Symmetrical RFID Transponder Antenna
20200350657 ยท 2020-11-05
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01Q7/00
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/2208
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/2225
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q1/22
ELECTRICITY
G06K19/077
PHYSICS
Abstract
An antenna for a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) transponder, including: terminals for connection with an RFID chip; two or more inductive loops; and one or more resonant structure; wherein the two or more inductive loops and the one or more resonant structure are arranged and configured such that the antenna has two or more lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction of the antenna, and wherein the terminals are located within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna.
Claims
1. An antenna for a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) transponder, comprising: terminals for connection with an RFID chip; two or more inductive loops; and one or more resonant structure; wherein the two or more inductive loops and the one or more resonant structure are arranged and configured such that the antenna has two or more lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction of the antenna, and wherein the terminals are located within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna.
2. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the antenna comprises two inductive loops, each connected to a different resonant structure.
3. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the antenna comprises two inductive loops, each separated from, but capacitively coupled, to a different resonant structure.
4. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the one or more resonant structure comprises a fine-tuning portion.
5. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the antenna comprises two inductive loops, each connected to a same resonant structure.
6. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the radiation pattern of the antenna on a plane of the antenna, perpendicular to the thickness direction of the antenna, has two lines of symmetry.
7. A Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) transponder, comprising: an RFID chip; and an RFID antenna comprising: terminals for connection with an RFID chip; two or more inductive loops; and one or more resonant structure; wherein the two or more inductive loops and the one or more resonant structure are arranged and configured such that the antenna has two or more lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction of the antenna, and wherein the terminals are located within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna.
8. The RFID transponder of claim 7, wherein the antenna comprises two inductive loops, each connected to a different resonant structure.
9. The RFID transponder of claim 7, wherein the antenna comprises two inductive loops, each separated from, but capacitively coupled, to a different resonant structure.
10. The RFID transponder of claim 7, wherein the one or more resonant structure comprises a fine-tuning portion.
11. The RFID transponder of claim 7, wherein the antenna comprises two inductive loops, each connected to a same resonant structure.
12. The RFID transponder of claim 7, wherein the radiation pattern of the antenna on a plane of the antenna, perpendicular to the thickness direction of the antenna, has two lines of symmetry.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0014] Embodiments of the present invention will be discussed with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
[0015]
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[0022]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0023] The present disclosure introduces a novel and inventive antenna design for RFID tags. In particular, the antenna is designed to have two or more lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction of the antenna.
[0024] In a broad form, the antenna comprises terminals for connection with an RFID chip, two or more inductive loops, and one or more resonant structure. The two or more inductive loops and the one or more resonant structure are arranged and configured such that the antenna has two or more lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction of the antenna. Further, the terminals are located within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna.
[0025] The phrase lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction means when viewing in a thickness direction (same meaning as when viewed from a thickness direction) of an antenna (i.e. viewed from the top such as the view of
[0026] However, due to the design considerations and constraints, it was noted that conventional design of RFID tags focuses on maximising the read distance or attempting to impedance match an RFID chip with the antenna, to maximise power transfer and again to maximise read distance. To achieve that, the antenna is designed with only one line of symmetry. For example, a common UHF RFID antenna for a UHF RFID tag is usually a mirrored design with only one line of symmetry. The chip is usually connected to the antenna at the bottom middle section or top middle section depending on the reference direction and connected to a loop, where two mirrored arms extend from the loop to form a symmetrical design with one line of symmetry. This conventional idea is derived from a conventional dipole-type antenna, which has two opposite straight arms extended outward. A conventional dipole antenna provides a linearly polarized radiation pattern and with symmetrical donut-shaped radiation patterns.
[0027] Radiation pattern refers to the directional (angular) dependence of the strength of the radio waves from the antenna or from another source to the antenna. Due to the principle of reciprocity in antenna theory, the strength of radio waves at a direction from and to an antenna is the same. A directional radiation pattern simply means that there is a direction with a strength much stronger than those of the other directions. A directional radiation pattern is different from a uniform radiation pattern where the strength is the same in all directions (i.e. the Omni-directional radiation pattern with antenna gain of 0 dBi).
[0028] However, in practice, both left and right arms of the antenna have to be custom designed to accommodate some design constraints and requirements, such as size. Methods include meandering the arms, bending the ends to make hook-shaped ends, etc. Accordingly, it was found that based on the conventional design of an RFID tag, such as a UHF RFID tag, an RFID tag would only have a single line of symmetry with an RFID chip connected to the antenna at the bottom middle section or top middle section.
[0029] When a custom design deviated from a conventional dipole antenna to have only a single line of symmetry, the original donut-shaped radiation patterns become distorted. The radiation pattern is symmetrical along one direction only, but it is not symmetric in another directions. A non-symmetrical radiation pattern implies the beamwidth or gain along a particular direction is not equal to the opposite direction, which can be a problem for beamwidth-specific or gain-specific applications such as Automatic Vehicle Identification (AVI) etc. when the transponder has been accidentally placed incorrectly (e.g. upside down). In AVI, it is important to ensure an RFID tag mounted on a vehicle, travelling within a certain lane, to be successfully read by a reader antenna that is covering the lane, and at the same time not being read by an adjacent reader antenna that is covering adjacent lanes. In AVI, an RFID tag can be applied on a windshield, or headlamp. In other applications, such an RFID tag is applied on a label or sticker for inventory tracking, access control, etc. It finds its use in logistics and supply chain, as the movement of an item can be tracked automatically using an RFID system. A non-symmetrical radiation pattern may also create issues.
