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Effects of EM radiation on the human body from nearby communication devices

There is increasing public concern that adverse health effects may arise from exposure to radiofrequency (RF) sources, particularly due to the increasing use of mobile and wearable devices with growing radio-communication capabilities such as GSM, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth. This is particularly true with wearables, which are usually worn on the body and sometimes in direct contact with the. The primary concern is that the RF electromagnetic fields can be absorbed by tissues of the human body and could potentially lead to carcinogenic or adverse health effects [1].

Since then, dozens of studies have been done to investigate the possible adverse effects of radio-communication devices near the human body with various review articles published. Specific absorption rate (SAR) is a measure of energy absorption by the body from the source being measured when exposed to a transmitting source [2, 3], which is defined as the power absorbed per mass of tissue. It has units of watts per kilogram (W/kg) and the value is averaged either over the whole body or overstated volume or mass (typically 10g of tissue). SAR provides a straightforward means for measuring the RF exposure characteristics of devices, which in most studies are usually mobile phones, due to the increasing prevalence of mobile smartphones.

Studies in 1998 hypothesize possible effects when the transmitter is in close proximity to the head (brain) [4]. However new studies done with Bluetooth transmission at 2.45Ghz with a 100mW normalized radiation power showed SAR values averaging at 0.4W/Kg [5], and 10µW/kg over 24 hours [6] – all well below ICNIRP limits of 2W/Kg [7] and FCC limits of 1.6W/Kg [8]. The results of epidemiological studies on mobile phones or broadcasting stations are inconclusive or have no known direct ill health effects on humans [1, 4-6, 9-24].

Noting public concerns and understanding of academic studies investigating the health effects of radiating devices thus far, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)’s 47 C.F.R. 1.1307(b), 1.1310, 2.1091, 2.1093 guidelines require that smartphones sold have a SAR level at or below 1.6W/kg taken over the volume containing a mass of 1g of tissue that is absorbing the most signal [8, 12]. The European Union’s CENELEC specifies SAR limits within the region, following IEC 62209-1 [25] standards. For mobile phones and other handheld devices, the SAR limit is 2 W/kg averaged over the 10g of tissue absorbing the most signal.

The SARs for the iPhone 6 models can be found here, whilst future mobile and wearable devices complying with the emission power and SAR value not exceeding 1.6W/Kg would be a suitable design guideline [26]. A new generation of tracking and wearable technologies are designed with SAR values of <1W/Kg and will be suitable for long-term deployment in close proximity to humans.

With the explosive growth of IoT and WSNs and as the number of radio-communication devices around us increases with the increased use of wearables and reliance on smartphones, it’s important to note that safety needs to be part of a new technology of device design considerations, and over extended periods of time, and keeping RF emissions from these communication devices within acceptable limits will enable quicker regulatory approval, is socially responsible for engineers introducing new devices into the market.

