“Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags

UHF RFID tags need to be attached or embedded into various objects. Unlike traditional free-standing antennas, UHF antenna shapes and form factors may vary significantly. There have been no systematic methods that facilitate the design practice of antenna with unconventional shapes. In this paper, u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Silong Wang, Yulong Liu, Terry Tao Ye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2021-01-01
Series:International Journal of Antennas and Propagation
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/9965252
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spelling doaj-4d1d3c0036394ce58cd3d2b2566dc2d22021-07-12T02:12:47ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Antennas and Propagation1687-58772021-01-01202110.1155/2021/9965252“Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID TagsSilong Wang0Yulong Liu1Terry Tao Ye2Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and University Key Laboratory of Advanced Wireless Communications of Guangdong ProvinceDepartment of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and University Key Laboratory of Advanced Wireless Communications of Guangdong ProvinceDepartment of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and University Key Laboratory of Advanced Wireless Communications of Guangdong ProvinceUHF RFID tags need to be attached or embedded into various objects. Unlike traditional free-standing antennas, UHF antenna shapes and form factors may vary significantly. There have been no systematic methods that facilitate the design practice of antenna with unconventional shapes. In this paper, using the geometries of 26 English letters (in capital) as examples, we explore the general methodology of shape-specific antenna design. More specifically, we show that 26 letter geometries can be categorized into 9 groups, and the antennas in each group can be divided and conquered into standard baseline geometries. Through prototypes and measurements, we demonstrate that each letter-shaped antenna, although exhibiting different gains and radiations, can achieve satisfactory performance, as compared to standard UHF dipole antennas. Specifically, letters “M” and “J” achieve the longest reading range of more than 20 meters with a good radiation pattern, which is comparable or even better than many commercial UHF RFID tags.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/9965252
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silong Wang
Yulong Liu
Terry Tao Ye
spellingShingle Silong Wang
Yulong Liu
Terry Tao Ye
“Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags
International Journal of Antennas and Propagation
author_facet Silong Wang
Yulong Liu
Terry Tao Ye
author_sort Silong Wang
title “Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags
title_short “Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags
title_full “Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags
title_fullStr “Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags
title_full_unstemmed “Unconventionally Shaped” Antenna Design for UHF RFID Tags
title_sort “unconventionally shaped” antenna design for uhf rfid tags
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Antennas and Propagation
issn 1687-5877
publishDate 2021-01-01
description UHF RFID tags need to be attached or embedded into various objects. Unlike traditional free-standing antennas, UHF antenna shapes and form factors may vary significantly. There have been no systematic methods that facilitate the design practice of antenna with unconventional shapes. In this paper, using the geometries of 26 English letters (in capital) as examples, we explore the general methodology of shape-specific antenna design. More specifically, we show that 26 letter geometries can be categorized into 9 groups, and the antennas in each group can be divided and conquered into standard baseline geometries. Through prototypes and measurements, we demonstrate that each letter-shaped antenna, although exhibiting different gains and radiations, can achieve satisfactory performance, as compared to standard UHF dipole antennas. Specifically, letters “M” and “J” achieve the longest reading range of more than 20 meters with a good radiation pattern, which is comparable or even better than many commercial UHF RFID tags.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/9965252
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AT yulongliu unconventionallyshapedantennadesignforuhfrfidtags
AT terrytaoye unconventionallyshapedantennadesignforuhfrfidtags
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