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Multiresonator-Based Chipless RFID

by Preradovic, Stevan.
Authors: Karmakar, Nemai Chandra.%author. | SpringerLink (Online service) Physical details: XX, 172 p. online resource. ISBN: 1461420954 Subject(s): Engineering. | Mathematics. | Electronics. | Engineering. | Electronics and Microelectronics, Instrumentation. | Signal, Image and Speech Processing. | Information and Communication, Circuits.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 621.381 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Low Cost Chipless RFID Systems -- Spiral Resonators -- Ultra Wideband Antennas -- Chipless RFID Tag -- Transceiver Design for RFID Tag Reader -- Chipless RFID Tag-Reader System -- Conclusions and Future Works.

This vital new resource offers engineers and researchers a window on important new technology that will supersede the barcode and is destined to change the face of logistics and product data handling. In the last two decades, radio-frequency identification has grown fast, with accelerated take-up of RFID into the mainstream through its adoption by key users such as Wal-Mart, K-Mart and the US Department of Defense. RFID has many potential applications due to its flexibility, capability to operate out of line of sight, and its high data-carrying capacity. Yet despite optimistic projections of a market worth $25 billion by 2018, potential users are concerned about costs and investment returns. Clearly demonstrating the need for a fully printable chipless RFID tag as well as a powerful and efficient reader to assimilate the tag’s data, this book moves on to describe both. Introducing the general concepts in the field including technical data, it then describes how a chipless RFID tag can be made using a planar disc-loaded monopole antenna and an asymmetrical coupled spiral multi-resonator. The tag encodes data via the “spectral signature” technique and is now in its third-generation version with an ultra-wide band (UWB) reader operating at between 5 and 10.7GHz.

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