RFID
[Radio Frequency ID]
RFID
[Radio Frequency ID]
What is an RF-ID system
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a chip, or RFID tag, attached to an object that can be read at a short distance via radio waves by a tag reader.
These items can be moved close to or away from each other and are used for many processes. From credit cards to inventory tracking to ticketing. The components can be broken down as a tag (transponder), a reader, an antenna and possibly an interface. Sometimes the reader and antenna are enclosed in a single housing, other times they are two separate components.
It is common to add an architecture for this interface that can translate data into other communication protocols and/or manage a network with multiple readers.
Radio Frequency Identification System
Integration and usefulness
RFID tags are applied to virtually every product manufactured today, from clothing to furniture, medical products, home appliances and cars. RFID is an integral part of any automated production system.
AGV and AGC
Consumables
Fuel supply
Goods
Factory process controls
Industrial identification
OEM & Custom Development
Personal and vehicle identification
Supply chain visibility
… and more.
We offer integrated RFID solutions for many industries. RFID technology helps increase speed, accuracy and visibility of inventory as well as profit margins.
Avantajele oferite de RF-ID
Simplification of accounting records
Reduce management costs
Contactless and error-free inventory
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) uses electromagnetic fields to automatically identify and track tags attached to objects. An RFID system consists of a small radio transponder, a radio receiver and a transmitter. When triggered by an electromagnetic interrogation pulse from a nearby RFID reader device, the tag transmits digital data, usually an identifying inventory number, back to the reader. For example, this number can be used to track inventory goods.
What does a basic RFID system look like?
We help companies track and trace assets using RFID
We help companies track and trace assets using RFID
Where is RFID technology used and how many types of tags are there?
RFID tags are used in many industries. For example, an RFID tag attached to a car during production can be used to track its progress through the assembly line, RFID-tagged pharmaceuticals can be tracked through warehouses, and RFID microchips implanted in animals allow them to be identified. Tags can also be used in stores to speed up the ordering process and prevent theft.
1. Passive labels
A data-bearing tag, which can be RO (read-only) or RW (read-write), remains dormant until activated by a reader’s RF signal. Once activated by the reader, the tag starts transmitting its data back to the reader. Tags usually have an infinite life in terms of reads and a finite life in terms of the amount of writes, about 100,000 writes are possible.
2. Active tags
Active RFID systems use battery-powered RFID tags that continuously transmit their own signal. Active RFID tags are commonly used as “beacons” to accurately track the real-time location of assets or in high-speed environments such as toll collection. Active tags offer a much longer read range than passive tags, but are also much more expensive.