Author:
Jaime-Yepez Ulises,Wang Hongyun,Foley Shannon E.,Zhou Hong
Abstract
AbstractWe study the temperature evolution in the three-dimensional skin tissue exposed to an electromagnetic beam of millimeter wavelength. The skin absorption coefficient of the beam frequency determines how deep the electromagnetic energy penetrates into the skin tissue, which gives a sub-millimeter penetration depth for a 94 GHz wave. In contrast, in the lateral directions perpendicular to the depth, the beam size is usually much larger than the penetration depth. Based on this separation of length scales, we establish an asymptotic formulation in which each term has separable dependences on the depth coordinate and on the lateral coordinates. We solve it analytically to obtain a two-term asymptotic solution of the temperature distribution in the three-dimensional skin tissue. This closed-form analytical solution provides a practical and accurate way of predicting the temperature. When the beam size is moderately larger than the penetration depth (a ratio of 20), the effect of lateral heat conduction is well captured in the asymptotic solution with maximum error less than 0.0017 in the normalized temperature of magnitude well above 1.
Funder
US Department of Defense Awarding Office
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC