RFID Transponders, Tags

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
IUC77-F151-M-GBL

IUC77-F151-M-GBL

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 865-928MHZ ENCAP

45

U-P4-RX

U-P4-RX

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W ENCAP

2

IUC76-34-M-FR2

IUC76-34-M-FR2

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 902-928MHZ COIN

14

IPC03-30P

IPC03-30P

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 125KHZ COIN

8

IPC03-50P

IPC03-50P

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 125KHZ COIN

17

IPH-18GM-V1

IPH-18GM-V1

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 125KHZ ENCAP

2

IUH-F190-V1-FR2-02

IUH-F190-V1-FR2-02

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 902-928MHZ ENCAP

1

IPC03-12.4

IPC03-12.4

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 125KHZ COIN

13

IQH1-18GM-V1

IQH1-18GM-V1

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 13.56MHZ ENCAP

1

IPT1-FP

IPT1-FP

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 125KHZ ENCAP

3

IPC03-16GK

IPC03-16GK

Pepperl+Fuchs

RFID TAG R/W 125KHZ COIN

4

RFID Transponders, Tags

1. Overview

RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) transponders and tags are wireless communication devices that use electromagnetic fields to identify and track objects. They consist of a microchip for data storage and an antenna for signal transmission. Operating in RF/IF (Radio Frequency/Intermediate Frequency) ranges, these devices enable non-contact data exchange between tags and readers. Their importance lies in enabling automation across industries, including supply chain management, access control, and smart manufacturing, by providing real-time asset visibility and data capture.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional FeaturesApplication Examples
Passive RFID TagsNo internal power source; powered by reader's electromagnetic fieldWarehouse inventory tracking, retail payment systems
Active RFID TagsIntegrated battery for enhanced transmission rangeContainer tracking in ports, vehicle fleet management
HF (High-Frequency) Tags13.56 MHz operation; supports NFC protocolsSmart posters, electronic ticketing
UHF (Ultra-High-Frequency) Tags860-960 MHz range; long read range (up to 12m)Logistics pallet tracking, livestock identification
IF-RFID HybridIntermediate frequency conversion for improved signal processingIndustrial automation sensors, precision manufacturing

3. Structure and Components

A typical RFID transponder comprises: - Chipset: Contains memory (EEPROM/FRAM) and modulation/demodulation circuits - Antenna: Copper/Aluminum etched traces for electromagnetic wave coupling - Substrate: PET/Flex PCB base material (0.1-0.3mm thickness) - Encapsulation: Epoxy coating or RFID-specific adhesive layers Advanced models integrate sensors (temperature/humidity) and security encryption modules.

4. Key Technical Parameters

ParameterImportance
Frequency Range (125kHz-900MHz)Determines read range and material penetration
Memory Capacity (64-8192 bits)Impacts data storage for EPC codes and sensor data
Read/Write Speed (50-600kbps)Affects throughput in high-speed conveyor systems
Operating Temperature (-40 C to +85 C)Critical for industrial environments
Antenna Gain (0-8dBi)Optimizes signal strength in metal-rich environments

5. Application Fields

  • Logistics: Parcel sorting systems (DHL, FedEx)
  • Retail: RFID-enabled point-of-sale terminals (Zara, Amazon Go)
  • Healthcare: Medical asset tracking (BD Pyxis dispensers)
  • Manufacturing: Tool lifecycle management (Siemens Industry 4.0 solutions)
  • Transportation: ETC (Electronic Toll Collection) systems (China's Expressway Network)

6. Leading Manufacturers

ManufacturerRepresentative Product
ImpinjMonza R4-P tag chips
Alien TechnologyALN-9828 UHF tags
NXP SemiconductorsICODE DNA HF tags
STMicroelectronicsST25DV series NFC tags
RF Micro DevicesLow-power IF transceiver modules

7. Selection Guidelines

  1. Match frequency to environment (LF for metal environments, UHF for long-range)
  2. Choose memory size based on EPC code requirements
  3. Consider enclosure rating (IP67 for outdoor/wet locations)
  4. Evaluate read sensitivity (-10dBm to -25dBm typical range)
  5. Verify compliance with ISO/IEC 18000 standards

8. Industry Trends

Future developments include: - Miniaturization (<0.5mm chip tags for textile integration) - Energy-harvesting passive tags with sensor fusion - Blockchain-integrated RFID for supply chain security - 5G-enabled RFID for real-time location systems (RTLS) - Biodegradable tags for sustainable retail applications

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top