Title :
A Specific Absorption Rate Measurement Method Using Fiber Optic Thermal Sensors
Author :
Okano, Yoshinobu ; Sato, Toshiya ; Sugama, Youji
Author_Institution :
Musashi Inst. of Technol., Tokyo, Japan
fDate :
6/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The specific absorption rate (SAR) is an indicator of the thermal effects caused by microwave exposure in biological tissues. Electric field probe scanning has been used as a practical SAR evaluation technology until now. A measurement standard is necessary for any physical quantity. In general, the existence of a standard constructed with a physically different procedure is important in uncertainty evaluation of the measurement standard. In this paper, a thermal SAR measurement method using an optical fiber thermal sensor is proposed. The thermal SAR measurement method is not suitable for dosimetric assessments for an actual cellular phone. Nevertheless, the proposed method is a simple measurement technique for measuring the temperature rise caused in an equivalent biological tissue (semisolid phantom) by electromagnetic energy absorption. A thermal sensor works independently of the frequency and is, therefore, suitable for primary testing of an electric field probe scanning system. The measurement utility of the proposed thermal SAR measurement method was verified in this paper. The results show that the proposed method is able to measure SAR within an error range of 1%-3% above 2 GHz.
Keywords :
fibre optic sensors; light absorption; optical variables measurement; absorption rate measurement method; biological tissues; cellular phone; dosimetric assessments; electric field probe scanning; electromagnetic energy absorption; fiber optic thermal sensors; microwave exposure; optical fiber thermal sensor; thermal SAR measurement method; thermal effects; 1 g mass-average SAR; 10 g mass-average SAR; Finite-difference time domain (FDTD); optical fiber thermal sensor; semisolid phantom; thermal specific absorption rate (SAR) measurement method;
Journal_Title :
Instrumentation and Measurement, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIM.2009.2022449