodological framework of RF-based non-invasive glucose sensing and the need to employ various phantom-based validation, sub-subject-based modeling, or clinically based evaluation metrics in future studies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Metasurface-Based Devices and Systems)
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21 pages, 2699 KB  
Article
Investigation of Underground Communication Quality Using Distributed Antenna Systems Considering Radio-Frequency Signal Propagation Characteristics in Almaty Metro Tunnels
by Askar Abdykadyrov, Moldir Kuatova, Nurzhigit Smailov, Zhandos Dosbayev, Sunggat Marxuly, Maxat Mamadiyarov, Ainur Kuttybayeva, Nurlan Kystaubayev and Amirkhan Bekmurza
Network 2026, 6(1), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/network6010015 - 10 Mar 2026
Viewed by 291
Abstract
This study investigates radio-frequency signal propagation in underground metro tunnels with a focus on distributed antenna system (DAS) deployment. Deterministic simulations were performed using Altair WinProp 2024.1 (ProMan) with a 3D ray-tracing engine (GO + UTD) at 2.4 GHz in a reinforced concrete [...] Read more.
This study investigates radio-frequency signal propagation in underground metro tunnels with a focus on distributed antenna system (DAS) deployment. Deterministic simulations were performed using Altair WinProp 2024.1 (ProMan) with a 3D ray-tracing engine (GO + UTD) at 2.4 GHz in a reinforced concrete tunnel model of 900 m length. Two antenna configurations (B3: 8 dBi directional; B8: 5 dBi wide-beam) were evaluated under identical geometric and material conditions. Results show that path loss varies from 42 to 65 dB over 850 m, with estimated attenuation exponents lower than free-space values due to quasi-waveguide effects. The B3 configuration provides higher near-field received power (up to −7.5 dBm) but exhibits stronger attenuation over long distances. In contrast, the B8 configuration ensures a more uniform spatial power distribution and a reduced path-loss growth rate beyond 500 m. The findings confirm that antenna radiation pattern significantly influences underground communication performance and demonstrate the engineering suitability of distributed antenna systems for stable metro tunnel coverage. Full article
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16 pages, 4442 KB  
Article
Bistatic Radar with Quantum-Generated Noise Phase Manipulation and Non-Directional Antennas
by Nikolay Gueorguiev, Atanas Nachev, Ognyan Todorov, Tereza Trencheva and Gergana Chalakova
Sensors 2026, 26(5), 1717; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051717 - 9 Mar 2026
Viewed by 337
Abstract
The development of bistatic noise radars is a promising contemporary direction in the field of radar technology. Two novel approaches are proposed in this study as further development of existing methods for their design. The first approach involves using a quantum-generated random number [...] Read more.
The development of bistatic noise radars is a promising contemporary direction in the field of radar technology. Two novel approaches are proposed in this study as further development of existing methods for their design. The first approach involves using a quantum-generated random number sequence for phase manipulation control, which is practically infinite in duration. This ensures additional electronic protection of the radar, since the phase manipulation control code will not repeat regardless of the duration of its operation. The second approach is related to the introduction of synchronized emissions from both antennas in a manner ensuring equality or controlled difference of their signals upon arrival at a predetermined point in space. This enables the formation of a controlled electromagnetic field. As a result, received-signal processing capabilities are improved, while additional electronic “stealth” is achieved by creating a fictitious electromagnetic center of the radar’s resultant radiation (i.e., an effective RF phase center of the resultant emission) and complicating the determination of antenna locations. A block diagram and general algorithm for information processing of a bistatic radar with quantum-generated noise phase manipulation and non-directional antennas are proposed in this study. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Radar Sensors)
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