A personal, distributed exposimeter: Procedure for design, calibration, validation, and application

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Abstract

This paper describes, for the first time, the procedure for the full design, calibration, uncertainty analysis, and practical application of a personal, distributed exposimeter (PDE) for the detection of personal exposure in the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) downlink (DL) band around 900 MHz (GSM 900 DL). The PDE is a sensor that consists of several body-worn antennas. The on-body location of these antennas is investigated using numerical simulations and calibration measurements in an anechoic chamber. The calibration measurements and the simulations result in a design (or on-body setup) of the PDE. This is used for validation measurements and indoor radio frequency (RF) exposure measurements in Ghent, Belgium. The main achievements of this paper are: first, the demonstration, using both measurements and simulations, that a PDE consisting of multiple on-body textile antennas will have a lower measurement uncertainty for personal RF exposure than existing on-body sensors; second, a validation of the PDE, which proves that the device correctly estimates the incident power densities; and third, a demonstration of the usability of the PDE for real exposure assessment measurements. To this aim, the validated PDE is used for indoor measurements in a residential building in Ghent, Belgium, which yield an average incident power density of 0.018 mW/m².

Figures

  • Figure 1. Measured power reflection coefficient (R11) of the textiles antennas used for the GSM 900 DL band (the band is indicated by dashed lines).
  • Figure 2. Illustration of the used antennas. More detailed dimensions of the antennas can be found in [22].
  • Figure 3. Illustration of the potential locations (A to L) to deploy the antennas on the upper body of the Virtual Family Male.
  • Table 1. Parameters used in the numerical simulations to generate exposure samples in realistic environments (taken from [24]).
  • Figure 4. Locations (1 to 6) of the validation measurements and the transmitter (TX) used during the measurements (Courtesy of Marina Marinova).
  • Figure 5. Floor plan of the residential building in Ghent, Belgium, where the RF exposure measurements took place.
  • Figure 6. Boxplot of the distribution of the simulated PI50 in the “urban Macro-cell” scenario as a function of the number of antennas. The grey boxes indicate the distribution of the PI50 using numerical simulations, while the black boxes indicate the distribution using calibration measurements. Outliers are suppressed in this figure.
  • Figure 7. Correlation coefficient of the multipath antenna apertures in the “Urban Macro-cell” scenario for the simulated textile antenna placed horizontally (hor) or vertically (ver) on positions A to L on the VFM.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Thielens, A., Vanveerdeghem, P., Van Torre, P., Gängler, S., Röösli, M., Rogier, H., … Joseph, W. (2016). A personal, distributed exposimeter: Procedure for design, calibration, validation, and application. Sensors (Switzerland), 16(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/s16020180

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