RF Antennas

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
WRL-17841

WRL-17841

SparkFun

WIDE BAND 4G LTE INTERNAL FPC AN

57

WRL-13002

WRL-13002

SparkFun

RF ANT 537MHZ WHIP STR SMA MALE

68

WRL-13982

WRL-13982

SparkFun

RF ANT 700MHZ WHIP TILT SMA MALE

0

SPX-17751

SPX-17751

SparkFun

GNSS MULTI-BAND L1/L2 SURVEYING

0

WRL-14580

WRL-14580

SparkFun

RF ANT 1.6215GHZ CER PATCH CAB

0

SPX-17587

SPX-17587

SparkFun

GNSS MULTI-BAND L1/L2 SURVEYING

0

SPX-17382

SPX-17382

SparkFun

GNSS MULTI-BAND L1/L2 SURVEYING

0

SPX-17383

SPX-17383

SparkFun

GNSS MULTI-BAND L1/L2 HELICAL AN

0

WRL-14875

WRL-14875

SparkFun

915MHZ LORA ANTENNA RP-SMA - 1/4

0

GPS-14986

GPS-14986

SparkFun

MAGNETIC MOUNT ANTENNA SMA 3M

0

GPS-14987

GPS-14987

SparkFun

GPS/GNSS EMBEDDED ANTENNA SMA 1M

0

WRL-15597

WRL-15597

SparkFun

LORA ANT TYPE N 5.8DBI 860-930MH

0

WRL-14876

WRL-14876

SparkFun

915MHZ LORA ANTENNA RP-SMA - 1/2

0

WRL-14868

WRL-14868

SparkFun

915MHZ LORA FIBERGLASS ANTENNA T

0

RF Antennas

1. Overview

RF/IF (Radio Frequency/Intermediate Frequency) antennas and RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) antennas are critical components in wireless communication systems. RF/IF antennas transmit and receive radio frequency signals, while RFID antennas enable contactless data exchange between tags and readers. These technologies underpin modern applications such as IoT, 5G networks, logistics tracking, and smart devices, driving efficiency and connectivity across industries.

2. Major Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
Dipole AntennasBalanced radiation pattern, omnidirectional coverageWi-Fi routers, radio broadcasting
Microstrip Patch AntennasCompact, planar design, directional beamMobile devices, satellite communication
Loop AntennasHigh sensitivity for near-field applicationsRetail RFID payment systems
Fractal AntennasMultiband operation with miniaturized geometryMilitary communication, wearable devices
Far-Field RFID AntennasLong-range UHF operation (>860 MHz)Warehouse inventory management
Near-Field RFID AntennasShort-range HF operation (13.56 MHz)Contactless payment, access control

3. Structure and Components

A typical RF/IF antenna consists of:

  • Conductive elements (copper, aluminum) for signal radiation
  • Dielectric substrates (FR4, Rogers materials) for impedance control
  • Feed lines (coaxial cables, microstrip lines) for signal transmission
  • Enclosures for environmental protection
RFID antennas integrate additional components like impedance matching circuits and chip interfaces, with designs optimized for magnetic or electric field coupling.

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Frequency RangeOperational bandwidth (e.g., 860 960 MHz for UHF RFID)Determines application compatibility
Gain (dBi)Signal directionality and strength (2 8 dBi typical)Affects transmission distance and efficiency
ImpedanceMatching standard (usually 50 )Minimizes signal reflection
VSWRVoltage Standing Wave Ratio (<2:1 preferred)Indicates power transfer efficiency
PolarizationLinear/circular orientationImpacts signal stability in dynamic environments

5. Application Fields

  • Telecommunications: 5G base stations, DAS (Distributed Antenna Systems)
  • Healthcare: MRI RF coils, patient monitoring systems
  • Transportation: ETC (Electronic Toll Collection), vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communication
  • Retail: Smart shelves, inventory tracking with RFID
  • Industrial: Asset management, drone communication

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductFeatures
AvnetRFID UHF Reader Antenna A1001Linear polarization, 902 928 MHz, 6 dBi gain
Alien TechnologyALN-9652 IMPINJ R4PPassive UHF RFID, 860 960 MHz
Pulse ElectronicsLF RFID Antenna PLX17R125 kHz, embedded in access control systems
KathreinRF Dipole Antenna 800101332.3 3.8 GHz for 5G small cells

7. Selection Recommendations

Key factors to consider:

  1. Frequency alignment with system requirements
  2. Environmental durability (temperature, moisture, vibration)
  3. Size constraints for PCB or mechanical integration
  4. Cost vs. performance trade-offs for mass deployment
  5. Regulatory compliance (FCC, ETSI standards)
For RFID systems, prioritize read range and tag compatibility; for high-frequency RF applications, emphasize VSWR and phase stability.

8. Industry Trends

Emerging trends include:

  • Development of mmWave (24 100 GHz) antennas for 5G/6G
  • Miniaturization via metamaterials and 3D printing
  • AI-optimized beamforming antennas for IoT networks
  • Conductive ink-based flexible RFID tags for disposable applications
  • Integration of energy harvesting capabilities
The global RFID antenna market is projected to grow at 12.3% CAGR through 2027, driven by smart city initiatives and supply chain digitization.

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top