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arxiv: 2605.05824 · v1 · submitted 2026-05-07 · 📡 eess.SP

Indoor 60 GHz Radio Channel Dataset Enabling Digital Twin Construction

Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 07:21 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 📡 eess.SP
keywords 60 GHzradio channel datasetbeamspace samplingdigital twinISACindoor measurementschirp waveformsbeamforming
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The pith

A 60 GHz indoor radio channel dataset collected at 350 points enables digital twin construction.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The authors have assembled an indoor dataset of radio signals at 60 GHz to aid in the building of digital twins for wireless systems. Their testbed combines a high-end processor board with a beamforming antenna to scan the space quickly at many angles. A special set of waveforms lets them measure the full pattern of signal directions in a fraction of a second at each of 350 spots on a grid. If accurate, the data will help researchers model how these high-frequency signals behave indoors and improve both communication and sensing technologies.

Core claim

The paper establishes that a validated high-performance testbed integrating a Xilinx Zynq UltraScale+ RFSoC with a Sivers 60 GHz beamforming front-end, using segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirp waveforms to perform rapid exhaustive beamspace sampling, produces a high-density spatial dataset of 350 measurement points across a 1.95 m x 3.60 m indoor grid, with each 63x63 beamspace intensity map constructed in 200us, serving as a benchmark for spatial channel modeling, Digital Twins and ISAC research.

What carries the argument

Segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirp waveforms enabling rapid exhaustive beamspace sampling on an RFSoC-integrated 60 GHz beamforming testbed.

Load-bearing premise

The segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirp waveforms and RFSoC-based testbed capture the true propagation channel without significant hardware-induced artifacts or calibration errors that would distort the beamspace maps.

What would settle it

A side-by-side comparison of beamspace maps from this testbed against those from a standard vector network analyzer or a different commercial 60 GHz system at identical locations would reveal any hardware-specific distortions.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.05824 by Daniele de Santis, Davide Scazzoli, Fortunato Santucci, Francesco Linsalata, Maurizio Magarini, Umberto Spagnolini.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Main software and hardware components used view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Spatial heatmap of the average Received Sig view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Power Delay Profile (PDP) of a representative view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The ambitious performance targets of modern wireless networks, including 6G and Industrial IoT (IIoT) systems, necessitate advanced hardware platforms utilizing millimeter-wave (mmWave) technology. High-frequency signals provide the bandwidth and low latency required for these systems, but rely on beamforming to overcome path loss and exploit channel sparsity. This kind of architecture provides all the specifications needed to build a SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) system. This paper presents a dataset based on a validated, high-performance testbed integrating a Xilinx Zynq UltraScale+ RFSoC with a Sivers 60 GHz beamforming front-end. We demonstrate a novel methodology using segment-scrambled, quasi-orthogonal chirp waveforms to perform rapid exhaustive beamspace sampling. The system is integrated with Pynq Linux for real-time control and high-speed waveform upload. We present a high-density spatial dataset consisting of 350 measurement points across a 1.95 m x 3.60 m indoor grid. We exploited the system's ability to scan 63 transmit directions and construct a complete 63x63 beamspace intensity map in 200us. This dataset serves as a benchmark for spatial channel modeling, Digital Twins and Integrated Sensing and Communication (ISAC) research.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript introduces an indoor 60 GHz radio channel dataset collected with a testbed combining a Xilinx Zynq UltraScale+ RFSoC and Sivers 60 GHz beamforming front-end. Using segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirp waveforms, it performs rapid exhaustive beamspace sampling to generate 63x63 intensity maps in 200 μs at each of 350 points in a 1.95 m x 3.60 m indoor area. The work positions this dataset as a benchmark for spatial channel modeling, digital twin construction, and ISAC research.

Significance. Should the measurements prove to faithfully represent the propagation channel, the dataset's high spatial resolution and rapid acquisition time would offer substantial value for validating digital twin models and developing ISAC techniques in mmWave bands. The integration of Pynq Linux for real-time control is a practical strength for reproducibility.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The assertion that the testbed is 'validated' and that the dataset enables digital twin construction is made without any quantitative validation results, error analysis, ground-truth comparisons, or calibration residuals for the 63x63 beamspace maps collected over the 350-point grid.
  2. [Testbed and waveform description] Testbed and waveform description: The central claim that the segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirps and RFSoC+Sivers hardware capture the true propagation channel (rather than hardware artifacts) is load-bearing for the benchmark utility but is not supported by any fidelity metrics, residual error analysis, or cross-checks against ray-tracing or reference measurements.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The sentence stating that the architecture 'provides all the specifications needed to build a SLAM system' is tangential to the dataset contribution and disrupts the abstract's focus; it should be clarified or removed.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive feedback, which identifies key areas where additional rigor will strengthen the manuscript. We address each major comment below and commit to revisions that directly respond to the concerns raised.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The assertion that the testbed is 'validated' and that the dataset enables digital twin construction is made without any quantitative validation results, error analysis, ground-truth comparisons, or calibration residuals for the 63x63 beamspace maps collected over the 350-point grid.

    Authors: We agree that the abstract's use of 'validated' and the positioning for digital twin construction would benefit from supporting quantitative details, which are not present in the current version. The manuscript emphasizes the novel chirp-based acquisition method and the resulting high-density dataset. We will revise the abstract to describe the testbed as 'high-performance' and add a new subsection detailing calibration procedures, residual error analysis, and initial ground-truth comparisons with ray-tracing simulations for a subset of the 350 points. This will provide the requested quantitative support for the dataset's utility in digital twin and ISAC research. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Testbed and waveform description] Testbed and waveform description: The central claim that the segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirps and RFSoC+Sivers hardware capture the true propagation channel (rather than hardware artifacts) is load-bearing for the benchmark utility but is not supported by any fidelity metrics, residual error analysis, or cross-checks against ray-tracing or reference measurements.

    Authors: The segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirps are designed to enable rapid exhaustive sampling while minimizing inter-segment interference, as described in the waveform section, with the RFSoC+Sivers integration providing the hardware platform. We acknowledge that the current manuscript does not include explicit fidelity metrics, residual analysis, or cross-checks to demonstrate that the measurements reflect the propagation channel. In the revised version, we will expand the testbed and waveform description with residual error metrics from the chirp processing pipeline and add cross-validation results against ray-tracing simulations and available reference measurements to substantiate that hardware artifacts are not dominant. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Purely empirical dataset paper with no derivations or predictions

full rationale

The manuscript describes a hardware testbed (RFSoC + Sivers 60 GHz front-end), a waveform methodology (segment-scrambled quasi-orthogonal chirps), and a collected spatial dataset of 350 indoor points with 63x63 beamspace maps. No equations, fitted parameters, first-principles derivations, or predictions appear. The central claim is that the dataset serves as a benchmark; this is an assertion about utility, not a derived result that reduces to its own inputs. No self-citations, ansatzes, or uniqueness theorems are invoked in a load-bearing way. The paper is self-contained as an empirical contribution.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper is an empirical dataset release and does not introduce or rely on free parameters, mathematical axioms, or invented entities.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5541 in / 1150 out tokens · 103429 ms · 2026-05-08T07:21:06.351547+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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