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BS IEC 62232:2011

$215.11

Determination of RF field strength and SAR in the vicinity of radiocommunication base stations for the purpose of evaluating human exposure

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2011 184
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This International Standard provides methods for the determination of radio-frequency (RF) field strength and specific absorption rate (SAR) in the vicinity of radiocommunication base stations (RBS) for the purpose of evaluating human exposure.

This standard:

  1. considers RBS which transmit on one or more antennas using one or more frequencies in the range 300 MHz to 6 GHz;

  2. describes several RF field strength and SAR measurement and computation methodologies with guidance on their applicability to address both the in situ evaluation of installed RBS and laboratory-based evaluations;

  3. describes how surveyors with a sufficient level of expertise shall establish their specific evaluation procedures appropriate for their evaluation purpose;

  4. considers the evaluation purposes, namely:

    1. product conformity: to establish that a RBS conforms to a defined set of limit conditions under its intended use;

    2. compliance boundary: to establish the compliance boundary or boundaries for a RBS in relation to a defined set of limit conditions;

    3. to evaluate RF field strength or SAR values at one or more evaluation locations, namely:

      1. evaluation location(s) at arbitrary locations outside the control boundary to provide information for interested parties;

      2. evaluation location(s) at the control boundary to confirm validity of control boundary;

      3. evaluation location(s) within the control boundary with the specific conditions relevant to investigate an alleged over-exposure incident;

  5. provides guidance on how to report, interpret and compare results from different evaluation methodologies and, where the evaluation purpose requires it, determine a justified decision against a limit value;

  6. provides informative guidance on how to evaluate ambient RF field strength levels in the vicinity of a RBS from RF sources other than the RBS under evaluation and at frequencies within and outside the range 300 MHz to 6 GHz;

  7. provides short descriptions of the informative example case studies to aid the surveyor given in the companion Technical Report IEC 62669 [54].

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
4 CONTENTS
9 FOREWORD
11 INTRODUCTION
12 1 Scope
13 2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
19 4 Symbols and abbreviated terms
4.1 Physical quantities
4.2 Constants
4.3 Abbreviations
20 5 Developing the evaluation plan
5.1 Overview
21 5.2 Key tasks
22 Tables

TableĀ 1 ā€“ Checklist for the evaluation plan
23 6 Evaluation methods
6.1 Overview
Figures

