In the past two decades, reverberation chambers (RCs) have been increasingly utilized in large-scale rodent bioassays to study dose-response relationships for cancer and non-cancer biological endpoints. Computational radio-frequency (RF) dosimetry plays a critical role in the design of these studies, influencing key parameters such as RC size, number, cohort size, and exposure frequencies. Given the complexity of modeling animal-loaded RCs, simplified random plane-wave (PW) superposition techniques have often been used, though full-wave characterizations have also been explored. This study expands previous research by analyzing the effects of line-of-sight (LoS) elimination in the Università Politecnica delle Marche RC at 900 MHz, modeling 96 caged rodents. Using whole-body Specific Absorption Rate (wbSAR) as the key observable, the study highlights asymmetries in RC exposures, showing higher wbSAR values near the mode-stirrer. The study investigates field diffusers and cage repositioning strategies to mitigate these imbalances. Simulations conducted with Transmission-Line Matrix (TLM) and Finite Element Method (FEM) techniques reveal a weaker correlation between wbSAR and rodent mass than previously reported. These findings suggest that real-world RC configurations introduce exposure variations not necessarily captured by idealized Rayleigh field models, impacting the interpretation of rodent bioassay results.

Numerical Characterization of Rodent Exposure Imbalances in Large Reverberation Chambers / Faraone, A.; Bit-Babik, G.; Sanderson, K.; Russo, P.; De Leo, A.; Mariani Primiani, V.; De Santis, V.. - (2025), pp. 1103-1107. ( 2025 International Symposium on Electromagnetic Compatibility, EMC Europe 2025 Paris 1 - 5 September 2025) [10.1109/EMCEurope61644.2025.11176371].

Numerical Characterization of Rodent Exposure Imbalances in Large Reverberation Chambers

Russo P.;De Leo A.;Mariani Primiani V.;
2025-01-01

Abstract

In the past two decades, reverberation chambers (RCs) have been increasingly utilized in large-scale rodent bioassays to study dose-response relationships for cancer and non-cancer biological endpoints. Computational radio-frequency (RF) dosimetry plays a critical role in the design of these studies, influencing key parameters such as RC size, number, cohort size, and exposure frequencies. Given the complexity of modeling animal-loaded RCs, simplified random plane-wave (PW) superposition techniques have often been used, though full-wave characterizations have also been explored. This study expands previous research by analyzing the effects of line-of-sight (LoS) elimination in the Università Politecnica delle Marche RC at 900 MHz, modeling 96 caged rodents. Using whole-body Specific Absorption Rate (wbSAR) as the key observable, the study highlights asymmetries in RC exposures, showing higher wbSAR values near the mode-stirrer. The study investigates field diffusers and cage repositioning strategies to mitigate these imbalances. Simulations conducted with Transmission-Line Matrix (TLM) and Finite Element Method (FEM) techniques reveal a weaker correlation between wbSAR and rodent mass than previously reported. These findings suggest that real-world RC configurations introduce exposure variations not necessarily captured by idealized Rayleigh field models, impacting the interpretation of rodent bioassay results.
2025
9798331596446
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11566/350014
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