Visible to the public Human EMF Exposure in Wearable Networks for Internet of Battlefield Things

TitleHuman EMF Exposure in Wearable Networks for Internet of Battlefield Things
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsNasim, I., Kim, S.
Conference NameMILCOM 2019 - 2019 IEEE Military Communications Conference (MILCOM)
Date PublishedNov. 2019
PublisherIEEE
ISBN Number978-1-7281-4280-7
Keywordsantenna design approaches, antenna radiation patterns, average specific absorption rate, biological effects of microwaves, biomedical communication, electromagnetic field exposure effect, electromagnetic fields, Electromagnetics, frequency 2.4 GHz, frequency 60.0 GHz, Guidelines, human electromagnetic field exposure effect, human EMF exposure, human factors, human skin surface, Internet of battlefield things, Internet of Things, iobt, military communication, On-body network, on-body wearable communications, on-body wearable devices, pubcrawl, Safety, SAR, Scalability, Skin, Specific absorption rate, UHF antennas, wearable antennas, Wearable Device, wearable networks
Abstract

Numerous antenna design approaches for wearable applications have been investigated in the literature. As on-body wearable communications become more ingrained in our daily activities, the necessity to investigate the impacts of these networks burgeons as a major requirement. In this study, we investigate the human electromagnetic field (EMF) exposure effect from on-body wearable devices at 2.4 GHz and 60 GHz, and compare the results to illustrate how the technology evolution to higher frequencies from wearable communications can impact our health. Our results suggest the average specific absorption rate (SAR) at 60 GHz can exceed the regulatory guidelines within a certain separation distance between a wearable device and the human skin surface. To the best of authors' knowledge, this is the first work that explicitly compares the human EMF exposure at different operating frequencies for on-body wearable communications, which provides a direct roadmap in design of wearable devices to be deployed in the Internet of Battlefield Things (IoBT).

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9020889
DOI10.1109/MILCOM47813.2019.9020889
Citation Keynasim_human_2019