The rapid expansion of smart city infrastructures and Internet of Things (IoT) networks has led to extremely dense wireless deployments, driving unsustainable energy consumption and exacerbating environmental concerns. To improve sustainability in the long term, future wireless systems must fundamentally prioritize energy-efficient and autonomous operation. Integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) is emerging as a key enabler for next-generation systems by jointly supporting sensing and communication through shared spectrum, hardware, and signal processing resources. In IoT systems, sensing of target parameters, e.g., range, angle, velocity and identity, etc., form the basis of autonomous and environment-aware applications. However, this integration increases overall power consumption due to the added coordination overhead and the workload placed on shared hardware components. To this end, backscatter communication provides a low-power alternative that enables passive data transmission through energy harvesting and sharply reduces the need for active radio circuits. However, the coexistence of sensing and backscatter functions introduces mutual interference, which often requires large multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) arrays for effective mitigation. Furthermore, sensing performance depends heavily on line-of-sight conditions, while backscatter links operate only over short ranges. Although increasing array size or transmit power can extend coverage, it imposes substantial energy and hardware costs and undermines sustainability goals. To address these limitations, cell-free MIMO is emerging as a promising candidate technology for next-generation systems. Cell-free MIMO relies on a dense deployment of distributed access points that cooperate to serve devices across a wide area. This cooperation enables effective beamforming and interference management, providing spatial diversity comparable to large, centralized antenna arrays without incurring their associated hardware or power costs. They also enable aggregation of weak double-hop reflections, reduced effective-illumination distances, multi-view sensing, and robustness to blockage, which is invaluable to backscatter communication. This perspective article introduces the foundations, challenges, and architectural considerations of cell-free backscatter-aided integrated sensing and communication (CF-BISAC) systems. By leveraging the advantages of battery-less backscatter IoT devices and the distributed nature of cell-free MIMO, CF-ISABC aims to maximize sensing and communication performance under strict energy constraints, contributing toward energy-aware ISAC systems capable of supporting high-density, low-power wireless applications.
Anjum et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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