[0030] In the present disclosure, examples of antenna with two or more lines of symmetry when viewed in a thickness direction of the antenna are disclosed. Further, the terminals are located within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna. Such antennas have symmetrical radiation patterns in multiple directions, thus avoiding or reducing unwanted reading error when they are incorrectly misplaced.
[0031] With reference to
[0032] An inductive loop can take many forms, as long as the loop is inductive as opposed to capacitive. The term loop also does not necessitate the induction loop to be a single loop, or resemble a coil. In fact, it can be a square-loop, rectangular loop, multi-turn loop, or even with discontinuities, etc., as long as it is inductive. Being inductive does not mean that it contains no capacitance. A person skilled in the art would understand that capacitance exists in an inductive loop, but the degree of capacitance is lesser than its degree of inductance.
[0033] A resonant structure is a structure where, at a frequency of interest, the inductive impedance and capacitance impedance of circuit elements cancel each other. In relation to antenna design, resonant frequency is an important parameter. In simple form, a designer would want the resonant frequency of an antenna to be within the operating band (for UHF RFID antenna, it would be within the band of 860 MHz to 960 MHz). Depending on applications and regulations of some countries, the antenna can be specifically designed to resonate at a particular frequency. In other words, the resonant frequency of the resonant structure corresponds to a designed operating frequency of an RFID tag.
[0034] The inductive loop and the resonant structure can be made of the same material or different materials. In one form, they are made of copper or a dielectric material (such as a glass board, plastic sheet or a FR-4 PCB board). Of course they can be made with other conductive material deemed suitable by a person skilled in the art. The antenna can be made through various known manufacturing processes, such as printing, etching, milling etc. A complete RFID tag is then made by attaching a chip to an antenna. One common form is known as RFID inlay. It comprises a chip and aluminum, copper or silver antenna bonded to a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) layer that is delivered to the label maker dry (without adhesive) or wet (attached to a pressure sensitive liner). The inlay is adhered to the back side of the label and printed and encoded in an RFID printer.
[0035] The antenna of the present disclosure also shows that the inductive loop and the resonant structure are at a same plane. It should be understood that an antenna plane refers to a flat surface on which the majority of the antenna is located. It follows that the plane where the majority of the inductive loop is found, is the same plane where the majority of the resonant structure is found. In a broad sense, it does not require all parts of the inductive loop and the resonant structure to be at a same plane, just the majority.
[0036] An RFID chip is then connected to the antenna. In this disclosure, the RFID chip is connected to the inductive loop, and not connected to the resonant structure. When connected, and when the RFID tag (combination of the chip and an RFID antenna) is in operation in the presence of an RF field, current (AC current at that RF frequency) is induced and flows from the resonant structure to the inductive loop, which in turn induces an AC voltage at the RFID chip terminals, and power up the RFID chip, and continue to supply power to the RFID chip to allow the RFID chip to respond to an interrogating signal accordingly.
[0037] The resonant structure is connected to the inductive loop in the embodiment of
[0038] It can also be seen from
[0039] Regarding the position of the terminals, the centre point of the terminals need not be exactly the centre point of the overall structure of the antenna. As long as the terminals are within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna, it would not affect in a substantial way the symmetry of the radiation pattern. For this disclosure, one can understand that the terminals are positioned within a centre region when the centre of the terminals is within a deviation from the centre of <5% of the length and <10% of the height of the RFID antenna. For example, with reference to 74 mm19 mm, the deviation of the centre point of the terminals should not be more than 3.7 mm in the length direction and 1.9 mm in the height direction from the centre point of the overall structure of the RFID antenna.
[0040] Further, in one embodiment, the RFID chip is not directly connected to the terminals located at the centre portion of the RFID antenna. Whilst it is not ideal, it is possible to have the terminals connected to an RFID chip through a connecting means, such as a cable or a copper track. What is essential for the working of this disclosure is that the terminals are within a centre portion of an overall structure of the antenna, and having the overall radiating structure symmetrical in multiple planes/directions.
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[0044] With reference to
[0045] With reference to
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[0048] While the antenna of the present disclosure is designed to work for a passive tag, there is no reason why the designed antenna cannot be used in an active tag.
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[0050] Similar to
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[0053] In one embodiment, it is possible to have more than two lines of symmetry. One example is shown in
[0054] Throughout the specification and the claims that follow, unless the context requires otherwise, the words comprise and include and variations such as comprising and including will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated integer or group of integers, but not the exclusion of any other integer or group of integers.
[0055] The reference to any prior art in this specification is not, and should not be taken as, an acknowledgement or any form of suggestion that such prior art forms part of the common general knowledge.
[0056] It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the invention is not restricted in its use to the particular application described. Neither is the present invention restricted in its preferred embodiment with regard to the particular elements and/or features described or depicted herein. It will be appreciated that the invention is not limited to the embodiment or embodiments disclosed, but is capable of numerous rearrangements, modifications and substitutions without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth and defined by the following claims.