RFID tag secured to a tire
11021021 · 2021-06-01
Assignee
Inventors
- Adrian Florin Nicula (Luxembourg, LU)
- Andreas Frantzen (Trier, DE)
- Christian Jean-Marie Kaes (Schrondweiler, LU)
Cpc classification
B29D2030/0077
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29D30/0061
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60C2019/004
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60C19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60C5/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60C19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An RFID tag for attaching to a tire consists of a first polyester layer, a second polyester layer adjacent the first polyester layer, the second polyester layer having an etched antenna and an RFID chip, and a third polyester layer adjacent the second polyester layer. The third polyester layer surrounds part of the first and second layers and is secured by heat to an innerliner of the tire.
Claims
1. An RFID tag for attaching to a tire, the RFID tag consisting of: a first polyester layer; a second polyester layer adjacent the first polyester layer, the second polyester layer having an etched antenna and an RFID chip; and a third polyester layer adjacent the second polyester layer, the third polyester layer surrounding part of the first and second layers and being secured by heat to an innerliner of the tire.
2. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 1 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially outermost topcoat sublayer.
3. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 1 wherein the second polyester layer is corona tested on both sides.
4. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 1 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner polyamide sublayer with an etched antenna and an integrated circuit.
5. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 1 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner first polyester sublayer with a thermal printed barcode image.
6. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 5 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner second polyester sublayer.
7. The RFID tag as set forth in to claim 5 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner uncured rubber-based third adhesive sublayer.
8. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 1 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner first high temperature adhesive sublayer.
9. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 8 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner second high temperature adhesive sublayer.
10. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 1 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner first adhesion promoter sublayer.
11. The RFID tag as set forth in claim 10 wherein the second polyester layer includes a radially inner second adhesion promoter sublayer.
12. A tire comprising an RFID tag for attaching to the tire, the RFID tag consisting of: a first polyester layer; a second polyester layer adjacent the first polyester layer, the second polyester layer having an etched antenna and an RFID chip; and a third polyester layer adjacent the second polyester layer, the third polyester layer surrounding part of the first and second layers and being secured by heat to an innerliner of the tire.
13. The tire as set forth in claim 12 wherein the second polyester layer includes an ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLES OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
(5) The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which examples of the present invention are shown. However, the present invention may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the representative examples set forth herein. The examples are provided so that this disclosure will be both thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the present invention and enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make, use, and/or practice the present invention. Like reference numbers refer to like elements throughout the various drawings.
(6) RFID tags may enable various tire tracking solutions for articles of manufacture that include electronic identification provisions such as, for example, RFID devices incorporated in/onto a substrate such as a mesh backing/material such that the tags may be configured to withstand pressures, temperatures, and/or stresses associated with manufacturing (e.g., tire vulcanization) and a wide variety of uses of tires and other rubber products while concurrently maintaining operability during these processes, after these processes, and throughout the lifetime of the article thereby sensing and providing unique identifier(s) and/or other information about the article during distribution, inventory, and article life. As disclosed further below, the RFID tag may be affixed to, and/or incorporated on, a sidewall, a bead, and/or an innerliner of a wide array of tires. Depending on the type of tire, the material of the tire, and/or the use of the tire (e.g. racing tires), the thickness, surface area, and/or configuration of the different RFID tag materials may vary.
(7) As will be appreciated, tires may typically be used in combination with rims of a vehicle. The rubber-based tire may support, and provide grip for, the vehicle with a road or ground surface. The RFID tag may be used with bias tires, belted bias tires, radial tires, solid tires, semi-pneumatic tires, pneumatic tires, airless tires, non-pneumatic tires, truck/bus tires, airplane tires, agriculture tires, racing tires, etc.
(8) An RFID tag may withstand conditions typically associated with vulcanization processes without degradation. The term vulcanization as used herein may generally refer to heating to a temperature greater than 90° C., and up to 200° C., for a predetermined time period, for example, from at least 10 minutes to as much as several hours. The RFID tag generally may include at least one RFID device.
(9) The RFID device generally includes an antenna for wirelessly transmitting and/or receiving RF signals and analog and/or digital electronics operatively connected thereto. The RFID device may include passive RFID devices and/or active and/or semi-passive RFID devices including a battery and/or other power source. The electronics may be implemented via an integrated circuit (IC) and/or microchip and/or other suitable electronic circuit, such as, for example, communications electronics, data memory, control logic, etc.
