RIS-Aided Radar for Target Detection: Clutter Region Analysis and Joint Active-Passive Design

Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface (RIS) brings a transformative potential to radar systems by providing a new dimension to control electromagnetic waves. This paper focuses on enhancing target detectability through the design and analysis of RIS-aided radar. A comprehensive signal model is established, recognizing both Line of Sight (LoS) and Non-Line of Sight (N-LoS) returns, factoring in RIS location and range gate shifts. This modeling enables an examination of the RIS-dependent effect of enlarged clutter region, underscoring the essential need for precise RIS phase optimization. A joint design problem encompassing transmit waveform, receive filter, and RIS phase is then formulated with the aim to optimize Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise-Ratio (SINR), complying with practical waveform constraints and discrete RIS phase alphabet. For this nonconvex problem, an iterative algorithm is developed to monotonically enhance SINR, ensuring convergence by alternately updating the radar waveform and RIS phases. Through the majorization-minimization framework, radar waveform updates are achieved using the feasible point pursuit technique, while a quasi-closed form solution is employed for the RIS phases. Simulation results demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed design, revealing the crucial role of RIS in the system.
Source: IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing - Category: Biomedical Engineering Source Type: research