References

  1. Qing, X., et al. Characterization of RF transmission in human body. in Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium (APSURSI), 2010 IEEE. 2010. IEEE.
  2. EN50383, C., Basic standard for the calculation and measurement of electromagnetic field strength and SAR related to human exposure from radio base stations and fixed terminal stations for wireless telecommunication systems (110 MHz–40 GHz). Technical committee, 2002. 211.
  3. Christ, A., et al., Characterization of the electromagnetic near-field absorption in layered biological tissue in the frequency range from 30 MHz to 6000 MHz. Physics in Medicine and Biology, 2006. 51(19): p. 4951.
  4. Frey, A.H., Headaches from cellular telephones: are they real and what are the implications? Environmental health perspectives, 1998. 106(3): p. 101.
  5. Pizarro, Y., et al. Specific absorption rate (SAR) in the head of Google glasses and Bluetooth user’s. in Communications (LATINCOM), 2014 IEEE Latin-America Conference on. 2014. IEEE.
  6. Neubauer, G., et al., Feasibility of future epidemiological studies on possible health effects of mobile phone base stations. Bioelectromagnetics, 2007. 28(3): p. 224-230.
  7. Ahlbom, A., et al., Guidelines for limiting exposure to time-varying electric, magnetic, and electromagnetic fields (up to 300 GHz). Health physics, 1998. 74(4): p. 494-521.
  8. Fields, R.E., Evaluating compliance with FCC guidelines for human exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. 1997.
  9. Baan, R., et al., Carcinogenicity of radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. The lancet oncology, 2011. 12(7): p. 624-626.
  10. Bit-Babik, G., et al., Simulation of exposure and SAR estimation for adult and child heads exposed to radiofrequency energy from portable communication devices. Radiation research, 2005. 163(5): p. 580-590.
  11. Christ, A., et al., The dependence of electromagnetic far-field absorption on body tissue composition in the frequency range from 300 MHz to 6 GHz. IEEE transactions on microwave theory and techniques, 2006. 54(5): p. 2188-2195.
  12. Commission, F.C., Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) for Cell Phones: What It Means for You. 2014.
  13. Kshetrimayum, R.S., Mobile phones: Bad for your health? IEEE Potentials, 2008. 27(2).
  14. Repacholi, M.H., Lowlevel exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic fields: Health effects and research needs. Bioelectromagnetics, 1998. 19(1): p. 1-19.
  15. Dhami, A., Studies on Cell-Phone Radiation Exposure inside a Car and near a Bluetooth Device. International Journal of Environmental Research, 2015. 9(3): p. 977-980.
  16. See, T.S.P., et al. RF transmission in/through the human body at 915 MHz. in Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium (APSURSI), 2010 IEEE. 2010. IEEE.
  17. Hietanen, M. and T. Alanko, Occupational exposure related to radiofrequency fields from Wireless communication systems. http://www.ursi.org/Proceedings/ProcGA05/pdf, 2005. 3.
  18. Ahlbom, A., et al., Epidemiology of health effects of radiofrequency exposure. Environmental health perspectives, 2004. 112(17): p. 1741.
  19. De Salles, A.A., G. Bulla, and C.E.F. Rodriguez, Electromagnetic absorption in the head of adults and children due to mobile phone operation close to the head. Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine, 2006. 25(4): p. 349-360.
  20. Faruque, M.R.I., M.T. Islam, and N. Misran, Analysis of SAR levels in human head tissues for four types of antennas with portable telephones. Australian Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences, 2011. 5(3): p. 96-107.
  21. Beard, B.B., et al., Comparisons of computed mobile phone induced SAR in the SAM phantom to that in anatomically correct models of the human head. IEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility, 2006. 48(2): p. 397-407.
  22. Bernardi, P., et al., Specific absorption rate and temperature elevation in a subject exposed in the far-field of radio-frequency sources operating in the 10-900-MHz range. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2003. 50(3): p. 295-304.
  23. Christ, A., et al., Assessing human exposure to electromagnetic fields from wireless power transmission systems. Proceedings of the IEEE, 2013. 101(6): p. 1482-1493.
  24. Christ, A. and N. Kuster, Differences in RF energy absorption in the heads of adults and children. Bioelectromagnetics, 2005. 26(S7).
  25. Comission, I.E. IEC 62209-1:2016 Measurement procedure for the assessment of specific absorption rate of human exposure to radio frequency fields from hand-held and body-mounted wireless communication devices – Part 1: Devices used next to the ear (Frequency range of 300 MHz to 6 GHz). 2016.
  26. Joshi, P., et al., Output Power Levels of 4G User Equipment and Implications on Realistic RF EMF Exposure Assessments. IEEE Access, 2017.
Categories
News Tear downs

Teardown of the low-cost No.1 Sun 2 smartwatch

Overview

We have already done a teardown on the LG watch R, and today, we will tear down the Sun S2 to see what lessons we can glean from this low-cost smartwatch from China. A review on the watch has already been done, and we are not making a head-on comparison with the LG watch R.

It will be interesting to learn the design and manufacturing differences between the two that brought about such a big price difference. We will look at the following:

  1. The Charging Plate and base cover
  2. Audio Speakers
  3. Battery and microphone
  4. Mainboard PCB
  5. The Display and touchscreen controller
  6. Comparison
  7. Conclusion

Introduction

Tech circles were recently abuzz with announcements of new smartwatch releases, such as the new Samsung Gear S2 and Huawei’s Watch. Each smartwatch had its features benchmarked against the famous Apple watch.

However exciting the new smartwatches are, consumers often forget that the bulk of global electronics manufacturing is still centred in China, with massive manufacturing infrastructures capable of producing electronic wearable clones en masse.

Although the Huaqiangbei district in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, is notorious for counterfeit versions of leading electronics brands, we increasingly see products with additional features not found in the original devices. The parts are – of course – targeted at the growing segment of cost-conscious and tech-savvy consumers.

Apple watches knock-offs were available for sale the following day after the timepiece was unveiled. It is a fresh reminder that Chinese engineers and factories are more than capable of churning out cheaper alternatives and producing fakes at turn-around times measured in weeks instead of months. These are propelled by consumers’ insatiable appetite for the latest technologies.

The market has seen trends where consumers do not necessarily desire the best or latest gadgets but what’s more accessible to them in terms of affordability and availability. Such trends explain Xiaomi’s meteoric rise in the market of wearables and smartphones, surging past incumbent market leaders such as Fitbit and HTC.


In our usual trawl for the latest gadget bites, we chanced upon the No.1 Sun S2 smartwatch (above). The No.1 Sun S2 smartwatch is much like the LG Watch R as they both have round screens, but the similarity ends there. The Sun S2 costs S$80 (US$55), about one-fifth the cost of an LG Watch R, which initially retailed at S$399. That’s five No.1 Sun S2 smartwatches for the price of one LG Watch R.

