RFID Antennas

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
V680-HS52-R 2M

V680-HS52-R 2M

Omron Automation & Safety Services

ROBOTIC HF M22 DIA. ANTENNA

0

3512.000.01

3512.000.01

FEIG ELECTRONIC

ID ISC.ANTS370/270-A HF SHIELDED

0

V740-A01 20M

V740-A01 20M

Omron Automation & Safety Services

ANTENNA CABLE 20 METER

0

V680-HS65-R 12.5M

V680-HS65-R 12.5M

Omron Automation & Safety Services

V680 HEAD 100MM SQ FLEX 12.5M

0

RR-IDISC-ANT14-7B

RR-IDISC-ANT14-7B

Texas Instruments

RFID ANT TYPEB 1400X700 13.56MHZ

0

RI-ANT-S02C-00

RI-ANT-S02C-00

Texas Instruments

RFID STICK ANT W/3M CABLE 134.2K

0

113990051

113990051

Seeed

NFC ANTENNA

0

RI-ANT-T01A-00

RI-ANT-T01A-00

Texas Instruments

RFID 6000 300MM GATE ANT 13.56M

0

RR-IDISC-ANT1-1-A

RR-IDISC-ANT1-1-A

Texas Instruments

RFID ANT 100X100MM FOR IDISC-M02

0

1451.000.00

1451.000.00

FEIG ELECTRONIC

ID ISC.ANT300/300 ANTENNA

0

ANFCA-5035-A01-IPEX

ANFCA-5035-A01-IPEX

Abracon

NFC ANTENNA 13.56MHZ W IPEX CON

0

RI-ANT-S02C-30

RI-ANT-S02C-30

Texas Instruments

RFID STICK ANT W/3M CABLE 134.2K

0

ANFCA-2525-A02

ANFCA-2525-A02

Abracon

NFC STAMP FLEX ANTENNA 25X25MM

0

RR-IDISC-ANT14-7C

RR-IDISC-ANT14-7C

Texas Instruments

RFID ANT TYPEC 1400X700 13.56MHZ

0

RI-ANT-S01C-00

RI-ANT-S01C-00

Texas Instruments

RFID STICK ANT W/1M CABLE 134.2K

0

B82450A4904A000

B82450A4904A000

TDK EPCOS

RFID TRANSPONDER COIL 125KHZ SMT

0

ANFCA-4535-A01

ANFCA-4535-A01

Abracon

NFC STAMP FLEX ANTENNA 45X35MM

0

RI-ANT-S01C-30

RI-ANT-S01C-30

Texas Instruments

RFID STICK ANT W/1M CABLE 134.2K

0

RI-ANT-G02E-30

RI-ANT-G02E-30

Texas Instruments

RFID GATE ANTENNA SMALL 134.2KHZ

0

RR-IDISC-ANT14-7A

RR-IDISC-ANT14-7A

Texas Instruments

RFID ANT 1400X700MM 13.56MHZ

0

RFID Antennas

1. Overview

RF/IF (Radio Frequency/Intermediate Frequency) and RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) antennas are critical components in wireless communication systems. These antennas enable the transmission and reception of radio frequency signals for data exchange between devices and RFID tags. Their importance spans industries such as logistics, healthcare, automotive, and retail, where they drive applications like asset tracking, access control, and inventory management. RFID antennas operate across low-frequency (LF), high-frequency (HF), ultra-high-frequency (UHF), and microwave bands, adapting to diverse environmental and technical requirements.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

Type Functional Characteristics Application Examples
Dipole Antennas Balanced radiation patterns, linear polarization, wide bandwidth UHF RFID readers, warehouse management systems
Loop Antennas Compact size, high magnetic coupling efficiency HF RFID access control, contactless payment systems
Fractal Antennas Multiband operation, reduced physical size Mobile RFID readers, IoT devices
Planar Inverted-F Antennas (PIFA) Low profile, high efficiency, impedance tunability Smartphones with NFC, wearable RFID tags
Flexible Antennas Conformal design, durability in dynamic environments Logistics tracking, textile integration

3. Structure and Components

RFID antennas typically consist of conductive elements (copper, aluminum, or printed silver ink), dielectric substrates (FR4, Rogers materials), and impedance matching networks. Dipole antennas use two symmetrical conductive arms, while loop antennas form closed-loop structures. Fractal designs employ self-repeating geometric patterns for multiband functionality. Flexible antennas integrate conductive polymers or textiles for bendable applications. Advanced models incorporate RFIC (Radio Frequency Integrated Circuit) chips for signal processing and impedance matching.

4. Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Description Importance
Operating Frequency Defined band (e.g., 125kHz, 13.56MHz, 900MHz, 2.4GHz) Determines compatibility with RFID protocols and regulatory standards
Gain (dBi) Signal directionality and strength Affects read range and interference resistance
Impedance Matching ( ) 50 or 75 standardization Ensures maximum power transfer and minimal signal loss
Polarization Linear, circular, or elliptical wave orientation Impacts performance in orientation-sensitive applications
Environmental Tolerance Temperature (-40 C to +85 C), humidity, and vibration resistance Guarantees reliability in industrial settings

5. Application Fields

  • Logistics & Supply Chain: UHF RFID portals for pallet tracking
  • Healthcare: HF antennas in medical equipment monitoring
  • Automotive: LF antennas for tire pressure sensing systems
  • Retail: Circularly polarized antennas for anti-theft systems
  • Manufacturing: Industrial RFID readers for asset lifecycle management

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

Manufacturer Representative Product Key Features
Alien Technology ALN-9662 UHF R420 reader antenna with 8dBi gain, IP68 rating
Impinj ItemSense Platform High-accuracy UHF antenna arrays for inventory tracking
Nordic Semiconductor nRF52840 DK Multiband BLE/NFC antenna reference design
Texas Instruments RI-AMC-4C18-EM HF 13.56MHz antenna for contactless payment systems
Honeywell XF5800 Industrial RFID reader with adaptive polarization control

7. Selection Recommendations

Key considerations include:
- Frequency alignment: Match antenna bands with RFID protocol requirements (e.g., ISO 14443 Type A/B for HF).
- Environmental factors: Choose waterproof (IP67+) models for outdoor use.
- Read range: High-gain antennas (>6dBi) for long-range UHF applications.
- Integration constraints: Flexible antennas for curved surfaces or wearable devices.
- Cost-efficiency: Passive antennas for low-power systems, active designs for extended coverage.

8. Industry Trends

Future developments include:
- Millimeter-wave RFID: 60GHz+ antennas for sub-centimeter accuracy in RTLS (Real-Time Location Systems).
- AI-optimized designs: Machine learning-driven impedance matching for dynamic environments.
- Energy harvesting: Integrated solar/RF energy collection for battery-free IoT nodes.
- Biodegradable antennas: Eco-friendly cellulose-based substrates for disposable RFID tags.
- 5G convergence: MIMO antenna arrays supporting both RFID and cellular IoT protocols.

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