Abstract

We aimed to review the findings of exposure assessment studies done in European countries on the exposure of the general public to low frequency electric and magnetic fields (EMFs) of various frequencies. The study shows that outdoor average extremely low frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MF) in public areas in urban environments range between 0.05 and 0.2 µT in terms of flux densities, but stronger values (of the order of a few µT) may occur directly beneath high-voltage power lines, at the walls of transformer buildings, and at the boundary fences of substations. In the indoor environment, high values have been measured close to several domestic appliances (up to the mT range), some of which are held close to the body, e.g., hair dryers, electric shavers. Common sources of exposure to intermediate frequencies (IF) include induction cookers, compact fluorescent lamps, inductive charging systems for electric cars and security or anti-theft devices. No systematic measurement surveys or personal exposimetry data for the IF range have been carried out and only a few reports on measurements of EMFs around such devices are mentioned. According to the available European exposure assessment studies, three population exposure categories were classified by the authors regarding the possible future risk analysis. This classification should be considered a crucial advancement for exposure assessment, which is a mandatory step in any future health risk assessment of EMFs exposure.

Highlights

  • The general public is exposed to an ever-increasing number of sources of electromagnetic fields from various electric devices, appliances and technologies

  • We aimed to present a survey of the data available for European countries relating to the exposure of the general public to low frequency electric and magnetic fields (EMFs) of various frequencies and sources

  • We present the results in terms of the various measurement approaches used in Europe to measure fields related to extremely low frequency (ELF)-EMFs sources, discussing the available measurement data that we have identified

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The general public is exposed to an ever-increasing number of sources of electromagnetic fields from various electric devices, appliances and technologies (i.e., transmission lines, transformers, typical household appliances and their power supplies). The main sources of exposure for the general public are household electric appliances, and billions of these devices are used in everyday life in Europe. 2% of all electric power in Europe is supplied by underground cables [3] Such cables can produce magnetic fields directly above them (i.e., along the line of the route itself) stronger than those associated with aerial lines, due to the smaller distance between the external environment and the cable itself (typically a few meters). We aimed to present a survey of the data available for European countries relating to the exposure of the general public to low frequency EMF of various frequencies and sources. We present the results in terms of the various measurement approaches used in Europe to measure fields related to ELF-EMFs sources, discussing the available measurement data that we have identified

Exposure Assessment and Monitoring in Europe
Spot Measurements in Outdoor and Indoor Environments
Residential Exposure
Measurement Close to Transformer Stations
Measurement of Exposure Due to Transport Systems
Personal Exposimetry
Exposure Characterization of EMF Emitting Devices
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call