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Potential Wireless Power Health Issues

By Bob Paddock at 06/24/07 08:03
As I mentioned in the Energy Sources section about the 2007 Nano-Power Forum , there are concerns of how Wireless Power Sources may impact the health of those near operating units.

Louis Slesin of Microwave News states:

"It's become axiomatic that wide acceptance of non-thermal effects will come from developing biomedical therapies rather than from studying potential hazards. The health effects work is mostly sponsored by those who don't want to find any. And they usually don't..."
Slesin points to NovoCure's use of weak 100-200 kHz electric fields, which the company call Tumor Treating Fields or TTFields to stunt the growth of cancer cells, as one of many examples in the revival of the old field of Electromedicine.

The 100-200 kHz range used by NovoCure is also one of the areas used for RFID tags centered at 125 kHz.

Cellular Research - Cell Phone Convenience or 21st Century Plague?, compiled by Dr. Nick Begich and the late James Roderick, give a detailed background on the issue, especially in the nine-two references cited throughout the paper.

Tags: energy harvesting • rfid • wireless energy health effects • cell phone health •
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Updated site to add Ultra Low Power Bluetooth and new 802.15.4B Book

By Bob Paddock at 06/21/07 06:01
Updated site to add Introduction to Ultra Low Power Bluetooth link, and added link to Second Edition of Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area Networks: Enabling Wireless Sensors with IEEE 802.15.4tm.
Tags: sensor networks • bluetooth • lowpower • wibree •
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The Challenge is to locate a potentially injured Coal Miner, can you do it?

By Bob Paddock at 06/17/07 20:57
The Challenge is to locate a potentially injured Coal Miner, in a Coal Mine that has just collapsed, using some kind of technology (You don't want to send in even more people in to a dangerous location, if you don't have to do so).

Sounds easy doesn't it? The first answers is always "Use GPS". GPS is 100% completely useless underground in a Coal Mine. Next problem is that Coal absorbs most radio frequencies. The physical environment also has several challenges. Dust so thick that you can not see through it. Work shifts last twelve hours, which makes powering anything a challenge, and you are not allowed to replace the batteries in most areas of the Coal Mine. Also there are extremely stringent regulations on the use of Lithium Batteries. There are few to none, power outlets where you could plug anything in to power it. There also issues of Intrinsic Safety, where available energy is extremely limited. Your total energy budge must not be capable of igniting a Methane Gas atmosphere. Finally it must be small physically, would you want to carry your design around for twelve hours?

Keep in mind that idea is to location someone after the mine has suffered some type of catastrophic damage. This means that placing 'way points', or anything like that is not the way to go for reference points, as there is no way to know how they might be damaged. This doesn't rule reference points out, but you can not rely on them. Running wires (Leaky Feeders for example), or fiber, of any type is also not going to work, as they are prone to being damaged.

Do you have an idea that no one has yet thought of?

Tags: miner tracking • coal mine • trapped worker • lithium batteries •
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If I had seven million dollars, how I would spend it on miner tracking.

By Bob Paddock at 06/17/07 20:04

Someone once asked me if "you had had six to seven million dollars to spend on for research contracts in trapped miner communications and miner tracking systems for miners, what would you do with it?".

These were my suggestions, as to how I would use the money:


James H. Rogers: Underground & Underwater Radio Antenna.

Rogers work was used in World War One to communicate with submarines. It works well underground. There is also similar work by a contemporary fellow named Minto.

Rogers work is known by a few other names and related research such as the Aharanov-Bohm Effect (Physics), Poynting Vector (Mathematics), Scalar Waves (Pseudoscience). The differences comes down to issues of geometry but I've not got my head wrapped around all of that yet.

I can't put my finger on the exact citation at the moment but T.E.Bearden made the comment that the J.H.Rogers system is rediscovered every few years then "Lost" (it worked to well). Classic RF energy falls off at 1/(r*r) where "Scalar Technology" falls off at 1/r. Most of this is still considered in the Pseudoscience category, but the main stream is catching up as they always do a decade or two later.


I would sponsor a Circuit Cellar contest. These contests attract the "best and brightest" of the Engineering World, from around the world. Someone in this group might have a idea that no one in the industry has thought of, because of their backgrounds in different fields.

A Circuit Cellar contest, requires a $150,00 sponsor ship fee to handle all of the administration, tasks such as promotion and judging.

Offer a prize fee of $250,000, the highest ever offered, to the wining entry that can come up with a workable design for finding a trapped Coal Miner. There would also be a few smaller prizes. The way I see it for, $500,000 you get thousands of people around the world competing to solve, what for the moment, is an unsolved problem. With that prize money as motivation, the solution will probably be quick!


RFID-RADAR offers a system that can do location in 3D, based on Angle of Arrival.


Tests with WWVB at 60 kHz to see how deep low frequencies penetrate, and what is the highest frequency that will give the greats usable depth.


Synchronous Demodulators in relation to Sutton & Spaniol et.al.'s Black Hole Antenna. Dr. Sutton, retired from NASA, has given me permission to post some of our email exchanges. In-a-nut-shell this technique lets you pull signals berried in noise, without using large inductors (coils).

Tags: miner tracking • miner location • coal mine • james harris rogers •
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Penn State Behrend RFID Training

By Bob Paddock at 06/17/07 11:22

This week (June/13/2007) I attended the RFID Training course offered at the Behrend campus of Penn State in Erie PA. The training is great "hands on" preparation for the CompTIA RFID+ Certification, which I'm going to be setting for later this summer.

There was a lot of tips and real world examples, that you can simply not get out of a book.

The RFID Center of Excellence at Penn State Behrend was established in early 2005 as a collaborative initiative with the Center for E-Business and Advanced IT (eBizITPA). The mission of the center is to conduct RFID research and outreach resulting in strategic advantage and economic growth for industry.
Tags: rfid • penn state • behrend •
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