FigureĀ 1 ā€“ Overview of evaluation methods
24 6.2 Measurement methods
FigureĀ 2 ā€“ Overview of RF field strength measurement methods
32 TableĀ 2 ā€“ Sample template for estimating the expanded uncertainty of a RF field strength measurement that used a frequency-selective instrument
33 TableĀ 3 ā€“ Sample template for estimating the expanded uncertainty of a RF field strength measurement that used a broadband instrument
35 FigureĀ 3 ā€“ Positioning of the EUT relative to the relevant phantom
38 6.3 Computation methods
39 FigureĀ 4 ā€“ Overview of computation methods
40 TableĀ 4 ā€“ Applicability of computation methodsfor source-environment regions of FigureĀ B.1
41 FigureĀ 5 ā€“ Reflection due to the presence of a ground plane
42 FigureĀ 6 ā€“ Enclosed cylinder around collinear arrays,with and without electrical downtilt
43 FigureĀ 7 ā€“ Directions for which SAR estimation expressions are given
44 TableĀ 5 ā€“ Applicability of SAR estimation formulae
46 FigureĀ 8 ā€“ Ray tracing (synthetic model) geometry and parameters
48 TableĀ 6 ā€“ Sample template for estimating the expanded uncertaintyof a ray tracing RF field strength computation
51 TableĀ 7 ā€“ Sample template for estimating the expanded uncertaintyof a full wave RF field strength computation
53 TableĀ 8 ā€“ Sample template for estimating the expanded uncertaintyof a full wave SAR computation
54 6.4 Extrapolation from the evaluated SARĀ /Ā RF field strength to the required assessment condition
56 6.5 Summation of multiple RF fields
57 7 Uncertainty
7.1 Background
7.2 Requirement to estimate uncertainty
58 7.3 How to estimate uncertainty
7.4 Uncertainty bounds on measurement equipment influence quantities
7.5 Applying uncertainty for compliance assessments
59 8 Reporting
8.1 Background
8.2 Evaluation report
61 8.3 Interpretation of results
62 Annex A (normative)
Developing the evaluation plan
64 Table A.1 ā€“ Measurand validity for evaluation points in each source region
66 TableĀ A.3 ā€“ Selecting in situ or laboratory measurementfrom evaluation purpose and RBS category
68 TableĀ A.5 ā€“ Guidance on selecting RF field strength measurement procedures
70 TableĀ A.7 ā€“ Guidance on specific evaluation method ranking
71 Annex B (normative)
Defining the source-environment plane
FigureĀ B.1 ā€“ Source-environment plane concept
72 FigureĀ B.2 ā€“ Geometry of an antenna with largest linear dimension Leff and largest end dimension Lend
73 TableĀ B.1 ā€“ Definition of source regions
TableĀ B.2 ā€“ Default source region boundaries
74 TableĀ B.3 ā€“ Source region boundaries for antennas with maximum dimension less than 2,5 Ī»
TableĀ B.4 ā€“ Source region boundaries for linear/planar antenna arrayswith a maximum dimension greater than or equal to 2,5 Ī»
75 TableĀ B.5 ā€“ Source region boundaries for equiphase radiation aperture (e.g. dish) antennas with maximum reflector dimension much greater than a wavelength
TableĀ B.6 ā€“ Source region boundaries for leaky feeders
77 FigureĀ B.3 ā€“ Maximum path difference for an antenna with largest linear dimension L
TableĀ B.7 ā€“ Far-field distance r measured in metres as a function of angle Ī²
79 Figure B.4 ā€“ Example source-environment plane regions near a roof-top antenna
which has a narrow vertical (elevation plane) beamwidth (not to scale)
80 Annex C (informative) Guidance on the application of the standard
to specific evaluation purposes
81 FigureĀ C.1 ā€“ Example of complex compliance boundary
FigureĀ C.2 ā€“ Example of circular cylindrical compliance boundaries: (a) sector coverage antenna, (b) horizontally omnidirectional antenna
82 FigureĀ C.3 ā€“ Example of parallelepipedic compliance boundary
FigureĀ C.4 ā€“ Example illustrating the linear scaling procedure
85 FigureĀ C.5 ā€“ Example investigation process
86 Annex D (normative)
Evaluation parameters
FigureĀ D.1 ā€“ Cylindrical, cartesian and spherical coordinatesrelative to the RBS antenna
87 TableĀ D.1 ā€“ Dimension variables
TableĀ D.2 ā€“ RF power variables
88 TableĀ D.3 ā€“ Antenna variables
89 TableĀ D.4 ā€“ Measurand variables
90 Annex E (normative)
RF field strength measurement equipment requirements
TableĀ E.1 ā€“ Broadband measurement system requirements
TableĀ E.2 ā€“ Frequency-selective measurement system requirements
91 Annex F (informative)
Basic computation implementation
FigureĀ F.1 ā€“ Reference frame employed for cylindrical formulae for field strength computation at a point P (left), and on a line perpendicular to boresight (right)
92 FigureĀ F.2 ā€“ Two (a) and three (b) dimensional views illustrating the three valid zones for field strength computation around an antenna
93 TableĀ F.1 ā€“ Definition of boundaries for selecting the zone of computation
95 TableĀ F.2 ā€“ Definition of
97 FigureĀ F.3 ā€“ Leaky feeder geometry
99 Annex G (normative)
Advanced computation implementation
103 Annex H (normative)
Validation of computation methods
FigureĀ H.1 ā€“ Cylindrical formulae reference results
TableĀ H.1 ā€“ Input parameters for cylinder and spherical formulae validation
