Electronic – Faraday cage with a RF WIFI router inside – does the electricity “evaporate”

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I have a Faraday cage and inside there is a WIFI router whose RF I am trying to contain. The cage is made of aluminium mesh with hole sizes of 3 mm or so.

What happens to the RF electricity coming from the RF WIFI router and hitting the Faraday cage (from inside) if I don't ground the cage?

Would the electricity "build up" inside/on the cage and in what form since it will cease to be RF?

I have had the RF WIFI router emitting for few hours however I cannot detect any voltage increase on the cage's surface.

I measured for DC and AC using a multimeter and the values remain constantly the same – about 4 volts AC.

Best Answer

No, radio waves are not "electricity" in that sense. Electromagnetic waves are produced by electric charges moving inside a conductor (the antenna), but the charges never actually leave the conductor and go somewhere else.

The RF power emitted by the router reflects from the inner surface of the cage, and bounces around until it encounters something that can absorb it, such as the plastic case of the router and other nonmetallic items inside the cage. These items will get slightly warmer as a result.

The router itself consumes a significant amount of electrical power while operating. A small fraction of this power gets emitted as radio waves, but the vast majority of it gets turned directly into heat within the components of the router.