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Review Article

Penetration and propagation into biological matter and biological effects of high-power ultra-wideband pulses: a review

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Pages 84-101 | Received 24 Apr 2014, Accepted 13 Oct 2014, Published online: 30 Oct 2014
 

Abstract

Systems emitting ultra-wideband high power microwave (HP/UWB) pulses are developed for military and civilian applications. HP/UWB pulses typically have durations on the order of nanoseconds, rise times of picoseconds and amplitudes around 100 kV m−1. This article reviews current research on biological effects from HP/UWB exposure. The different references were classified according to endpoints (cardiovascular system, central nervous system, behavior, genotoxicity, teratology …). The article also reviews the aspects of mechanisms of interactions and tissue damage as well as the numerical work that has been done for studying HP/UWB pulse propagation and pulse energy deposition inside biological tissues. The mechanisms proposed are the molecular conformation change, the modification of chemical reaction rates, membrane excitation and breakdown and direct electrical forces on cells or cell constituents, and the energy deposition. As regards the penetration of biological matter and the deposited energy, mainly computations were published. They have shown that the EM field inside the biological matter is strongly modified compared to the incident EM field and that the energy absorption for HP/UWB pulses occurs in the same way as for continuous waves. However, the energy carried by a HP/UWB pulse is very low and the deposited energy is low. The number of published studies dealing with the biological effects is small and only a few pointed out slight effects. It should be further noted that the animal populations used in the studies were not always large, the statistical analyses not always relevant and the teams involved in this research rather limited in number.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Mrs. C. Maire for linguistic corrections in the article.

Declaration of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Notes

1Cole–Cole expression (Cole and Cole, Citation1941): ɛ* − ɛ = (ɛ0 − ɛ)/[1 + (iωτ0)e1 − α], with ɛ0 the static dielectric constant, ɛ the dielectric constant at infinite frequency, τ0 the relaxation time and α the exponent factor. Moreover, ɛ* = ɛ′ − ″ and ω = 2πf.

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