The Charging Plate and base cover

A very nicely constructed magnetic charging base that even features a speaker duct!

No surprises here, the base came off quickly, revealing the expected optical photoplethysmograph (PPG) heart-rate sensor from Taiwanese PixArt PAH8001 featuring an integrated pixel array plus a green LED sensor in a 3 x 5mm SMD package with a low power consumption of 1.5mA. The complete datasheet is available here.

Not included in the LG watch R is an onboard camera! The specifications state a 0.3 megapix0.3-megapixels place where a usual adjustment crown would have been in a typical mechanically-winded watch. A possible inspiration from the Samsung Gear 2’s camera? Still a bona fide spy watch!

The microphone port is found on the left side of the watch, with the speaker placed on the opposite right, a well-thought layout, so the microphone will not pick up feedback from the speaker.

The designers went through the trouble of designing a clear window separator into the base cover for the heart-rate sensor and a cover mesh grill for the speaker, no shoddy slap-together work here.

Audio Speakers

The orange arrows in the above picture show the design of the acoustic channel.

The plastic brace was pried away to reveal a hefty speaker driver indeed! Not your typical piezoelectric buzzers found in a watch but a driven membrane speaker. The plastic housing appears to have machined-milled markings typical of a Computer Numerical Control (CNCed)-finish. Could this piece have been a piece of moulded plastic that went through machining post-moulding? The housing also contains a nicely designed acoustic channel that speeds the sound away from the speaker to the watch’s exterior—a charming engineering design.

Battery and Microphone


With the plastic brace out of the way, a standard 350mAh lithium polymer battery pack is soldered directly to the main printed circuit board (PCB). It appears that JST footprints were designed for attaching batteries. Still, they opted to solder the battery onto bare pads instead, a labour-intensive manufacturing process but one which saves the cost of an additional two components (male and female connectors) and allows generic battery leads to be used.

We couldn’t find information on the “XA2D 1516” markings of the microphone; it is likely another low-cost analogue microphone that you can easily replace with alternative components. What was more interesting was the little rubber duct that ducts the microphone’s channel to the watch casing’s exterior. It’s a custom-moulded part to add water resistance to the watch. It seems that the design of this watch isn’t the stereotypical shoddiness of Chinese engineering, which was pleasant and unexpected.

Mainboard PCB

The main PCB is connected to the screen via two flexible Hirose mezzanine connectors, likely for the touchscreen controller and the graphics interface to the screen itself.

The freed flex PCB houses the PixArt PAH8001 heart-rate sensor can now be studied. It’s not unexpected exposed pads for USB connectivity (GND, Data+, Data- and VCHG) that will be connected to the exterior of the base cover via the pogo pins, accompanied by the usual passive decoupling capacitors and a metal stiffener for the 30-pin a Hirose DF37B-30DS-0.4V mezzanine 0.4mm pitch receptacle.

Curiously, over half the connector of the 30-pin is not connected, so design-wise, a smaller connector could have been used to save real estate; such an approach could be to future-proof the design and allow more peripherals to be connected.

With the main PCB free, we can see that a large portion of real estate is entirely unpopulated; the silkscreen to indicates that it’s version 1.0. A likely explanation is that future models of this watch will be populated with other components – GPS? GSM-phone calling features? – To add additional functionality. The design of the PCB certainly seems capable of doing so.

We can now appreciate the layout, how scarcely populated the entire PCB is and how capable the central MCU, which is a Mediatek  MT6260 SoC 32-bit microcontroller, is. The central MCU has the following features:

  • Based on the ARM7EJ-S core
  • FM radio 76-108Mhz
  • Bluetooth 3.0 + EDR
  • LCD or WiFi interface
  • MPEG-4/H.263 codec encoder for video recording
  • HE-AAC audio codec with PCM playback and recording
  • GSM/GPRS/EDGE connectivity
  • Built-in Li-ion battery charger and 14 LDOs for various onboard peripherals

This is one full-featured MCU with built-in power management, WiFi/Bluetooth and GSM, and audio/video capabilities! WiFi and GSM are not featured in this model, but there’s no doubt that future models will use the same MCU and PCB layout. Populated with the necessary support components, those features will become available in the later models.

The most significant component is the MT6260 SoC MCU, flanked by a Gigadevice Flash Memory 25LQ128YIG chip, a 128 Mbit 133Mhz NOR flash memory (datasheet here) and a TXC T260 crystal series from TXC Corp. Impressive, just four components on the top layer!

We also found a PT116 SOT23-6 charging chip, possibly a current protection regulator for the battery. The routing from the battery to the PT116 certainly appears to fulfil that function since the Mediatek MT6260 has a built-in lithium-ion battery charge controller. An unknown “CM4U VV3” chip is also observed, which is likely the accelerometer sensor.

