Andreas Christ, Mark Douglas, Jagadish Nadakuduti, and Niels Kuster, Proceedings of the IEEE , Volume 101, Issue 6, pp. 1482-1493, June 2013, online March 13, 2013
Wireless power transmission (WPT) systems transmit energy by means of an electromagnetic field that has strongly reactive components. The field strengths close to the transmitters can exceed the reference levels posed by the safety guidelines and can pose potential direct health hazards to persons in the environment of the WPT, as well as indirect risks via interference with medical implants. In this paper, the safety guidelines and the fundamental mechanisms of coupling of the human body with the electromagnetic near-fields of WPT are reviewed, and methodologies and instrumentation for the demonstration of the safety of such systems operating at 100 kHz – 50 MHz are discussed. The advantages and shortcomings of state-of-the-art numerical and experimental techniques in compliance and safety testing are discussed and applied to a generic WPT operating at 8 MHz. Recommendations for future research to define scientifically sound product standards for demonstrating the safety of WPT include: