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IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques
Volume 48 Number 11, November 2000
Table of Contents for this issue
Complete paper in PDF format
The Dependence of Electromagnetic
Energy Absorption Upon Human Head Tissue Composition
in the Frequency Range of 300-3000 MHz
Antonios Drossos, Member, IEEE Veli Santomaa, Senior Member, IEEE and Niels Kuster Member, IEEE
Page 1988.
Abstract:
The requirements for testing compliance of cellular phones with
electromagnetic safety limits demand evaluation of the maximum exposure that
may occur in the user group under normal operational conditions. Under these
conditions, the tissues of the ear region are most exposed, the tissue composition
of which is complex and varies considerably from user to user. The objective
of this paper is to derive head tissue equivalent dielectric parameters that
enable the utilization of one generic homogeneous head for testing compliance
for the entire user group, i.e., granting no underestimation, but also not
greatly overestimating the actual maximum user exposure. As a primary study,a simple analytical model of an infinite half-space layered tissue model exposed
to a plane wave was utilized to investigate the impact of impedance-matching
standing waves, etc. on the spatial-peak specific absorption rate. The tissue
layers were varied in composition and thickness, representing the anatomical
variation of the exposed head region covering the user group including adults
and children (<10% to > 90% percentile). Based on the worst-case tissue layer compositions
with respect to absorption at each frequency, head tissue equivalent dielectric
parameters for homogeneous modeling were derived, which result in the same
spatial-peak absorption. The validity of this approach for near-field exposures
was demonstrated by replacing the plane wave by different near-field sources
(dipoles and generic phones) and the layered structure with magnetic-resonance-image-based
nonhomogeneous human head models.
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