The present invention relates to an antenna construction according to the preamble of Claim 1.
The invention also relates to the operation of the antenna construction.
The antenna is used, for example, with remote-identifier circuits.
The use of RFID will increase in the next few years. It will mostly replace, for example, optically-read bar-codes in product marking. An RFID transponder is a mark that can be read remotely by means of a radio signal, and which comprises an antenna, a voltage-generating circuit, rf-signal modulation/demodulation circuits, and a memory. It is possible to both write in the memory and to read from it with the aid of a radio signal. There are several different types of RFID transponder: passive and active, as well as those to which a connection can be made inductively, capacitively, or with the aid of a radio-frequency radiation field. Passive transponders generate the electrical energy they need from the rf field aimed at them. In active transponders, there is a separate battery or other power supply. Inductively connected remote sensors typically operate at frequencies of 100-125 kHz or 13.56 MHz.
The most preferred embodiments of the present invention relate to passive RFID transponders readable using a radio-frequency radiation field, but the antenna type is advantageous in all applications in which the antenna is required to have a long reading distance, a thin structure, and to be able to be attached to some base, for example, the surface of goods or packages. Such a surface is usually flat. The frequencies most advantageously suitable for the invention are 869 MHz and 2.45 Ghz.
An RFID transponder is a small device comprising an antenna, a microcircuit, and a memory, which transmits the contents of its memory by backscattering, when it receives a transmit command from a reading device and the reading device illuminates it with a radio signal. In a passive RFID transponder there is no battery, instead it draws the operating power it requires from the radio signal transmitted to it. The transmission of power and information between the transponder and the reading device can take place with the aid of a magnetic field, an electrical field, or a radiating radio signal. In many transponder applications, it is important for the distance between the reader and the transponder to be long—even up to several meters.
Attempts have already been made to use RFID transponders commercially even on an extensive scale. However, RFID transponders, which in laboratory conditions have achieved long reading distances, have, in practical situations, been measured as having considerably shorter reading distances. The deterioration in the results has been caused by the fact that the base, to which the transponder is attached, has caused a considerable change in the properties of the antenna of the transponder.
A PIFA is an antenna that is used very widely in, for example, mobile telephone applications. Generally it is fed from near a fold, so that the impedance can be brought to close to 50 Ohm. The feed also takes place through the ‘ground plane’. A PIFA antenna can also be applied in connection with RFID circuits, in which the real component of the impedance is large, as the feed point is brought close to the open end of the antenna. In this embodiment, a via is required to the ground plane of the PIFA for the RFID circuit. If, in addition to this, the antenna is slightly shorter than one quarter of the wavelength, the antenna will remain inductive and the impedance can be adapted to an RFID circuit with capacitive input impedance. A problem with a PIFA antenna is that it requires a via and this increase manufacturing costs significantly. If the antenna is manufactured by exploiting, for example, high-frequency circuit-board technology, the cost of the antenna can be as much as several euros.
The present invention is intended to eliminate the defects of the prior art to create an entirely new type of system, method, and procedure for making power measurements.
The invention is based on the electronic component, such as an RFID circuit, being attached to one surface of the antenna structure and connected from the one antenna terminal to the transmission line and from the other terminal either to a second transmission line, or to the fold.
More specifically, the antenna construction according to the invention is characterized by what is stated in the characterizing portion of Claim 1.
The procedure according to the invention is, in turn, characterized by what is stated in the characterizing portion of Claim 7.
Considerable advantages are gained with the aid of the invention.
With the aid of embodiments of the invention, a thin antenna structure is achieved, which has a very long reading distance. The antenna type is also immune to the surface to which it is attached. The antenna type according to the embodiments of the invention is also economical to manufacture, because vias are not required. In addition, the sensor structure can also be easily and at low cost combined, for example with RFID electronics.
In the following, the invention is examined with the aid of examples of embodiments according to the accompanying figures.
The typical remote reading system according to
The present invention presents an antenna with a high efficiency, in which there is no need for a via. We will refer to the antenna as a planar asymmetrically fed folder antenna (PAFFA).
The location of the circuit on the antenna can vary greatly, always according to the impedance of the RFID circuit.
Because a via is not required in the antenna according to the invention, it is possible to make the antenna, for example, on flat plastic, on which the antenna pattern is built by etching or growing. An RFID circuit can be connected to this construction. If the plastic is sufficiently thin (1 mm-2 mm), it can be brought to the process directly from a roll. The line can be broad, so that the machine can produce several antennae parallel to each other. After the attachment of the circuit 4, the wide construction is cut into parts (the width of one web is twice the final width of the antenna). Finally the construction is heated and folded and cut to form a separate RFID transponder. If the original thickness of the plastic is 1 mm, the thickness of the insulation after the forming of the antenna will be 2 mm, which, according to simulations and tests will result in a reasonably good antenna. Thicker plastic can also possibly be used, in which case the efficiency of the antenna can be improved. Because the raw material of the process can be brought straight from a roll and the growing or etching of the antenna image can be made continuous, the entire process can be made continuous and subsequently very economical. Antennae according to the invention can also be produced in such a way that the antenna image is made on thin plastic, for example, by etching. Next, the antenna is connected to the RFID circuit 4 and the band is cut into a band. This construction can be folded over the edge of the plastic sheet, in such a way that an antenna like that disclosed in this invention is finally formed. This process to can be made considerably economical, as vias are not needed.
The invention has presented a method, in which an RFID circuit is connected to a planarly folded antenna. We refer to the antenna as a PAFFA. The invention has presented a folder antenna, the surface-metallized layer contains a transmission line with a length of about (2 n−1)λ/4, in which n=1,2,3, . . . . In practice, the best result is obtained by selecting n=1. The RFID circuit is placed at or near to the end of this transmission line. The circuit can also be embedded planarly in insulation material. At the other terminal of the RFID circuit is installed a nλ/2-long transmission line, which is terminated at the fold, or a (2 n−1)λ/4-long transmission line, which is terminated at the open load. In addition, the antenna is shaped in such a way that the transmission line is broad at the maximum point of the current and narrow at the minimum point of the current. By means of this arrangement, we are able to reduce the size of the antenna while nevertheless keeping the efficiency high. The most significant difference of the antenna from presently used antennas arranged on top of metal is that the RFID circuit need not be galvanically grounded through the insulation layer.
The lengths of the transmission lines 3 refer to the lengths of the lines drawn in the middle of the transmission lines 3 shown in the figures in this application.
In practice, there is also a need to make narrow and long structures, so that it is worth giving the structure presented above a slightly different shape. The principle of course remains, but the outward appearance clearly changes in these alternative solutions of the invention. These alternative solutions are shown in
In
A PAFFA antenna can also be implemented with a construction according to
An electronic circuit, such as an RFID circuit can be connected to the transmission line 3, either at its end or, according to
The antenna circuit can also be folded at both ends or from two sides, even though this manner may be technically more difficult and more expensive to implement than a single fold.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20050507 | May 2005 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2006/000149 | 5/8/2006 | WO | 00 | 2/21/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/120287 | 11/16/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090096612 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |