187 research outputs found
The SARFID technique for discriminating tagged items moving through a UHF-RFID gate
The discrimination of tagged items moving along a conveyor belt from other tagged items that are present in the scenario is investigated, when a UHF-RFID gate is installed at a conveyor section. Indeed, tagged items that are static or randomly moving in the scenario (nomad tags) around the reader antenna could be detected even if they are not on the conveyor (false positive readings). The classification procedure here proposed exploits the SARFID phase-based technique used to localize tags on a conveyor belt, which takes advantage of the fact that the tagged items move along a conveyor, whose path and instantaneous speed are both known. The latter can be implemented with only a firmware upgrade, in any conveyor belt scenario already equipped with an RFID system, without any modification of the system infrastructure and additional (reference tags/multiple antennas) or ad hoc hardware. From experimental results in a real scenario, the discrimination between moving tags from static/nomad tags can be obtained with an overall accuracy greater than 99.9%, by employing only one reader antenna
UHF-RFID desktop reader antennas: performance analysis in the near-field region
In this letter, a metric is proposed to qualitatively predict the achievable reading performance of a near-field (NF) UHF-RFID (865-928 MHz) desktop reader antenna, through a numerical analysis. Specifically, since the typical far-field antenna parameters (gain, radiation pattern, axial ratio) are not effective in the near-field region, the normalized power density is here proposed as a near-field antenna performance parameter. For a given NF antenna, the mean value of the normalized power density is evaluated on an area parallel to the antenna surface, at a set of different distances. Then, its decay rate is studied as a function of the distance from the antenna surface, which is useful to compare reading range performance of different antenna layouts. Additionally, the probability density function of the normalized power density at a given distance from the antenna surface is considered to investigate the field uniformity characteristics, the latter being important to guarantee tag reading independently on its location with respect to the reader antenna. The proposed analysis is applied to a set of NF UHF-RFID printed antennas, and conclusions are validated through a set of experimental tests
Wearable selfâtuning antenna for emergency rescue operations
In this study, the design, hardware implementation and characterisation of a self-tuning 406 MHz antenna of a Cospas-Sarsat personal locator beacon are presented. The realised prototype is able to perform automatic tuning of the antenna under time-varying environmental conditions due to human body movements and sea water proximity. The impedance tuning is performed by tracking the instantaneous value of the reflection coefficient and by modifying an appropriate impedance matching network according to a real-time adaptive algorithm. A resilient default/backup software architecture has been designed to ensure that tuning guarantees a return loss higher than 10 dB for the personal locator beacon in most of impedance mismatching conditions
A reconfigurable layout for a self-structuring life-jacket-integrated antenna of a SAR system
A reconfigurable layout to implement a self-structuring wearable antenna for the local user terminal of a Search and Rescue system (Cospas-Sarsat at 406MHz) is presented. The proposed antenna layout has been designed for integration on a commercial life jacket for use in a maritime environment. The shape of the antenna can be reconfigured by means of RF switches to ensure the best possible transmission conditions, in terms of overall antenna efficiency, even if part of the antenna goes under the sea level. The shape of the components of the self-structuring antenna has been optimized for different antenna positions with respect to the water level and immersion angles
A phase-based technique for localization of uhf-rfid tags moving on a conveyor belt: Performance analysis and test-case measurements
A new phase-based technique for localization and
tracking of items moving along a conveyor belt and equipped with
ultrahigh frequency-radio frequency identification (UHF-RFID)
tags is described and validated here. The technique is based on
a synthetic-array approach that takes advantage of the fact that
the tagged items move along a conveyor belt whose speed and
path are known apriori. In this framework, a joint use is done
of synthetic-array radar principles, knowledge-based processing,
and efficient exploitation of the reader-tag communication signal.
The technique can be easily implemented in any conventional
reader based on an in-phase and quadrature receiver and it does
not require any modification of the reader antenna configurations
usually adopted in UHF-RFID portals. Numerical results are used
to investigate the performance analysis of such methods, and
also to furnish system design guidelines. Finally, the localization
capability is also demonstrated through a measurement campaign
in a real conveyor belt scenario, showing that a centimeter-order
accuracy in the tag position estimation can be achieved even in
a rich multipath environment
Experimental validation of a SAR-Based RFID localization technique exploiting an automated handling system
The synthetic aperture radar (SAR) approach has attracted a considerable interest in the context of phase-based techniques for the localization of UHF-RFID passive tags. In this letter, the results of an extensive experimental activity are presented, when the reader antenna is moved in front of a set of static passive UHF-RFID tags by means of a planar handling system. Measured performance is evaluated with respect to several system parameters: tag number and typology, tag reciprocal distance and orientation, trajectory and speed of the moving reader antenna. It is shown that the SAR processing can guarantee an accurate two-dimensional localization of multiple tags, with a localization error comparable to the size of typical commercial tags, by using a single reader antenna and without the need for any reference tag
Numerical analysis of wireless power transfer in near-field UHF-RFID systems
A preliminary numerical analysis of the power transfer efficiency (PTE) for the forward link of near-field (NF) ultra high frequency (UHF)-radio frequency identification (RFID) systems is addressed in this paper, by resorting to an impedance matrix approach where the matrix entries are determined through full-wave simulations. The paper is aimed to quantify the NF-coupling effects on the PTE, as a function of the distance between the reader and tag antennas. To allow for a PTE comparison between different reader and tag antenna pairs, a benchmarking tag-loading condition has been assumed, where the tag antenna is loaded with the impedance that maximizes the PTE. In a more realistic loading condition, the load impedance is assumed as equal to the conjugate of the tag antenna input impedance. Full-wave simulations use accurate antenna models of commercial UHF-RFID passive tags and reader antennas. Finally, a âshape-matched antennaâ configuration has been selected, where the reader antenna is assumed as identical to the tag antenna. It is shown that the above configuration could be a valuable compact solution, at least for those systems where the relative orientation/position between the tag and reader antennas can be controlled, and their separation is of the order of a few centimeters or less
Technologies for Near-Field Focused Microwave Antennas
This paper provides a review spanning different technologies used to implement near-field focused antennas at the microwave frequency band up to a few tens of GHz: arrays of microstrip patches and printed dipoles, arrays of dielectric resonator antennas, reflectarrays, transmitarrays, Fresnel zone plate lenses, leaky-wave antennas, and waveguide arrays
Dual-Band Integrated Antennas for DVB-T Receivers
An overview on compact Planar Inverted-F Antennas (PIFAs) that are suitable for monitor-equipped devices is presented. In particular, high efficiency PIFAs (without any dielectric layer) with a percentage bandwidth (%BW) greater than 59% (470â862âMHz DVB-T band) are considered. In this context, two PIFA configurations are reviewed, where a dual-band feature has been obtained, in the 3300â3800âMHz (14% percentage bandwidth) WiMAX and 2400â2484âMHz (2.7% percentage bandwidth) WLAN IEEE 802.11b,g frequency bands, respectively, to also guarantee web access to on-demand services. The two PIFAs fill an overall volume of âmm3 and âmm3, respectively. They are composed of a series of branches, properly dimensioned and separated to generate the required resonances. Finally, to show the extreme flexibility of the previous two configurations, a novel dual-band L-shape PIFA has been designed. A reflection coefficient less than â6âdB and â10âdB and an antenna gain of around 2âdBi and 6.3âdBi have been obtained in the 470â862âMHzâDVB-T band and the 2400â2484âMHz WLAN band, respectively. The L-shape PIFA prototype can be obtained by properly cutting and folding a single metal sheet, thus resulting in a relatively low-cost and mechanically robust antenna configuration
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