IEEE Journal of Microwaves (Jan 2021)
Antenna/Human Body Coupling in 5G Millimeter-Wave Bands: Do Age and Clothing Matter?
Abstract
With the fast development of 5th generation (5G) mobile networks and prominence of the personal area networks and human-centered communications, people of all ages are increasingly exposed in the upper part of the microwave spectrum. In some exposure scenarios, presence of a textile between the radiating source and skin can affect the power absorption. This study investigates, for the first time, the effect of ageing and impact of textile on the power deposition in a skin-equivalent model under near-field exposure induced by multi-beam radiating structures at 26 GHz and 60 GHz. An array of four Yagi antennas has been used as a representative example of 5G reconfigurable antennas. The maximum increase of the averaged absorbed power density with respect to the averaged value for adults is observed at 70 year (8.8% at 26 GHz and 6.9% at 60 GHz). The strongest decrease is for 5-years-old children (-4.5% at 26 GHz and -3.7% at 60 GHz). In presence of a textile, the absorbed power density can increase or decrease depending on the textile properties (thickness and permittivity) and on the thickness of the air gap between textile and skin. With cotton and wool (considered as representative textile materials) the maximum increase of the averaged absorbed power density is about 40% compared to the bare skin.
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