Method to increase RFID tag sensitivity
10452968 ยท 2019-10-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01Q15/0006
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/248
ELECTRICITY
G06K7/10158
PHYSICS
G06K7/0008
PHYSICS
G06K19/0723
PHYSICS
International classification
G06K19/077
PHYSICS
G06K7/00
PHYSICS
H01Q15/00
ELECTRICITY
G06K7/10
PHYSICS
H01Q1/22
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag with improved sensitivity includes an antenna that receives a radio-frequency (RF) signal and wireless power from an RFID reader. The RFID tag further includes a circuit that varies a reflection coefficient of the antenna to transmit a reflected signal to the reader, the reflected signal having periods of high reflectance when a relatively high amount of the RF signal is reflected, and low reflectance periods when a relatively low amount of the RF signal is reflected. The reflectance of the antenna is sufficiently low during the high reflectance periods to enable wireless power reception during the high reflectance periods.
Claims
1. A radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag comprising: a main antenna that receives a radio-frequency (RF) signal from an RFID reader and wirelessly harvests power from the RF signal; a switch connected to a first portion of the main antenna and a separate length of antenna; and a circuit connected to a second portion of the main antenna, wherein the second portion of the main antenna is different than the first portion of the main antenna, the circuit being configured to: vary a reflection coefficient of the main antenna to transmit a reflected signal to the RFID reader, the reflected signal having high reflectance periods when an amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is greater than a predetermined amount, and low reflectance periods when an amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is lower than the predetermined amount; control the switch to intermittently connect the separate length of antenna to the main antenna; change a resonant frequency of the main antenna, based on the controlled switching, to generate a high reflectance period and a low reflectance period; and reduce a reflectance of the main antenna below a predefined amount during the high reflectance period without shorting the main antenna to enable the main antenna for continuous wireless power harvesting while transmitting the reflected signal to the RFID reader, wherein the reflectance of the main antenna during the high reflectance period is reduced based on the change in the resonant frequency of the main antenna.
2. The RFID tag of claim 1, wherein the predetermined amount is a reflection coefficient magnitude of between 0 and 0.5.
3. The RFID tag of claim 1, wherein the predefined amount is a reflection coefficient magnitude of 0.5.
4. The RFID tag of claim 1, wherein the circuit is an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC).
5. The RFID tag of claim 1, wherein the main antenna is a linearly polarized antenna.
6. A radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag comprising: a main antenna that receives a radio-frequency (RF) signal from an RFID reader and wirelessly harvests power from the RF signal; and a circuit that is configured to vary a reflection coefficient of the main antenna to transmit a reflected signal to the RFID reader, the reflected signal having a high reflectance period when an amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is greater than a predetermined amount, and a low reflectance period when an amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is lower than the predetermined amount, wherein a reflectance of the main antenna is reduced below a predefined amount during the high reflectance period without shorting the main antenna to enable the main antenna for continuous wireless power harvesting while transmitting the reflected signal to the RFID reader, wherein the reflectance of the main antenna during the high reflectance period is reduced based on a change in a resonant frequency of the main antenna, wherein the circuit increases a duty cycle of the low reflectance periods and decreases a duty cycle of the high reflectance periods to increase a time period of wireless power transmission.
7. The RFID tag of claim 6, wherein the predetermined amount is a reflection coefficient magnitude of between 0 and 1.
8. The RFID tag of claim 6, wherein the circuit increases the duty cycle of the low reflectance periods to greater than 50%.
9. The RFID tag of claim 6, wherein the circuit is an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC).
10. The RFID tag of claim 6, wherein the main antenna is a linearly polarized antenna.
11. A radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag comprising: a main antenna that receives a radio-frequency (RF) signal from an RFID reader and wirelessly harvests power from the RF signal; and a circuit that is configured to vary a reflection coefficient of the main antenna to transmit a reflected signal to the RFID reader, the reflected signal having a first reflectance period and a second reflectance period when an amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is different than during the first reflectance period, wherein a reflectance of the main antenna is reduced below a predefined amount during the first reflectance period without shorting the main antenna to enable the main antenna to continuously harvest power while transmitting the reflected signal to the RFID reader, wherein the reflectance of the main antenna is reduced based on a change in a resonant frequency of the main antenna.
12. The RFID tag of claim 11, wherein the circuit changes the resonant frequency of the main antenna to generate the first and second reflectance period.
13. The RFID tag of claim 12, wherein the circuit adds a separate length of antenna to the main antenna during the first reflectance period.
14. The RFID tag of claim 13, further comprising: a switch that adds the separate length of antenna by connecting the separate length of antenna to the main antenna during the first reflectance period, the switch being located on a first portion of the main antenna and the circuit being located on a second portion of the main antenna, wherein the first portion of the main antenna is different than the second portion of the main antenna.
15. The RFID tag of claim 11, wherein the main antenna includes a first antenna for receiving the RF signal, and a second antenna for receiving power, and the second antenna continues to absorb a portion of the RF signal during the first reflectance period and the second reflectance period to generate a low reflectance to enable wireless power harvesting during both the first reflectance period and the second reflectance period.
16. The RFID tag of claim 11, further comprising: a switch controlled by the circuit that connects an RF impedance to the main antenna during the first reflectance period.