A quick schematic of the PT116 battery charger/protector.

Moving onto the bottom layer. Besides the camera, membrane button as well as an Eccentric Rotating Mass (ERM) vibrator and a microphone, there are no other components populating the bottom of the PCB.

The camera module is a YUV422-format type 22-pin that is soldered directly onto the PCB with a resolution of 640×480 pixels (0.3 megapixels). The YUV colour encoding scheme assigns both brightness and colour values to each pixel. In ‘YUV,’ ‘Y’ represents the brightness or ‘luma’ value; and ‘UV’ represents the colour or ‘chroma’ values. In contrast, the values of the RGB encoding scheme represent the intensities of red, green and blue channels in each pixel.

The YUV422 format cameras usually use 14 to 20-pin assignments and it’s common to see such VGA-resolution camera modules support YUV422 or RGB565 data output formats. This module is no different; read more about YUV-type formats here and here. Space is saved by soldering the module directly to the PCB at the cost of ease of replacement.


One of the other two spaces on the PCB appears to be the footprint of a microSD card socket. We found that it fits a microSD card very nicely could it be expansion-able memory storage? Adjacent to the space is likely space for a SIM card for GSM-enabled models of this watch.

The Display and touchscreen controller


From our tests, the screen is satisfactorily responsive and the graphics are crisp and sharp. The BL-RL-IPS122H001A-3 screen appears to be a Hyundai SW122DC IPS screen from Hong Kong that was manufactured on the 12th of June 2015. Specifications include:

  • 262K colours
  • Resolution: 240(H) X 204(V)
  • 1:1000 contrast ratio
  • 0.7mm thick Corning glass cover
  • Interface: SPI 4 wire via a Hirose DF37B-24DS-0.4V Mezzanine 0.4mm pitch 24-way receptacle

The capacitive touch controller is a Mstar Semiconductor MSG22S that supports screen sizes up to 3.2″ and an X, Y resolution of up to 2048×2048 pixels.

The uQFN-32 chip on the flex PCB has an operating voltage of 2.8V ~ 3.3V and appears to have embedded flash memory & SRAM via an I2C slave interface. It is able to transfer data at up to 400Kb/s through the 0.4mm 10-way connector. The MSG22S also has a built-in 1.2V LDO with programmable interrupt (INT) levels: 1.2V, 1.5V, 1.8V, and VDD.

This beefy little chip also touts automatic background capacitance tracking with a 14-bit Analog-To-Digital Converter (ADC) with a 120Hz update rate! That allows it to support wet-finger tracking with enhanced immunity to RF interference and AC charger noise which plagues many other capacitive touch controllers. Several useful articles on EMI-rejection methods in touchscreen designs are discussed here and here.

Up until 2011, US companies – including Atmel, STMicroelectronics, Synaptics, and Cypress – had dominated the capacitive touch controller IC market. But as the global demand for smartphones and tablet PCs soars, Asian companies such as FocalTech, Elotouch, Goodix and MStar Semiconductor from China and Taiwan,  while Melfas, Zinitix and Imagis Technology are emerging as the leading vendors in South Korea. More options are now available to developers!

Goodix, formally known as Shenzhen Huiding Technology, provides touchscreen controllers to major clients include Samsung Display Corp, JDI, Huawei, Toshiba, Asus, Lenovo, Acer, Nokia and many other giants in the tech industry and has even recently challenged Synaptics’ touchscreen controller patents! Juicier reading here.

Comparison


If you compare these two smartwatches it becomes clear that the winner based on specifications would be the LG Watch R. But at one-fifth the cost, the No.1 Sun S2 watch does give consumers a fully featured smartwatch that meets most expectations with similar specifications and functions. Considerable cost advantage and availability is a major contributing factors when it comes to consumer purchase decisions.

Conclusion

What have we learnt?

The system is obviously designed to be more capable but possibly crippled or designed for future upgradability so that an inexpensive model in the manufacturer’s line is first introduced to gain market traction before the full-featured flagship model is released to the market.

This is a good business strategy in terms of engineering and marketing – such an approach reduces the number of component variants and allows different models to be released based on the same hardware. The need to retool a manufacturing line or procure new components for a separate model is reduced whilst giving consumers the illusion of choice. Yet, between sales of thousands of units versus Apple’s millions, Chinese brands will need to improve their standing amongst consumers if a major global market share is to be captured.

The No.1 Sun S2 watch is packed with Chinese silicon. The MCU, memory, sensors and controllers can be manufactured at a fraction of the cost of its Western equivalent components, and with the Chinese capable of producing tens of thousands of such devices, consumer choices may well soon be skewed in the other direction of low-cost, functional and relatively fashionable wearable devices, a business direction that has enabled certain Chinese companies to enjoy massive growth in recent years.

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