RF Receiver, Transmitter, and Transceiver Finished Units

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
2700449

2700449

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS MODULE 802.11 WLAN

0

2867021

2867021

Phoenix Contact

900 MHZ TRANSMISSION SYSTEM

0

2885728

2885728

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS WLAN ACCESS POINT 24VDC

0

2900046

2900046

Phoenix Contact

WLAN WIRELESS TRANCEIVER

0

2692788

2692788

Phoenix Contact

BLUETOOTH ETHERNET PORT ADAPTER

0

2313106

2313106

Phoenix Contact

GPRS/GSM MODEM DIN RAIL 24VDC

0

2867034

2867034

Phoenix Contact

900 MHZ TRANSMISSION SYSTEM

0

2867089

2867089

Phoenix Contact

BIDIRECTIONAL WIRELESS 900 MHZ

0

2701416

2701416

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS BLUETOOTH ADAPTER

0

2884509

2884509

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS MUX SET 2 MODULES

0

2990011

2990011

Phoenix Contact

WLAN ACCESS POINT DIN RAIL 24VDC

0

2700452

2700452

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS ACCESS CLIENT 802.11

0

2867733

2867733

Phoenix Contact

BIDIRECTIONAL WIRELESS DIN RAIL

0

2884282

2884282

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS I/O MODULE

0

2902277

2902277

Phoenix Contact

TXRX 900MHZ ISM DIN RAIL

0

2867102

2867102

Phoenix Contact

900 MHZ TRANSMISSION SYSTEM

0

2736767

2736767

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS BASE STATION 8 OUTPUTS

0

2900100

2900100

Phoenix Contact

WIRELESS HART ADAPTER

19

2867047

2867047

Phoenix Contact

RECEIVER TO EXPAND PT TO POINT

0

2903806

2903806

Phoenix Contact

SMS REMOTE CONTROL

0

RF Receiver, Transmitter, and Transceiver Finished Units

1. Overview

RF (Radio Frequency)/IF (Intermediate Frequency) and RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) finished units are critical components in wireless communication systems. These devices enable signal reception, transmission, and bidirectional communication through electromagnetic waves. RF/IF units typically operate in the radio frequency spectrum (3 kHz 300 GHz) and intermediate frequency ranges (typically 455 kHz for AM radios or 10.7 MHz for FM), while RFID systems use specific ISM (Industrial, Scientific, Medical) bands (e.g., 125 kHz, 13.56 MHz, 900 MHz). Their importance spans telecommunications, IoT, logistics, healthcare, and industrial automation.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
RF ReceiverDemodulates incoming RF signals, amplifies weak signals, and filters noiseAM/FM radios, Wi-Fi routers, satellite communication systems
RF TransmitterGenerates and amplifies RF signals for wireless transmissionCellular base stations, Bluetooth devices, RFID readers
RF TransceiverCombines receiver and transmitter functions with duplexing capabilitiesSmartphones, Zigbee modules, 5G infrastructure
RFID ReaderInterrogates RFID tags and processes backscattered signalsInventory management, access control systems
RFID TagPassive/active device storing unique identification dataAsset tracking, retail payment systems

3. Structure and Components

Typical physical structures include:

  • Antenna Interface: Dipole, patch, or loop antennas for signal coupling
  • RF Front-End: Low-noise amplifiers (LNAs), power amplifiers (PAs), and frequency synthesizers
  • Mixing Stage: Converts signals between RF and IF/baseband using local oscillators (LOs)
  • Digital Baseband: ADC/DAC converters, DSP/FPGA for signal processing
  • Power Supply: Regulated DC sources or energy-harvesting circuits (for passive RFID tags)

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Frequency RangeOperating bandwidth (e.g., 2.4 GHz ISM band)Determines application compatibility
Receiver SensitivityMinimum detectable signal level (e.g., -120 dBm)Impacts communication range and reliability
Output PowerTransmit signal strength (e.g., +30 dBm)Dictates coverage area and regulatory compliance
Data RateMaximum transmission speed (e.g., 1 Mbps)Critical for real-time applications
Power ConsumptionOperating current/voltage requirementsAffects battery life and thermal management

5. Application Fields

  • Telecommunications: 5G NR base stations, microwave backhaul links
  • Healthcare: Wireless patient monitoring systems (e.g., Medtronic CareLink)
  • Retail: RFID-based inventory tracking (e.g., Amazon Go stores)
  • Automotive: Keyless entry systems (e.g., Tesla Model S passive entry)
  • Industrial: Wireless sensor networks (e.g., Siemens SIMATIC NET)

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductKey Features
QualcommWTR5975 RF TransceiverSupports 2G 5G, 20 MHz bandwidth
NXP SemiconductorsUHF RFID Reader IC SL900A900 MHz, 128-bit security encryption
Texas InstrumentsCC2640R2F Bluetooth TransceiverBLE 5.0, 5 mm 5 mm QFN package
STMicroelectronicsSPBTLE-RF Evaluation Board868/915 MHz ISM band operation

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations include:

  • Frequency compatibility with target environment
  • Link budget analysis (distance, obstacles, fading)
  • Regulatory certifications (FCC, ETSI, RoHS)
  • Environmental factors (temperature, humidity, EMI)
  • Integration requirements (form factor, interface protocols)

8. Industry Trends

Future developments focus on:

  • Ultra-wideband (UWB) for precise localization
  • Massive MIMO integration in 5G transceivers
  • Energy-harvesting RFID tags for IoT
  • AI-driven dynamic spectrum management
  • Miniaturization via System-on-Chip (SoC) designs
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