Wireless innovations Next-generation
Online Workshop(WiNOW)
3-6 November, 2025 // Virtual

Pablo Ramírez-Espinosa
University of Málaga

Pablo Ramírez-Espinosa (Member, IEEE) received the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in telecommunication engineering from the University of Málaga, Spain, in 2017 and 2020, respectively. From 2020 to 2022, he was a Post-Doctoral Researcher with Connectivity Section, Department of Electronic Systems, Aalborg University, Denmark. From 2022 to 2024, he was a “María Zambrano” Post-Doctoral Fellow (National-Funded) with the University of Granada, Spain. In 2018, he was a Visiting Researcher with Queen’s University Belfast. He is currently a MSCA Post-Doctoral Fellow with the Telecommunications Research Institute (TELMA), University of Málaga. His main research interests include wireless communications, particularly dynamic metasurface antennas, fluid antennas, ultra-reliable low-latency communications, and channel modeling.

Talk Title: Metasurface-based Fluid Antennas

Fluid antenna systems (FASs) have become a popular topic in the wireless community as an effective yet simple means of exploiting spatial diversity. Due to the limitations of physically moving radiating elements, electronically reconfigurable antennas are emerging as practical implementations of FASs, since changing the radiation pattern is functionally equivalent to physically moving the device. However, electronically reconfigurable antennas pose a challenge in terms of analytical modeling, often requiring full-wave simulations or measurements for their characterization; this severely limits the extraction of theoretical insights useful for system design. Motivated by these difficulties and the growing interest in FASs, we propose in this paper a complete analytical model for metasurface-based embodiments of FASs. Specifically, we advocate for the implementation of the FAS concept through dynamic metasurface antennas (DMAs), hitherto proposed as array replacements in multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems. We leverage circuit theory to rewrite the conventional signal model of FASs in terms of admittance matrices accounting for the electromagnetic effects inherent to metasurfaces. The model is validated with full-wave simulations, showing good agreement. We further illustrate how to apply the model for standard performance analysis, and provide closed-form expressions for key metrics, including the resulting signal covariance matrix. Results confirm that practical DMA-based FASs can achieve similar performance to that of idealized implementations of position-flexible antennas.