What is it about?
Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) devices emitting in the 2.4GHz band may rise human exposure questions mainly when a person stands near an antenna. Proximity far-field level variation with distance, in the range 40cm-1m is investigated experimentally in order to extract peculiarities of radiated field in comparison with the theoretical predictions. Electric field strength depends on the method of measurement (not yet standardised for quasi-stochastic signals) and on some key characteristics of transmission. The field level proved to differ from theory: it is lower than predicted and it does not always follow the inverse law with distance. The time-amplitude and the duty cycle methods of weighting to get realistic field level allowed highlighting the dependence of the field strength on the traffic direction, on the type of the transmitted file and on the actual data rate and its statistical distribution. In the proximity of access points, downloading conducts to highest fields, while near the laptops, uploading does this. A data file transfer implies a higher level of exposure than a video file transfer, but one should consider the data rate dispersion. The proximity field does not significantly depend on the distances between the WLAN devices.
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Why is it important?
The exposure level highly depends on traffic direction, data file type and on a lesser extent on the actual data rate of transmission and its statistical distribution. The time-amplitude weighting method for field expression, accurately tracks the quasi-stochastic behaviour of WLAN signals.
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This page is a summary of: Electromagnetic field strength in proximity of WLAN devices during data and video file transmission, Electronics Letters, September 2014, the Institution of Engineering and Technology (the IET),
DOI: 10.1049/el.2014.0834.
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