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[Author] Niels KUSTER(4hit)

1-4hit
  • Dosimetric Evaluation of Handheld Mobile Communications Equipment with Known Precision

    Niels KUSTER  Ralph KASTLE  Thomas SCHMID  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E80-B No:5
      Page(s):
    645-652

    Recently several dosimetric assessment procedures have been proposed to demonstrate the compliance of handheld mobile telecommuications equipment (MTE) with safety limits. However, for none of these procedures has an estimation of the overall uncertainty in assessing the maximum exposure been provided for a reasonable cross-section of potential users. This paper presents a setup and procedure based on a high-precision dosimetric scanner combined with a new phantom derived from an anatomical study. This allows the assessment of the maximum spatial peak SAR values occurring in approximately 90% of all MTE users, including children, with a precision of better than 25%. This setup and procedure therefore satisfies the requirements of the FCC, as well as those drafted by a CENELEC working group mandated by the European Union.

  • Dosimetric Assessment of Two-Layer Cell Culture Configurations for Fertility Research at 1950MHz

    Yijian GONG  Manuel MURBACH  Teruo ONISHI  Myles CAPSTICK  Toshio NOJIMA  Niels KUSTER  

     
    PAPER-Electromagnetic Compatibility(EMC)

      Vol:
    E97-B No:3
      Page(s):
    631-637

    The objective of this paper is to extend the dosimetric assessment of 35mm Petri dishes exposed in the standing wave of R18 waveguides operated at 1950MHz for a medium-oil two-layer configuration for cells in monolayer and suspension. The culture medium inside the Petri dish is covered by oil that prevents evaporation and seals the cells below in the medium. The exposure of the cells was analyzed for one suspension-medium configuration, two different suspension-multilayer configurations, and one monolayer-multilayer configuration. The numerical dosimetry is verified by dosimetric temperature measurements. The non-uniformity of the specific absorption rate (SAR) distribution is 30% for monolayer, and 59-75% for suspension configurations. The latter should be taken into account when biological experiment is performed.

  • Correction of Numerical Phase Velocity Errors in Nonuniform FDTD Meshes

    Andreas CHRIST  Jurg FROHLICH  Niels KUSTER  

     
    PAPER-Antenna and Propagation

      Vol:
    E85-B No:12
      Page(s):
    2904-2915

    This paper proposes a novel method to correct numerical phase velocity errors in FDTD meshes with nonuniform step size. It enables the complete compensation of the phase velocity errors introduced by the mesh grading for one frequency and one arbitrary direction of propagation independently of the mesh grading. This permits the usage of the Total-Field-Scattered-Field formulation in connection with electrically large nonuniform FDTD meshes and allows a general reduction of the grid dispersion errors. The capabilities of the proposed method are demonstrated with the help of two examples: (1) the fields in a dielectric sphere illuminated by a plane wave are calculated and (2) a patch antenna simulation demonstrates that the uncertainty in determining its resonance frequency can be reduced by about 50%.

  • Experimental Evaluation of the SAR Induced in Head Phantoms of Three- and Eight-Year-Old Children

    Marie-Christine GOSSELIN  Sven KUHN  Andreas CHRIST  Marcel ZEFFERER  Emilio CHERUBINI  Jurriaan F. BAKKER  Gerard C. van RHOON  Niels KUSTER  

     
    PAPER-Electromagnetic Compatibility(EMC)

      Vol:
    E95-B No:10
      Page(s):
    3215-3224

    The exposure of children to mobile phones has been a concern for years, but so far the conclusions with respect to compliance with safety standards are based only on simulations. Regulators have requested that these conclusions be supported by experimental evidence. The objectives of this study are 1) to test if the hypothesis that the specific anthropomorphic mannequin (SAM) used in standardized compliance testing is also conservative for homogeneous child head models and 2) to validate the numerical prediction of the peak spatial SAR (psSAR) in child head phantoms. To achieve these objectives, head phantoms of 3- and 8-year-old children were developed and manufactured. The results confirm that SAM is also conservative for child head phantoms, and that the agreement between numerical and experimental values are within the combined uncertainty of 0.9 dB, provided that the actual peak spatial SAR (psSAR) is determined. The results also demonstrate that the currently suggested numerical SAR averaging procedures may underestimate the actual psSAR by more than 1.3 dB and that the currently defined limits in terms of the average of a cubic mass are impractical for non-ambiguous evaluations, i.e., for achieving inter-laboratory repeatability.

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