Abstract

This article presents a comparative numerical study of collocated and distributed massive multiple-input–multiple-output (MIMO) deployments at 3.5 GHz in an industrial indoor environment from the point of view of downlink human electromagnetic field (EMF) exposure. A collection of environmental models incorporating elements with stochastic geometry is generated, in which the EMF propagation is calculated using the ray-tracing (RT) method. To evaluate the human exposure, the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method is used, including a realistic human phantom and a user equipment model, into which the excitation is introduced based on the RT results. Single-user maximum ratio transmission and multiuser zero-forcing scenarios are studied. Small-scale EMF distributions in proximity to the phantom's head are assessed in FDTD and analysed for different user locations in the environment and user equipment placement with respect to the head. The massive MIMO hot-spot is characterized in terms of its size, instantaneous and time-averaged EMF enhancement, and position with respect to the head and the user equipment. The human exposure is assessed using the peak-spatial specific absorption rate averaged over 10 g, referenced to the hot-spot EMF amplitude, and compared to international guidelines. It is shown that the distributed deployment results in a more accurate and consistent EMF hot-spot around the user equipment with a higher average E-field gain, compared to the collocated deployment. In addition, the distributed configuration produced more compact hot-spots relative to the collocated one, leading to a more than tenfold average exposure reduction in a multiuser scenario.

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