DocumentCode
35815
Title
Temperature Increase in the Fetus Exposed to UHF RFID Readers
Author
Fiocchi, S. ; Parazzini, M. ; Liorni, I. ; Samaras, Theodoros ; Ravazzani, P.
Author_Institution
Ist. di Elettron. e di Ing. dell´Inf. e delle Telecomun., Milan, Italy
Volume
61
Issue
7
fYear
2014
fDate
Jul-14
Firstpage
2011
Lastpage
2019
Abstract
Exposure to electromagnetic fields (EMFs) has prominently increased during the last decades due to the rapid development of new technologies. Among the various devices emitting EMFs, those based on Radio-frequency identification (RFID) technologies are used in all aspects of everyday life, and expose people unselectively. This scenario could pose a potential risk for some groups of the general population, such as pregnant women, who are expected to be possibly more sensitive to the thermal effects produced by EMF exposure. This is the first paper that addresses the estimation of temperature rise in two pregnant women models exposed to ultrahigh frequency RFID by computational techniques. Results show that the maximum temperature increase of the fetus and of the pregnancy-related tissues is relatively high (even about 0.7 °C), not too far from the known threshold of biological effects. However, this increase is confined to a small volume in the tissues.
Keywords
UHF devices; biological effects of fields; biological effects of microwaves; biological tissues; biothermics; obstetrics; partial differential equations; physiological models; radiofrequency identification; EMF emitting devices; EMF exposure thermal effects; UHF RFID reader exposure effect; biological effect threshold; computational techniques; electromagnetic field; fetus temperature; maximum temperature increase; pregnancy-related tissues; pregnant women models; radio-frequency identification technologies; temperature rise estimation; ultrahigh frequency RFID; Amniotic fluid; Antennas; Fetus; Heating; Pregnancy; Radiofrequency identification; Skin; Fetus; radio frequency identification (RFID); temperature;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2014.2312023
Filename
6767087
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