What
is RFID
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History
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Types
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The RFID System
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Current Usage


What
is RFID?
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What
is RFID?
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a proven technology that
uses radio waves to identify individual items at specific locations.
Many enterprises are presently seeking ways to mobilize and automate
their field force operations with RFID, in areas such as asset management,
maintenance, repair, manufacturing, item tracking, delivery scheduling,
customer billing data collection, and work order management.
A basic
RFID system consist of three components:
- An
antenna or coil.
- A
transceiver (with decoder).
- A
transponder (RF tag) electronically programmed with unique information.
The
antenna emits radio signals to activate the tag and read and write
data to it. Antennas are the conduits between the tag and the transceiver,
which controls the system's data acquisition and communication.
Antennas are available in a variety of shapes and sizes; they can
be built into a door frame to receive tag data from persons or things
passing through the door, or mounted on an interstate toll booth
to monitor traffic passing by on a freeway. The electromagnetic
field produced by an antenna can be constantly present when multiple
tags are expected continually. If constant interrogation is not
required, the field can be activated by a sensor device.
Often
the antenna is packaged with the transceiver and decoder to become
a reader (a.k.a. interrogator), which can be configured either as
a handheld or a fixed-mount device. The reader emits radio waves
in ranges of anywhere from one inch to 100 feet or more, depending
upon its power output and the radio frequency used. When an RFID
tag passes through the electromagnetic zone, it detects the reader's
activation signal. The reader decodes the data encoded in the tag's
integrated circuit (silicon chip) and the data is passed to the
host computer for processing.
RFID
tags come in a wide variety of shapes and sizes. Animal tracking
tags, inserted beneath the skin, can be as small as a pencil lead
in diameter and one-half inch in length. Tags can be screw-shaped
to identify trees or wooden items, or credit-card shaped for use
in access applications. The anti-theft hard plastic tags attached
to merchandise in stores are RFID tags. In addition, heavy-duty
5- by 4- by 2-inch rectangular transponders used to track intermodal
containers or heavy machinery, trucks, and railroad cars for maintenance
and tracking applications are RFID tags.
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Improving Enterprise
Performance with RFID
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