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SAR versus Sinc: What is the appropriate RF exposure metric in the range 1–10 GHz? Part I: Using planar body models

✍ Scribed by Vitas Anderson; Rodney Croft; Robert L McIntosh


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
160 KB
Volume
31
Category
Article
ISSN
0197-8462

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

This is the first of two articles addressing the most appropriate crossover frequency at which incident power flux density (S~inc~) replaces the spatial peak value of the specific energy absorption rate (SAR) averaged over 1 or 10 g (i.e., peak 1 or 10 g SAR) as the basic restriction for protecting against radiofrequency (RF) heating effects in the 1–10 GHz range. Our general approach has been to compare the degree of correlation between these basic restrictions and the peak induced tissue temperature rise (Δ__T__) for a representative range of population/exposure scenarios. In this article we particularly address the effect of human population diversity in the thickness of body tissue layers at eight different sites of the body. We used a Monte Carlo approach to specify 32000 models (400 models for each of 8 body sites for 10 frequencies) which were representative of tissue thicknesses for age (18–74 years) and sex at the eight body sites. Histogram distributions of S~inc~ and peak 1 and 10 g SAR corresponding to a peak 1 °C temperature rise were obtained from RF and thermal analyses of 1D multiplanar models exposed to a normally incident plane wave ranging from 1 to 10 GHz in thermo‐neutral environmental conditions. Examination of the distribution spread of the histograms indicated that peak SAR was a better predictor of peak tissue temperature rise across the entire 1–10 GHz frequency range than S~inc~, as indicated by the smaller spread in its histogram distributions, and that peak 10 g SAR was a slightly better predictor than peak 1 g SAR. However, this result must be weighed against partly conflicting indications from complex body modeling in the second article of this series, which incorporates near‐field effects and the influence of complex body geometries. Bioelectromagnetics 31:454–466, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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SAR versus Sinc: What is the appropriate
✍ Robert L. McIntosh; Vitas Anderson 📂 Article 📅 2010 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 141 KB

## Abstract This is the second of the two articles that present modeling data and reasoned arguments for specifying the appropriate crossover frequency at which incident power flux density (__S__~inc~) replaces the peak 10 g averaged value of the specific energy absorption rate (SAR) as the designa