IEC/IEEE-62704-4 › Determining the peak spatial-average specific absorption rate (SAR) in the human body from wireless communication devices, 30 MHz to 6 GHz - Part 4: General requirements for using the finite element method for SAR calculations
IEC/IEEE-62704-4
-
EDITION 1.0
-
CURRENT
Document Center Inc. is an authorized dealer of IEC standards.
The following bibliographic material is provided to assist you with your purchasing decision:
The following bibliographic material is provided to assist you with your purchasing decision:
IEC/IEEE 62704-4:2020 describes the concepts, techniques, and limitations of the finite element method (FEM) and specifies models and procedures for verification, validation and uncertainty assessment for the FEM when used for determining the peak spatial-average specific absorption rate (psSAR) in phantoms or anatomical models. It recommends and provides guidance on the modelling of wireless communication devices, and provides benchmark data for simulating the SAR in such phantoms or models.
This document does not recommend specific SAR limits because these are found elsewhere (e.g. in IEEE Std C95.1 or in the guidelines published by the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)).
This publication is published as an IEC/IEEE Dual Logo standard.
To find similar documents by classification:
This document comes with our free Notification Service, good for the life of the document.
This document is available in either Paper or PDF format.
Customers who bought this document also bought:
ISO-14155Clinical investigation of medical devices for human subjects - Good clinical practice
ASTM-F2182
Standard Test Method for Measurement of Radio Frequency Induced Heating On or Near Passive Implants During Magnetic Resonance Imaging
ISO-11737-1
Sterilization of health care products - Microbiological methods - Part 1: Determination of a population of microorganisms on products
Document Number
IEC/IEEE 62704-4 Ed. 1.0 b:2020
Revision Level
EDITION 1.0
Status
Current
Publication Date
Oct. 1, 2020
Committee Number
106