IEEE Access (Jan 2022)

Realistic Human Exposure at 3.5 GHz and 28 GHz for Distributed and Collocated MaMIMO in Indoor Environments Using Hybrid Ray-Tracing and FDTD

  • Robin Wydaeghe,
  • Sergei Shikhantsov,
  • Emmeric Tanghe,
  • Gunter Vermeeren,
  • Luc Martens,
  • Piet Demeester,
  • Wout Joseph

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3227107
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 130996 – 131004

Abstract

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Realistic human downlink exposure at 3.5 and 28 GHz to electromagnetic fields is evaluated for distributed and collocated base stations using a hybrid ray-tracing/finite-difference time-domain method. For the first time, the absorbed power density is computed for distributed massive multiple-input multiple-output (DMaMIMO) 6G base stations at 28 GHz. The results are compared with 3.5 GHz 5G base stations. Computational costs are drastically increased at 28 GHz. A large analysis is realized by speed improvements and using two configurations. In the first, exposure distributions of DMaMIMO BS show clusters of low and high exposure. These clusters disappear when results are normalized with respect to the incoming power at the user. In the second, the influence of BS to user distance in line-of-sight (LOS) and non-line-of-sight (NLOS) scenarios shows expected results. This includes a power law relationship in LOS and shadowing in NLOS. The vast majority of exposure quantities are less than 4% of the limits of the International Commission for Non-Ionizing Radiation. Basic restrictions are respected when reference quantities are set to their limits. With equal power, distributed base stations contribute 2 to 3 times less to exposure than collocated base stations. Expressed as a ratio to their limits set by ICNIRP, the basic quantities are 5 to 10 dB lower than the reference quantities.

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