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The considerable growth of RFID is currently accompanied by the
development of numerous identification technologies that complement
those already available while seeking to answer new problems.
Chipless RFID is one example. The goal is to both significantly
reduce the price of the tag and increase the amount of information
it contains, in order to compete with the barcode while retaining
the benefits of a flexible reading approach based on radio
communication. To solve the problem of the number of bits, this
book describes the possibility of coding the information at the
level of the overall shape of the RCS of the tag, which would
facilitate reaching very large quantities. The design of the tags
then returns to the resolution of the inverse problem of the
electromagnetic signature. The proposed design methodology
regularizes the problem by decomposing the signature on a basis of
elementary patterns whose signature is chosen in advance.
Chipless RFID Reader Design for Ultra-Wideband Technology: Design,
Realization and Characterization deals with the efficient design of
Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) based embedded systems for
chipless readers, providing a reading technique based on
polarization diversity that is shown with the aim of reading
cross-polarized, chipless tags independently from their
orientation. This approach is valuable because it does not give any
constraint at the tag design level. This book presents the
state-of-the-art of chipless RFID systems, also providing useful
comparisons. The international regulations that limit the UWB
emission are taken into consideration, along with design guidance.
Two designed, realized, and characterized reader prototypes are
proposed. Sampling noise reduction, reading time, and cost
effectiveness are also introduced and taken into consideration.
Chipless RFID based on RF Encoding Particle: Realization, Coding
and Reading System explores the field of chipless identification
based on the RF Encoding Particle (REP). The book covers the
possibility of collecting information remotely with RF waves (RFID)
with totally passive tags without wire, batteries, and chips, and
even printed on paper. Despite the many benefits of RFID,
deployment is still hindered by several economic and technological
factors. Among these barriers are the high cost of tags, lack of
reliability and security in the information contained in the RFID
chip, and how tags are 'recycled.' This book focuses on the
development of chipless RFID tags, representing a new family of low
cost tags. With this technology information is extracted from the
electromagnetic response of the tag, which depends only on its
geometry. Various solutions have been developed by the authors to
increase the amount of information, reduce the surface of the tag,
or improve the robustness of detection. Considerations such as
realization using paper substrate, the development of a low cost
detection system, and measurements in a real environment have been
addressed for practical implementation.
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