17. The RFID tag of claim 11, wherein the amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is greater than the predetermined amount during the first reflectance period, and the amount of reflectance by the main antenna of the RF signal is lower than the predetermined amount during the second reflectance period.
18. The RFID tag of claim 11, wherein the amount of reflectance of the main antenna of the RF signal during the first reflectance period is of greater magnitude to the amount of reflectance of the main antenna of the RF signal during the second reflectance period.
19. The RFID tag of claim 11, wherein the circuit is an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC).
20. The RFID tag of claim 11, wherein the main antenna is a linearly polarized antenna.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(8) The RFID tag 100 according to some embodiments communicates with the reader 110 by backscattering a reader signal 112 to produce a reflected signal 102 (the signal transmitted from RFID tag 100 to reader 110) using its antenna 104. RFID tag 100 simultaneously communicates with reader 110 and receives power transmission from the reader signal 112. When an RFID tag 100 backscatters (talks to the reader 110), it switches between two reflectance states. One reflectance state is power harvesting. Another reflectance state is close to a short-circuit, in order to provide maximum backscattered signal to the reader 110. In this embodiment, z.sub.1 is an integrated circuit controlling a switch to selectively connect impedance z.sub.2 to antenna 104 and vary the antenna impedance to generate reflected signal 102. As discussed in the Background, this signal is designed to have the maximum strength to maximize the range of the tag 100.
(9) As a result, the tag shorts (or approximately shorts) its antenna port (and hence its RF power supply) approximately 50% of the time (duty cycle of a typical tag-to-reader data signal), thus losing up to 3 dB of the incoming RF power (the tag IC cannot harvest RF power when the input terminals are shorted).
(10) Modern RFID tags still follow this backscattering scheme, even though modern RFID readers are much more sensitive than they used to be and can successfully detect and decode weak tag signals. The result is that at the fringes of the tag range, the tag will intermittently lose power while attempting to communicate with the reader. This results in failed communication with the reader and shrinks the useable range of tag transmission.
(11) The inventors have determined several embodiments that counter the basic assumptions in the art and sacrifice tag transmission performance in order to increase its range. Accordingly, several embodiments described herein sacrifice backscatter signal strength in order to provide additional received power to the tag 100.
(12) This expands the useable range of the tag, by allowing the antenna to continuously harvest power while transmitting the reflected signal 102. Several embodiments use existing CMOS integrated circuits, and can nevertheless have significant sensitivity improvement (e.g. 3 dB). A 3 dB improvement in tag sensitivity corresponds to 40% more tag range in free space. According to several embodiments of the tag, backscattered signal strength is sacrificed in order to gain more power efficiency during tag modulation and hence more tag sensitivity and more tag range.
(13) As a result, when such tag 100 backscatters, it will not be fully shorting its receiving antenna port and thus will have additional received RF power available (e.g. 3 dB more). For example, when signal strength is sacrificed by 6 dB in certain embodiments, 2.43 dB of tag sensitivity is gained, as explained in the following equations (1)-(4) and Table 1. The reflection coefficient ? is described according to equation (1).
?.sub.i=(z.sub.i?z.sub.a*)/(z.sub.i?z.sub.a*),(1)
(14) where z.sub.a is the antenna impedance.
(15) Each state also has power coefficient ?.sub.1, defined by:
?.sub.i=1?|?.sub.i|.sup.2(2)
(16) Power efficiency of the tag can be described by:
P.sub.e=??.sub.1???.sub.2,(3)
(17) where the signal duty ratio is 50%.
(18) Modulation depth of the backscattered signal can be described by:
K=?|?.sub.1??.sub.2|.sup.2(4)
(19) Equation 5 defines ?, which is between zero and 1
?=|?.sub.2|(5)
(20) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 ? K ?.sub.2 P.sub.e 0 0 1 1 (0 dB) ? 1/16 (?12 dB) ? 0.875 (?0.56 dB) 1 ? 0 ? (?3 dB)
(21) In Table 1, the antenna with ?=0 is impractical because it has zero backscatter. The antenna with ?=1 is a conventional antenna. The antenna with ?=? is an antenna according to one embodiment. In this antenna, P.sub.e is improved by 2.33 dB and has a 30% increase in range. K is reduced by 6 dB.
(22) The tags described herein can take the sensitivity of passive RFID tags beyond what current CMOS integrated circuits are capable of and thus be important for many practical RFID applications, such as automotive vehicle identification and tolling applications. One of the significant advantages of several embodiments is that they work with linearly polarized reader signals and linearly polarized tags, prevailing on RFID market.
(23) The RFID tag 100 can be implemented in several different ways, including:
(24) 1. Physicalreduced backscatter signal strength and increased tag power efficiency are achieved via spatial separation of receiving 904 and backscattering 900 ports/points on the tag antenna using control line 406. A shared antenna 104 can have a modulator A that only slightly changes antenna resonant frequency (by engaging/disengaging extra antenna length 104), allowing one to maintain a high received power efficiency during tag modulation cycle, but still providing a detectable differential backscattered signal to the reader, as illustrated in
(25) 2. Electricalreduced backscatter signal strength and increased tag power efficiency are achieved and controlled via choosing a different modulating impedance within tag circuitry. These embodiments are shown in
(26) According to the embodiments shown in
(27) Although the invention has been described with reference to embodiments herein, those embodiments do not limit the scope of the invention. Modifications to those embodiments or different embodiments may fall within the scope of the invention.