(10) The RFID device may operate in a variety of frequency ranges including, but not limited to, a low frequency (LF) range (e.g., from approximately 30 kHz to approximately 300 kHz), a high frequency (HF) and NFC (Near Field Communication) range (e.g., from approximately 3 MHz to approximately 30 MHz) and an ultra-high frequency (UHF) range (e.g., from approximately 300 MHz to approximately 3 GHz). A passive device may operate in any one of the aforementioned frequency ranges. Specifically, for passive devices, LF systems may operate at about 124 kHz, 125 kHz, or 135 kHz, HF and NFC systems may operate at about 13.56 MHz, and UHF systems may use a band from 860 MHz to 960 MHz. Alternatively, passive devices may use 2.45 GHz and/or other areas of the radio spectrum. Active RFID devices may operate at about 455 MHz, 2.45 GHz, or 5.8 GHz. Semi-passive RFID devices may operate at a frequency of about 2.4 GHz.
(11) The read range of an RFID device (i.e., the range at which an RFID reader may communicate with the RFID device) may be determined by the type of device (e.g., active, passive, semipassive, etc.). Passive LF RFID devices (also referred to as LFID or LowFID devices) may typically be read from within approximately 12 inches (0.33 meters); passive HF RFID devices (also referred to as HFID or HighFID or NFC devices) may typically be read from up to approximately 3 feet (1 meter); and passive UHF RFID devices (also referred to as UHFID devices) may typically be read from approximately 10 feet (3.05 meters) or more.
(12) One factor influencing the read range for passive RFID devices is the method used to transmit data from the device to the reader (e.g., the coupling mode between the device and the reader—which may be inductive coupling or radiative/propagation coupling). Passive LFID devices and passive HFTD devices may use inductive coupling between the device and the reader, whereas passive UHFID devices may use radiative or propagation coupling between the device and the reader.
(13) Alternatively, in radiative or propagation coupling applications (e.g., as are conventionally used by passive UHFID devices), rather than forming an electromagnetic field between the respective antennas of the reader and device, the reader may emit electromagnetic energy that can illuminate the device. In turn, the device may gather the energy from the reader via an antenna, and the device's integrated circuit (IC) or microchip may use the gathered energy to change the load on the device antenna and reflect back an altered signal (e.g., backscatter). UHFID devices may communicate data in a variety of different ways such as increasing the amplitude of a reflected wave sent back to the reader (amplitude shift keying), shifting the reflected wave out of the phase of the received wave (phase shift keying), and/or changing the frequency of the reflected wave (frequency shift keying). The reader may then pick up the backscattered signal and convert the altered wave into data understood by the reader and/or an adjunct computer.
(14) The antenna employed in the RFID device may be affected by numerous factors, such as intended application, type of device (e.g., active, passive, semi-active, etc.), desired read range, device-to-reader coupling mode, and/or frequency of operation of the device. For example, since passive LFID devices may normally be inductively coupled with the reader, and because the voltage induced in the device antenna may be proportional to the operating frequency of the device, passive LFID devices may include a coil antenna with many turns in order to produce enough voltage to operate the device IC and/or microchip. Comparatively, a conventional HFID passive device may include a planar spiral antenna (e.g., with 5 to 7 turns over a credit-card-sized form factor) to provide read ranges on the order of tens of centimeters. HFID antenna coils may be less costly to produce (e.g., compared to LFID antenna coils) since they may be made using techniques relatively less expensive than wire winding (e.g., lithography or the like). UHFID passive devices may be radiatively and/or propagationally coupled with the reader antenna and consequently may employ conventional dipole-like antennas. The RFID tag used with the present invention may utilize any of the aforementioned RFID devices, as well as others not specifically mentioned.
(15) RFID tags may be advantageously attached to an innerliner of 11 a tire 10. The RFID tags may be received from suppliers on a roll with the RFID tags attached to a release liner with an uncured gum glue. The gum glue may have a good initial tack, or stickiness, to uncured rubber. However, after a curing/heating, the RFID tags may lose that initial tack and fall off of the innerliner 11. As shown in
(16) As shown in
(17) Instead of discarding a removable liner 101, the liner may be the third layer 213 itself and may be sized to appropriately surround the first and second layers 211, 212 and be temporarily secured to the innerliner 11 before curing of the tire 10. During curing, the liner 111 may at least partially liquify and permanently adhere to the innerliner 11 during cool down. Such a liner 213 may be constructed of any suitable polymeric material such an ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). The liner 213 may be sealed to the innerliner 11 completely around the first and second layers 211, 212 (
(18) Variations of the present invention are possible in light of the description of it provided herein. While certain representative examples and details have been shown for the purpose of illustrating the present invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in this art that various changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the scope of the present invention. It is, therefore, to be understood that changes may be made in the particular examples described herein which will be within the fully intended scope of the present invention as defined by the following appended claims.