Basics of RFID Technology
Basics of RFID Technology
History of RFID
Invented in 1948 by Harry Stockman. Initial application was during World War II-The United
Kingdom used RFID devices to distinguish returning English airplanes from inbound German ones. RADAR was only able to signal the presence of a plane. Came into commercial use only in 1990s.
Components of RFID
An RFID tag is an object that can be stuck on or incorporated into a
product, animal, or person for the purpose of identification using radio waves . Tags ( Chip + Antenna + Substrate ). Tag types -Active. -Passive. -Read only. -Write only . Frequency at which these tags are used -Between 125 to 134 kilohertz. -At 13.56 megahertz. -Between 868 to 956 megahertz. -At 2.45 gigahertz.
Components of RFID
that stores a small amount of data Tag can be programmed at manufacture or on installation Tag is powered by the high power electromagnetic field generated by the antennas usually in doorways The field allows the chip/antenna to reflect back an extremely weak signal containing the data. Collision Detection recognition of multiple tags in the read range is employed to separately read the individual tags
once
Range
Multi-tag reading
Up to 100m
1000s of tags recognized up to 100mph Up to 128Kb or read/write with sophisticated search and access
Data Storage
Components of RFID
Interrogator (Antenna + Reader) : They are used to read
the tags and in certain cases even remotely writes to the tag. Middleware: Middleware is the needed interface between the existing company databases and information management software. Business Application Software: used to manage the collected data. Middleware provides a range of functions:
Data filtering System monitoring Multiple reader coordination
identification process known as EPC E.g. 613.23000.123456.123456789 (96 bits) Header- defines version of EPC (8 bits) EPC Manager- Describes product Manufacturer (24 bits) Object Class- Describes Product Type (24 bits) Serial Number- Unique ID for that product item (36 bits)
System Overview
Up-to-date
RFID-TAG
Energy
RFID system
13.56 MHz
< 1m 1 100 m
433 MHz
860-930 MHz
25m
Moderate to high
2450 MHz
12m
High
Benefits of RFID
Read/Write
- Ability to add information directly to tags enables each unique asset to carry its own unique history Non-contact Reads - Ability to read tags at a distance, under a variety of environmental conditions, without physical manipulation of the asset Fast Read - Ability to simultaneously read large numbers (10001750 tags/sec) of items Automation - Requires less human intervention Authenticity - Each RFID chip is unique and can not be replicated
Relatively expensive as compared to Bar Codes (Reader 1000$, Tag 20 cents a piece) - EPC
Inexpensive - UPC
Distribution Center.
Namma Metro
RFID Radar
Identifying RFID transponders in its zone Measure the range and direction of those transponders from the reader antennas.
technology closer together. This technology encourages the development of longer range transponder technology to allow operation out to 100 meters Allows solution of complex security situations, such as when a transponder crosses a fictitious boundary - like cattle moving out of a field or trolleys from a carpark. Allows single radars to monitor much larger zones than multiple RFID systems.
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