104 FigureĀ H.2 ā€“ Spherical formulae reference results
TableĀ H.2 ā€“ Input parameters for SAR estimation formulae validation
TableĀ H.3 ā€“ SAR10g and SARwb estimation formulae reference results for Table H.2 parameters
106 FigureĀ H.4 ā€“ Antenna parameters for ray tracing algorithm validation example
107 TableĀ H.4 ā€“ Ray tracing power density reference results
108 FigureĀ H.5 ā€“ Generic 900Ā MHz RBS antenna with nine dipole radiators
FigureĀ H.6 ā€“ Line 1, 2 and 3 near-field positions for full wave and ray tracing validation
109 TableĀ H.5 ā€“ Validation 1 full wave field reference results
110 FigureĀ H.7 ā€“ Generic 1Ā 800Ā MHz RBS antenna with five slot radiators
TableĀ H.6 ā€“ Validation 2 full wave field reference results
111 FigureĀ H.8 ā€“ RBS antenna placed in front of a multi-layered lossy cylinder
TableĀ H.7 ā€“ Validation reference SAR results for computation method
112 Annex I (informative)
Guidance on spatial averaging schemes
113 FigureĀ I.1 ā€“ Spatial averaging schemes relative to foot support level
FigureĀ I.2 ā€“ Spatial averaging relative to spatial-peak field strength point height
114 Annex J (informative)
Guidance on addressing time variation of signals in measurement
115 Annex K (informative)
Guidance on determining ambient field levels
117 FigureĀ K.1 ā€“ Evaluation locations
119 Annex L (informative)
Guidance on comparing evaluated parameters with a limit value
121 Annex M (informative)
Guidance on assessment schemes
122 TableĀ M.1 ā€“ Examples of general assessment schemes
124 FigureĀ M.2 ā€“ Evaluation of compliance with limit
TableĀ M.2 ā€“ Determining target uncertainty
127 TableĀ M.3 ā€“ Monte Carlo simulation of 10 000 trials both surveyorand auditor using best estimate
TableĀ M.4 ā€“ Monte Carlo simulation of 10 000 trials both surveyorand auditor using target uncertainty of 4Ā dB
128 TableĀ M.5 ā€“ Monte Carlo simulation of 10 000 trials surveyor uses upper 95Ā %Ā CI vs. auditor uses lower 95Ā % CI
129 Annex N (informative)
Guidance on specific technologies
130 TableĀ N.1 ā€“ Technology specific information
135 FigureĀ N.1 ā€“ Spectral occupancy for GMSK
136 FigureĀ N.2 ā€“ Spectral occupancy for CDMA
137 TableĀ N.2 ā€“ Example of spectrum analyser settings for an integration per service
138 TableĀ N.3 ā€“ Example constant power components for specific technologies
139 FigureĀ N.3 ā€“ Channel allocation for a WCDMA signal
TableĀ N.4 ā€“ CDMA decoder requirements
140 TableĀ N.5 ā€“ Signals configuration
TableĀ N.6 ā€“ CDMA generator setting for power linearity
141 TableĀ N.7 ā€“ WCDMA generator setting for decoder calibration
TableĀ N.8 ā€“ CDMA generator setting for reflection coefficient measurement
142 FigureĀ N.4 ā€“ Example of Wi-Fi frames
FigureĀ N.5 ā€“ Channel occupation versus the integration time for 802.11b standard
143 FigureĀ N.6 ā€“ Channel occupation versus nominal throughput ratefor 802.11b/g standards
FigureĀ N.7 ā€“ Wi-Fi spectrum trace snapshot
145 FigureĀ N.8 ā€“ Plan view representation of statistical conservative model
151 FigureĀ N.9 ā€“ Binomial cumulative probability function for N = 24, PR = 0,125
152 FigureĀ N.10 ā€“ Binomial cumulative probability function for N = 18, PR = 2/7
153 Annex O (informative)
Guidance on uncertainty
158 FigureĀ O.2 ā€“ Plot of the calibration factors for E (not E2)provided from an example calibration report for an electric field probe
161 TableĀ O.1 ā€“ Guidance on minimum separation distances for some dipole lengths to ensure that the uncertainty does not exceed 5Ā % or 10Ā % in a measurement of E.
162 TableĀ O.2 ā€“ Guidance on minimum separation distances for some loop diameters to ensure that the uncertainty does notexceed 5Ā % or 10Ā % in a measurement of H.
TableĀ O.3 ā€“ Example minimum separation conditionsfor selected dipole lengths for 10Ā % uncertainty in E
163 FigureĀ O.3 ā€“ Computational model used for the variational analysis of reflected RF fields from the front of a surveyor
164 TableĀ O.4 ā€“ Standard estimates ofĀ dB variation for the perturbations in front of a surveyor due to body reflected fields as described in FigureĀ O.3
TableĀ O.5 ā€“ Standard uncertainty (u) estimates for E and H due to body reflections from the surveyor for common radio services derived from estimates provided in TableĀ O.4
167 Annex P (informative)
Case studies
168 FigureĀ P.1 ā€“ MicroĀ cell case study
169 FigureĀ P.2 ā€“ Roof-top case study (a) with nearby apartment buildings (b)
170 FigureĀ P.3 ā€“ Roof-top/tower case study (a) in residential area (b)
171 FigureĀ P.4 ā€“ Roof-top case study with direct access to antennas
172 FigureĀ P.5 ā€“ Roof-top case study with large antennas and no direct access
173 FigureĀ P.6 ā€“ Cylindrical compliance boundary determinationfor dual band antenna on building
174 FigureĀ P.7 ā€“ Tower case study (a) in parkland (b)
175 FigureĀ P.8 ā€“ Multiple towers case study (a) at sports venue (b)
176 FigureĀ P.9 ā€“ Office building in building coverage case study
177 Bibliography
BS IEC 62232:2011
$215.11