RFID Evaluation and Development Kits, Boards

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
AT90RFD-09

AT90RFD-09

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT REF DESIGN FOR AT90RF135602

0

DV103003

DV103003

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT DEV MICROID 13.56MHZ

0

AT88CK201BK

AT88CK201BK

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

BRD CRYPTORF READER AT88RF1354

0

DV103002

DV103002

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT DEV MICROID 125KHZ ANTI-COLL

0

ATAK2270UG

ATAK2270UG

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT IDIC UPGRADE TMEB8704-ATAK22

0

ATAB5276

ATAB5276

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

BOARD DEV ANT DRVR TPM ATA5276

0

AT88SCRF-S7DK2P

AT88SCRF-S7DK2P

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT DEMO CRYPTORF W/READER

0

AT89C5121-SK1

AT89C5121-SK1

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT STARTER FOR T8XC5121

0

ATAB5279

ATAB5279

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

BOARD TRANSMITTER LF W/ATA5279

0

AT24RF08-EK

AT24RF08-EK

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT EVAL FOR AT24RF08CN-10SC

0

AT88SC6416CRF-DK

AT88SC6416CRF-DK

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

DEVELOPMENT KIT

0

ATAK2270

ATAK2270

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT EVAL RFID IDIC 125KHZ

0

ATAB-LFMB-75

ATAB-LFMB-75

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

MAINBOARD LF W/AVR FOR ATA5275

0

89C5121-SK1

89C5121-SK1

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

KIT SMART CARD FOR AT89C5121

0

RFID Evaluation and Development Kits, Boards

1. Overview

RF/IF (Radio Frequency/Intermediate Frequency) and RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) evaluation and development kits are essential tools for designing, testing, and optimizing wireless communication systems. These kits enable engineers to prototype hardware, validate protocols, and ensure compliance with industry standards. RFID systems utilize electromagnetic fields to automatically identify and track tags attached to objects, while RF/IF components handle signal processing between antennas and baseband systems. These technologies are critical in IoT, supply chain management, automotive systems, and healthcare.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional FeaturesApplication Examples
RFID Reader KitsSupport ISO/IEC 14443, NFC, UHF protocols; include antennas and SDKsContactless payment terminals, access control systems
RFID Tag EmulatorsSimulate passive/active tags for protocol testingInventory management, logistics tracking
RF/IF Transceiver BoardsCover 300 MHz 6 GHz; integrate frequency synthesizers and ADCs5G prototyping, software-defined radios
Development Boards with MCUsEmbedded ARM/FPGA processors for algorithm implementationSmart metering, industrial automation

3. Structure and Components

A typical kit includes:

  • RF front-end modules (amplifiers, filters, mixers)
  • Baseband processors with ADC/DAC interfaces
  • Programmable antennas (dipole, loop, patch types)
  • Onboard memory (Flash, EEPROM) for tag data storage
  • Debug interfaces (UART, SPI, USB 2.0/3.0)
  • Power management units for battery or USB-powered operation

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Frequency Range125 kHz 900 MHz (LF/HF/UHF) or 2.4 GHz ISM bandDetermines application compatibility (e.g., 13.56 MHz for NFC)
Read/Write Distance0 15 cm (HF) or 0 15 m (UHF)Impacts deployment scenarios
Data Transfer Rate106 kbps 848 kbps (ISO/IEC 14443)Affects system throughput
Output Power0 30 dBm adjustableRegulatory compliance (FCC, ETSI)
Protocol SupportEPCglobal Gen2, ISO 15693, LoRaWANInteroperability assurance

5. Application Areas

Major industries include:

  • Retail: Inventory tracking (e.g., Amazon Go stores)
  • Healthcare: Patient monitoring and medication management
  • Automotive: Tire pressure monitoring systems (TPMS)
  • Logistics: Package tracking with UHF RFID portals
  • Industrial IoT: Predictive maintenance sensors

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

VendorKey ProductFeatures
NXP SemiconductorsMifare SDK Starter KitSupports 13.56 MHz, includes JavaCard development tools
TI (Texas Instruments)RF430FRL152HEVMLow-power HF RFID sensor tag development
STMicroelectronicsST25R3911B-DISCOMulti-protocol reader with NFC and FeliCa support
ImpinjImpinj Speedway R420UHF Gen2 reader for supply chain applications

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations:

  1. Frequency compatibility with target environment
  2. Regulatory certifications (FCC, CE, RoHS)
  3. Integration with existing development ecosystems (e.g., Arduino, STM32Cube)
  4. Debugging capabilities (JTAG/SWD support)
  5. Cost-to-performance ratio for volume production

8. Industry Trends

Future directions include:

  • Integration with AI for adaptive frequency hopping
  • Advancements in sub-6 GHz 5G RF front-ends
  • Energy-harvesting RFID tags for battery-free IoT
  • Increased adoption of RISC-V-based programmable transceivers
  • Expansion of RFID into medical implant tracking (ISO 18000-7 compliant)

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top