Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

The 2026 roadmap on wireless and microwave metasurfaces

  • Akram Alomainy*
  • , Stephen Henthorn*
  • , Qammer H. Abbasi*
  • , Fraser Burton
  • , Aaron Walker
  • , Yangyishi Zhang
  • , Jalil Ur Rehman Kazim
  • , Farooq A. Tahir
  • , Muhammad Ali Imran
  • , Milo Baraclough
  • , Euan Humphreys
  • , Miguel Navarro-Cía
  • , Mustafa K.Taher Al-Nuaimi
  • , William G. Whittow
  • , Rupam Das
  • , Anikó Német
  • , Syeda Fizzah Jilani
  • , Muhammad Aslam
  • , Alex Powell
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Queen Mary University of London
  • University of Sheffield
  • University of Glasgow
  • Applied Research
  • Defence Science and Technology Laboratory
  • University of Birmingham
  • Loughborough University
  • University of Exeter

Research output: Contribution to journalReview Articlepeer-review

4 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Microwave and wireless metasurfaces are transitioning from specialist electromagnetic structures to enabling technologies with growing impact across telecommunications, sensing, healthcare, and defence. This roadmap provides a comprehensive overview of the current state of research on microwave and wireless metasurfaces in the UK, highlighting recent advances and the key challenges that must be addressed to enable widespread deployment. Contributions from academia, industry, and government laboratories are organised around three cross-cutting themes: application-driven developments, emerging fundamental science, and practical considerations related to manufacture, integration, and scalability. The roadmap reviews progress in areas including reconfigurable intelligent surfaces for 5G and beyond-5G communications, enhanced radio coverage and sensing in wireless and healthcare settings, terahertz metasurfaces for beam manipulation, radar cross-section control, bioelectronic applications, and flexible and conformal metasurface platforms. Across these domains, recurring challenges are identified, such as bandwidth and angular limitations, reconfigurability with low loss and low power consumption, robustness to manufacturing tolerances, system-level integration, and long-term reliability. Emerging solutions are discussed, including machine learning-assisted design, advanced and additive manufacturing techniques, new functional materials, and hybrid electronic, optical, and mechanical control strategies. By synthesising perspectives across multiple sectors, this roadmap provides a clear snapshot of the current research landscape while outlining priority directions for future work, with the aim of supporting researchers, industry stakeholders, and policymakers in accelerating the translation of microwave and wireless metasurfaces from laboratory demonstrations to reliable, scalable technologies with real-world impact.

Original languageEnglish
Article number133001
Number of pages35
JournalJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics
Volume59
Issue number13
Early online date30 Mar 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 03 Apr 2026

Keywords

  • metamaterial
  • wireless
  • microwave
  • telecommunication
  • terahertz
  • metasurface
  • manufacturing
  • RECONFIGURABLE INTELLIGENT SURFACES
  • EXTRAORDINARY OPTICAL-TRANSMISSION
  • SCATTERING
  • METAMATERIALS
  • OPTIMIZATION
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • CHALLENGES
  • ULTRATHIN
  • POLYMER
  • DEVICES

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The 2026 roadmap on wireless and microwave metasurfaces'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this