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Introduction to Radio Frequency Radiation

Introduction to Radio Frequency Radiation. Robert Curtis, USDOL/OSHA Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine March 2003. Health Effects and Standards. Frequency and Wavelength. Electromagnetic Spectrum. How RF Transfers. Specific Absorption Rate.

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Introduction to Radio Frequency Radiation

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  1. Introduction to Radio Frequency Radiation Robert Curtis, USDOL/OSHADirectorate of Science, Technology and Medicine March 2003

  2. Health Effects and Standards

  3. Frequency and Wavelength

  4. Electromagnetic Spectrum

  5. How RF Transfers

  6. Specific Absorption Rate • Measure absorbed power in watts per kg of tissue • Basis of most RF standards

  7. A Quick Review of RFMW Biological Effects (II) • Immune (animals only) - T lymphocyte activity alteration @ 1.4 W/Kg • Blood - no consistent results • Cancer - No specific animal life span study seeking cancer has been done; epl' studies of radio hams, electrical workers, and physical therapists found excess cancer, but other studies have not found association

  8. A Quick Review of RFMW Biological Effects (III) • Neurological (animals only) - Test of blood/brain barrier contradictory; unreplicated studies with AM & PM fields show brain metabolism changes @ >0.02 W/kg 200 & 591 MHz, but not @ 2450 MHz • Mutations - Mutations not found in replicated studies to date

  9. A Quick Review of RFMW Biological Effects (III) (cont.) • Reproduction - (animals only) • Temporary make sterility @ 5.6 W/kg • Testicular changes @ 15 W/kg • Leutenizing hormone changes @ >2 W/kg • Teratology (animals only) - Malformed offspring found @ 31 W/kg, strong thermal dependance (temp >41°C) • Thermoscoustic - (Pulsed only)

  10. A Quick Review of RFMW Biological Effects (III) (cont.) Observed in radar operators in WWII as perceived clicking sound. Possible cause of neurological, central cholinergic, effects observed by James Lai @ 0.6 W/kg (0.45 W/kg NOEL, brain SAR #2 W/kg for effect)

  11. Basis of RF Standards • Behavioral disruption threshold • Limit temperature increase to 1 degrees C • 1-4 W/kg SAR • 10-fold safety factor

  12. Maximum Permissible Exposure (MPE) for Occupational (Controlled) Environment

  13. Same Basis, but Standards Differ • General population vs. Controlled RF Sites • Localized exposure limits (spatial averaging) • Time averaging • Special exclusions, such as low-power devices, peak exposures.

  14. Maximum Permissible Exposure (MPE) for Public (Uncontrolled) Environment

  15. Maximum Contact Current for Occupational (Controlled) Environment

  16. Maximum Contact Current for Public (Uncontrolled) Environment

  17. RF Exposure Standards are Typically Based on 6 min. TWA • Excursions allowed if 6 min time weighted average is within limits • Up to 30 min intervals used for public exposure standards

  18. Spatial Averaging • ANSI standard is confusing regarding partial-body vs. non-uniform exposure. • Exception for testes and eyes (See interpretation). • OSHA standards, based on old ANSI, does not allow for spatial averaging.

  19. Microwave Measurement

  20. Antenna Equations • Equation

  21. Microwave Applications

  22. Cassegrain Antenna

  23. Radio Frequency Measurement

  24. >300 MHz - E or H or S; spatial average 100 - 300 MHz - E & H; spatial average 3 kHz - 100 MHz - E & H; spatial average; including current; contact current Radio-Frequency MeasurementsIEEE c95.1 - 1991

  25. FCC Limits for MPE • Table Notes

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