Title :
Human body capacitance: static or dynamic concept? [ESD]
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Tech. Univ., Lyngby, Denmark
Abstract :
A standing human body insulated from ground by footwear and/or floor covering is in principle an insulated conductor and has, as such, a capacitance, i.e. the ability to store a charge and possibly discharge the stored energy in a spark discharge. In the human body, the human body capacitance (HBC) is traditionally chosen as 100 pF. However, a simple geometric model seems to suggest considerably higher values. A series of experiments, where the capacitance of standing persons were determined for various combinations of footwear and floor coverings, gave values in the order of 100-150 pF when the capacitance was determined by an AC-bridge measurement, but 200-400 pF when the traditional static charge-sharing method was used. Further experiments indicate that the two methods give the same result when the electric flux is well located in a dielectric other than air, but that the static method leads to higher values when a substantial part of the flux extends itself through badly defined stray fields. Since the concept of human body capacitance is normally used in a static (electric) context, it is suggested that the HBC be determined by a static method. No theoretical explanation of the observed differences is presently at hand.
Keywords :
capacitance; capacitance measurement; electrostatic discharge; sparks; 100 to 150 pF; 200 to 400 pF; AC-bridge measurement; ESD; HBC; capacitance; charge storage; electric flux; floor covering insulation; footwear insulation; geometric model; human body capacitance; insulated conductor; spark discharge; standing human body; standing person capacitance; static charge-sharing method; static electric context; static method; stored energy; stray fields; Biological system modeling; Capacitance measurement; Conductors; Current measurement; Electrostatic discharge; Footwear; Humans; Insulation; Solid modeling; Sparks;
Conference_Titel :
Electrical Overstress/Electrostatic Discharge Symposium Proceedings, 1998
Conference_Location :
Reno, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
1-878303-91-0
DOI :
10.1109/EOSESD.1998.737028