Title :
Interaction of electromagnetic waves with humans in wearable and biomedical implant antennas
Author :
Agarwal, Kush ; Yong-Xin Guo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Nat. Univ. of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
Abstract :
Antennas are the key components for far-field wireless transmission of data and power by electromagnetic (EM) radiation. These passive devices are the only radiating structures in biomedical communication systems, so its design needs to be carefully studied to ensure human safety. In this paper, we analyse and discuss the effect of wearable and implantable biomedical antennas on humans and vice versa. The design process of these electromagnetic radiating structures in body-worn devices and implantable medical devices (IMDs), which take into consideration the human body effects and FCC/FDA safety regulations, has been demonstrated using a wearable endfire antenna on artificial magnetic conductor metasurface intended for wireless body area network communications and an implantable rectenna for far-field wireless powering. Both proposed antenna designs perform considerably well in/on the voxel model used for the human body analysis and adhere to the FCC/FDA human safety limits of specific absorption rate (SAR) and thermal heating by EM radiation.
Keywords :
biomedical communication; biomedical equipment; electromagnetic waves; heat treatment; prosthetics; wearable antennas; EM radiation; FCC-FDA human safety limits; FCC-FDA safety regulations; IMD; SAR; antenna designs; artificial magnetic conductor metasurface; biomedical communication systems; biomedical implant antennas; body-worn devices; electromagnetic radiating structures; electromagnetic radiation; electromagnetic wave interaction; far-field wireless data transmission; far-field wireless powering; human body analysis; human body effects; human safety; implantable medical devices; implantable rectenna; passive devices; radiating structures; specific absorption rate; thermal heating; voxel model; wearable endfire antenna; wearable implant antennas; wireless body area network communications; Antenna radiation patterns; Biological system modeling; Biomedical monitoring; Microwave antennas; Safety; Wireless communication; biomedical implant; far-field RF powering; safety; specific absorption rate; wearable antennas; wireless power transfer;
Conference_Titel :
Electromagnetic Compatibility (APEMC), 2015 Asia-Pacific Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Taipei
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-6668-4
DOI :
10.1109/APEMC.2015.7175377