• DocumentCode
    3611147
  • Title

    Dosimetric Simulations of Brain Absorption of Mobile Phone Radiation–The Relationship Between psSAR and Age

  • Author

    Fernandez-Rodriguez, Claudio Enrique ; Almeida de Salles, Alvaro Augusto ; Davis, Devra Lee

  • Author_Institution
    Sci. & Technol. of Rio Grande do Sul, Fed. Inst. of Educ., Canoas, Brazil
  • Volume
    3
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    7/7/1905 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    2425
  • Lastpage
    2430
  • Abstract
    As children develop, they differ from adults in a number of important ways, including anatomy, metabolism, immune system, and the extent of myelination of the nervous system. As a consequence, equivalent exposures to radiation from mobile phones result in different doses to specific tissues in children compared with adults. Higher doses are likely to have more severe implications in the young. A young child´s skull is not only smaller and thinner than an adult´s, but also has dielectric characteristics closer to those of soft tissues, probably due to a higher water content. The young skull better matches the electromagnetic characteristics of the skin and brain. As a result, finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations confirm field penetration and higher specific absorption rate (SAR) in deeper structures in the young brain. If the peak spatial SAR (psSAR) is modeled in the entire head, as current testing standards recommend, the results for adults and children are equivalent. Our anatomically based evaluations rely on FDTD simulations of different tissues within the brain and confirm that the psSAR in a child´s brain is higher than in an adult´s brain.
  • Keywords
    brain; dosimetry; finite difference time-domain analysis; skin; smart phones; FDTD simulation; brain absorption dosimetric simulation; brain electromagnetic characteristics; finite difference time-domain simulation; immune system; mobile phone radiation; nervous system myelination; peak spatial SAR; psSAR; skin electromagnetic characteristics; soft tissue; specific absorption rate; water content; Absorption; Bones; Brain models; Finite difference methods; Phantoms; Time-domain analysis; Dosimetry; Finite-Difference Time-Domain imulation; Mobile phone certification; Specific Absorption Rate; Specific absorption rate; dosimetry; finite-difference time-domain simulation; mobile phone certification;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Access, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2169-3536
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/ACCESS.2015.2502900
  • Filename
    7335557