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调整接触电流的暴露限值与电场暴露限值。

Aligning Exposure Limits for Contact Currents with Exposure Limits for Electric Fields.

机构信息

Kavet Consulting LLC, 4455 Worden Way, Oakland, CA 94619.

Richard Tell Associates, Inc., 10037 Long Meadow Road, Madison, AL 35756.

出版信息

Health Phys. 2023 May 1;124(5):351-371. doi: 10.1097/HP.0000000000001659. Epub 2023 Feb 3.

Abstract

The Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) and the International Commission on Non-ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) have established limits for exposures to electromagnetic fields across the 0-300 GHz (non-ionizing) spectrum, including limits on contact currents ( CC ) specified by IEEE for 0-110 MHz (ICNIRP issued a CC "guidance level"). Both sets of limits seek to protect against potentially adverse effects, including aversive electrostimulation at frequencies <100 kHz and excessive heating of tissue at frequencies >100 kHz. For the most part, CC is linked to electric field ( E -field) exposures for an ungrounded person contacting a grounded object, with the short-circuit current ( I SC ) through the contact point (usually the hand) equivalent to the current through the grounded feet of a free-standing person exposed to a vertically polarized E -field. The physical linkage between these two quantities dictates that their respective exposure limits align with one another, which is presently not the case, especially with respect to frequencies from100 kHz to 110 MHz. Here we focus specifically on recommendations for revisions to the IEEE standard, IEEE Std C95.1™-2019 ("IEEE C95.1"), in which the E -field exposure limit ( E -field exposure reference levels, ERL s) >100 kHz induces substantially greater currents than the CC ERL s currently prescribed. The most important scenario deserving of attention concerns finger contact through a 1-cm 2 cross-sectional interface between the skin and a grounded conductor in which the rate of temperature rise in the presence of an E -field ERL can be rapid enough to cause a burn injury. This rate is highly dependent on the moistness/dryness of the skin at the contact point (i.e., its impedance)-a highly variable value-with temperature increasing more rapidly with increasing dryness (greater contact impedance). The two main remedies to alleviate the possibility of injury in this "touch" scenario are to (a) limit the time of finger contact to 1 s in all cases and (b) revise the E -field ERL between 100 kHz and 30 MHz from a "hockey-stick-shaped" curve vs. frequency to a "ramp" across this frequency range. These measures factored in with the real-world prevalence of potentially hazardous scenarios should afford greater protection against adverse outcomes than is presently the case. IEEE C95.1 also specifies limits for grasp contact (15 cm 2 in the palm) and associated wrist heating, plus heating in the ankles from free-standing induction. However, these scenarios are more manageable compared to finger touch due mainly to the comparatively lower rates of tissue heating attributable to the wrist's and ankle's relatively greater cross-sectional area. Recommendations for grasp can thus be dealt with separately. Two identified but unaddressed issues in IEEE C95.1 deserving of further attention are first, the circumstance in which a grounded person contacts an ungrounded object situated in an electric field for which there are countless numbers of scenarios that are not amenable to a single ERL . Second, arcing between an extended limb and E -field-exposed object is perhaps the most hazardous of all scenarios. Both of these scenarios cannot be stereotyped and must be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Future revisions of IEEE Std C95.1-2019 (and the ICNIRP guidelines) will benefit from improved insight into strategies of affording protection from potentially adverse effects in these circumstances.

摘要

国际电气和电子工程师协会(IEEE)和国际非电离辐射防护委员会(ICNIRP)已经为电磁 0-300GHz(非电离)频谱中的暴露制定了限制,包括 IEEE 为 0-110MHz 规定的接触电流(CC)限制(ICNIRP 发布了 CC“指导水平”)。这两套限制都旨在防止潜在的不利影响,包括 100kHz 以下的令人不快的电刺激和 100kHz 以上的组织过度加热。在大多数情况下,CC 与接触接地物体的未接地人员的电场(E 场)暴露有关,接触点(通常是手)的短路电流(ISC)等效于暴露于垂直极化 E 场的自由站立人员的接地脚中的电流。这两个量之间的物理联系决定了它们各自的暴露限制相互一致,目前情况并非如此,尤其是在 100kHz 至 110MHz 之间的频率。在这里,我们特别关注对 IEEE 标准 IEEE Std C95.1™-2019(“IEEE C95.1”)的修订建议,其中超过 100kHz 的 E 场暴露限制(E 场暴露参考水平,ERL)会导致比当前规定的 CC ERL 大得多的电流。最值得关注的重要情况涉及手指通过皮肤和接地导体之间 1cm2 横截面界面的接触,在存在 E 场 ERL 的情况下,温度上升的速度可能足够快,导致灼伤。这种速度高度依赖于接触点处皮肤的潮湿/干燥程度(即其阻抗)——一个高度可变的值——随着干燥程度(更大的接触阻抗)的增加,温度上升得更快。在这种“触摸”情况下缓解受伤可能性的两种主要方法是:(a)在所有情况下将手指接触时间限制为 1 秒,(b)将 100kHz 至 30MHz 之间的 E 场 ERL 从与频率成“冰球棒状”的曲线修改为在该频率范围内的“斜坡”。这些措施与现实生活中潜在危险情况的普遍存在相结合,应该比目前提供更大的保护,防止不良后果。IEEE C95.1 还规定了抓握接触(手掌为 15cm2)和相关腕部加热的限制,以及自由站立感应引起的脚踝加热。然而,与手指触摸相比,这些情况更容易处理,主要是由于手腕和脚踝相对较大的横截面积导致组织加热的速度相对较低。因此,可以单独处理抓握的建议。IEEE C95.1 中还有两个需要进一步关注但未得到解决的问题,一是接地人员接触处于电场中的未接地物体的情况,其中有无数种情况无法采用单一 ERL 来解决。其次,伸展的肢体与暴露在电场中的物体之间的电弧可能是所有情况下最危险的。这两种情况都不能刻板化,必须逐个处理。IEEE Std C95.1-2019(和 ICNIRP 指南)的未来修订将受益于对在这些情况下提供潜在不利影响保护策略的更好理解。

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