RF Receivers

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
SI4613-A10-GM

SI4613-A10-GM

Silicon Labs

RF RECEIVER AM/FM 48QFN

0

SI4762-A20-AM

SI4762-A20-AM

Silicon Labs

RX AM/FM 520KHZ-1.71MHZ 40QFN

0

EVA-8M-0

EVA-8M-0

u-blox

RF RX GLONASS 1.575GHZ MODULE

0

SI4760-A20-AM

SI4760-A20-AM

Silicon Labs

RX AM/FM 520KHZ-1.71MHZ 40QFN

0

TRF7900APW

TRF7900APW

Texas Instruments

CONSUMER CIRCUIT, PDSO28

238

WRL-10532

WRL-10532

SparkFun

RF RCVR 4800BPS MODULE

20

SI4756-A40-AM

SI4756-A40-AM

Silicon Labs

RF RX AM/FM 520KHZ-1.71MHZ 32QFN

0

TDA5200XUMA1

TDA5200XUMA1

IR (Infineon Technologies)

RF RX ASK 433MHZ/868MHZ 28TSSOP

0

ATA8204P3C-TKQW

ATA8204P3C-TKQW

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

RF RECEIVER UHF 433MHZ 20SSO

3902

MAX7036GTP/V+

MAX7036GTP/V+

Maxim Integrated

RF RX ASK/OOK 300-450MHZ 20TQFN

1860

MAX1471ATJ+

MAX1471ATJ+

Maxim Integrated

RF RX ASK/FSK 315/434MHZ 32TQFN

86

SI4767-A20-GM

SI4767-A20-GM

Silicon Labs

RX AM/FM 520KHZ-1.71MHZ 40QFN

0

MAX14735EWG+T

MAX14735EWG+T

Maxim Integrated

RF RCVR ASK 315MHZ-433MHZ 24SOIC

0

SI4754-A40-AM

SI4754-A40-AM

Silicon Labs

RF RX AM/FM 520KHZ-1.71MHZ 32QFN

840

ATA8203P3C-TKQW

ATA8203P3C-TKQW

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

RF RECEIVER UHF 315MHZ 20SSO

3976

MLX71120KLQ-AAA-000-TU

MLX71120KLQ-AAA-000-TU

Melexis

RF RCVR ASK/FM 300-930MHZ 32QFN

482

MAX41470GTC+

MAX41470GTC+

Maxim Integrated

ASK AND FSK, SPI INTERFACE

1464

MICRF221AYQS

MICRF221AYQS

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

RF RX ASK/OOK 850-950MHZ 16QSOP

480

SI4757HEADUNIT

SI4757HEADUNIT

Silicon Labs

RF RECEIVER KIT DEV SI4757 32QFN

0

SI4705-D60-GUR

SI4705-D60-GUR

Silicon Labs

RF RCVR FM 64MHZ-108MHZ 24SSOP

0

RF Receivers

1. Overview

RF (Radio Frequency) and IF (Intermediate Frequency) receivers are critical components in wireless communication systems, responsible for signal acquisition, frequency conversion, and data demodulation. RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) RF receivers specialize in decoding signals from RFID tags for identification and tracking. These technologies enable modern applications such as IoT, 5G networks, logistics automation, and smart devices, forming the backbone of wireless connectivity.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional FeaturesApplication Examples
Superheterodyne ReceiverConverts RF signals to fixed IF for stable filtering and amplificationCellular base stations, broadcast receivers
Direct Conversion ReceiverConverts RF directly to baseband, eliminating IF stageSoftware-defined radios, WLAN access points
Zero-IF ReceiverReduces complexity with direct downconversion to DCBluetooth modules, IoT sensors
RFID HF/LF ReadersOperates at 125kHz-134kHz (LF) and 13.56MHz (HF) for short-range ID readingAccess control systems, animal tracking
UHF RFID Readers300MHz-900MHz range for extended read range (up to 15m)Inventory management, supply chain logistics

3. Structure and Components

Typical RF receiver architecture includes:

  • Antenna interface with impedance matching circuits
  • Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) for signal boosting
  • Mixer and local oscillator (LO) for frequency conversion
  • IF filters and amplifiers for signal conditioning
  • Demodulator (AM/FM/PM/PSK/QAM compatible)
  • Digital baseband processor (for RFID: tag protocol decoding)
RFID readers additionally integrate tag collision avoidance algorithms and power management for passive tag activation.

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Frequency RangeOperational bandwidth (e.g., 860-960MHz for UHF RFID)Determines application compatibility
SensitivityMinimum detectable signal (-120dBm typical)Impacts read range and reliability
SelectivityAdjacent channel rejection (measured in dBc)Reduces interference in dense environments
Dynamic RangeSignal amplitude tolerance (e.g., 80dB)Prevents distortion in variable signal strength
Bit Error Rate (BER)Data integrity metric (e.g., <10-6)Defines communication quality

5. Application Fields

Major industries include:

  • Telecommunications (5G NR receivers, satellite modems)
  • Healthcare (RFID asset tracking in hospitals)
  • Retail (smart shelves with UHF RFID readers)
  • Industrial IoT (wireless sensor networks)
  • Transportation (V2X communication receivers)
Case study: Amazon's warehouse robots use UHF RFID readers to manage inventory with 99.9% accuracy.

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductFeatures
Texas InstrumentsCapture CC1310Sub-1GHz wireless MCU for long-range sensing
Nordic SemiconductornRF52840Bluetooth 5.2 + NFC receiver for wearables
ImpinjR420 RFID ReaderSupports 16 antenna ports for retail analytics
STMicroelectronicsCR95HF13.56MHz RFID reader for contactless payments

7. Selection Guidelines

Key factors to consider:

  1. Match frequency range with regulatory standards (FCC, ETSI)
  2. Balance sensitivity vs. power consumption for battery-powered devices
  3. Verify protocol compatibility (ISO 14443, EPC Gen2)
  4. Evaluate environmental robustness (IP rating, temperature range)
  5. Assess integration complexity (package size, interface type - SPI/I2C)
Recommend prototyping with evaluation kits before mass deployment.

8. Industry Trends

Future development focuses on:

  • Higher integration (RFSoC solutions combining ADC/DAC)
  • AI-enhanced signal processing for 6G receivers
  • Energy harvesting RFID readers for sustainable IoT
  • mmWave receiver adoption for automotive radar
  • Standardization of RAIN RFID for global supply chains
Market growth projected at 9.2% CAGR through 2027, driven by industrial automation and contactless payment adoption.

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top