This application claims the priority benefit of French patent application number 08/52103, filed on Mar. 31, 2008, entitled “TERMINAL OF RADIO-FREQUENCY TRANSMISSION/RECEPTION BY INDUCTIVE COUPLING,” which is hereby incorporated by. reference to the maximum extent allowable by law.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to the transmission of data by inductive coupling and, more specifically, to a contactless transceiver terminal capable of operating in a first so-called reader mode where the terminal communicates with a distant electromagnetic transponder, and a second so-called card mode where the terminal operates as an electromagnetic transponder with respect to another terminal.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
A contactless card reader transmits a magnetic field to an oscillating circuit of a card generally having no autonomous power supply. In the reader-to-card direction, the data are generally encoded, then transmitted in amplitude modulation of a carrier for driving an oscillating circuit of the reader. In the card (transponder)-to-reader direction, the card circuits modulate the load formed by the oscillating circuit of the card on the magnetic field of the reader, with a generally so-called retromodulation circuit, for example by short-circuiting the antenna circuit by means of a switch.
A radio-frequency terminal transmitting data by inductive coupling, capable of operating in card mode and in reader mode, needs to be able to manage the coding and the decoding of data frames according to different protocols.
Standards set the communication protocols. Reference can be made to ISO standard 14443 as an example, which defines that the antenna circuit of a reader is driven at a frequency on the order of 13.56 MHz. The data transmission in the reader-to-card direction is performed by amplitude modulation of the generated field with a modulation depth of 100% (ISO standard 14443-2/A) or of 10% (ISO standard 14443-2/B). In the card-to-reader direction, the data transmission is performed by modulation of the load at the rate of a sub-carrier at a frequency on the order of 847 kHz, this modulation being coded according to a Manchester type for standard 14443-2/A or to a BPSK type for standard 14443-2/B.
In card mode, the circuit supply is generally induced by the magnetic field generated by the reader which forms the communication channel between the card and the reader. The A.C. signal for driving the oscillating circuit of the reader then forms a remote-supply carrier for the card.
In reader mode, the terminal needs to be powered (by a battery or by a connection to the power line distribution system) to transmit the magnetic field to a card.
In dedicated devices, the reader antenna (or inductance of the oscillating circuit) is often adapted to the transmit frequency (for example, 13.56 MHz) and to the impedance of the A.C. signal generator, while the antenna (inductance of the resonant circuit) of a card is often tuned to the operating frequency of the system (for example, 13.56 MHz).
If the reader antenna is tuned, but mismatched, the transmission is not optimal. Further, the reflected wave linked to the mismatch disturbs the detection of the signal retromodulated by the card.
Conversely, if the card antenna is matched but off-tune, the power recovery is not optimized.
As a result, antenna circuits are generally not compatible for an operation in card mode and in reader mode. In particular, it is difficult to use a single antenna to design a device which can operate both in reader mode and in card mode.
Document EP-A-1327222 describes a contactless integrated circuit reader capable of operating in reader mode and in card mode, having its receive portion associated with inductive and capacitive low-pass and band-pass filters to allow an operation according to different protocols. Such operations can only be a matching in reader mode with no optimal tuning in card mode, or a tuning in card mode with no optimal matching in reader mode.
It would be desirable to have a device capable of operating in reader mode and in card mode, which overcomes all or part of the disadvantages of usual devices.
More specifically, it would be desirable to have a device using a single antenna for an operation in card mode and in reader mode and which improves the matching in reader mode and the tuning in card mode.
It would also be desirable to have a solution requiring no further inductive element between the antenna and the demodulation circuits.
It would also be desirable to have a solution simplying switching from one mode to another.
It would also be desirable to improves the power consumption of the device, in particular when it operates in reader mode.
To achieve all or part of these objects as well as others, at least one embodiment of the present invention provides a device of transmission/reception by inductive coupling, comprising:
means for generating an AQ.C. signal intended to drive an oscillating circuit;
means intended to modulate the impedance of the oscillating circuit when data is to be transmitted, the oscillating circuit comprising:
an inductive element forming an antenna in parallel with a first capacitive element; and
at least one second capacitive element in series with a switch, all in parallel with the first capacitive element and the antenna, the modulation means being connected between the terminals of the antenna and the means for generating the AQ.C. signal being connected to the junction point of the second capacitive element and of the switch.
According to an embodiment, a third capacitive element, of same value as the second one, is connected in series with the second capacitive element and the switch, the switch connecting two electrodes of the second and third capacitive elements having their other electrodes connected to the respective electrodes of the first capacitive element, and two terminals of the means for providing the AQ.C. signal being respectively connected across the switch.
According to an embodiment, the switch is in an off position when the device is to transmit the AQ.C. signal and operate in reader mode.
According to an embodiment, the switch is in an on position when the device is to transmit data in load modulation and operate in card mode.
According to an embodiment, the capacitive elements are sized so that, at the frequency of the AQ.C. transmit signal, the oscillating circuit matches the output impedance of the means for generating the AQ.C. signal.
According to an embodiment, the sum of the values of the capacitive elements is selected so that the oscillating circuit is tuned to a frequency of an AQ.C. signal received from another device in card mode.
According to an embodiment, said switch is formed of an output switch of a transmit amplifier.
According to an embodiment, the device further comprises a second switch for disconnecting the modulation means when the device is to operate in reader mode.
The present invention also provides a method for configuring a device of transmission/reception by inductive coupling between an operation in reader mode and in card mode, comprising the step of switching capacitive elements of a single oscillating circuit of the device according to the operating mode.
According to an embodiment, the idle state of the device is in reader mode, the device switching to the card mode when it detects a supply voltage extracted from the oscillating circuit.
The foregoing objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be discussed in detail in the following non-limiting description of specific embodiments in connection with the accompanying drawings.
The same elements have been designated with the same reference numerals in the different drawings. For clarity, only those elements which are useful to the understanding of the present invention have been shown and will be described. In particular, the data transmission protocols in reader mode or in card mode have not been detailed, the described embodiments being compatible with usual protocols which are generally standardized, and thus easily available. Further, the applications of the reader-card devices have not been detailed, the described embodiments being here again compatible with the different current uses of dual-mode or combined devices. For example, these may be terminals for communicating with electronic tags capable of switching to a card mode to transfer data from one terminal to a neighboring terminal down to a server. It may also be a portable device capable of operating according to applications in card mode (in a transport application) and in reader mode.
For a card or tag 8, these circuits comprise at least one element for rectifying the signal sampled across the oscillating circuit to extract a supply voltage therefrom. The transponder also comprises retromodulation elements for modifying the load that it forms on the electromagnetic field generated by the reader and, possibly, circuits for demodulating data transmitted by the reader.
For a single reader 9, said reader comprises at least elements for generating an electromagnetic field for the transponders, capable of being amplitude-modulated to transmit data thereto, and elements for demodulating received data including means for detecting a load modulation performed by a transponder in the field.
Combined device 1 comprises both means for modulating an electromagnetic field that it generates and means for sensing an equivalent field and transmitting back retromodulated data.
Switch K is switched by control block 13 to an off position when the device is to operate in reader mode and to the on position when the device is to operate in card mode. Thus, in card mode, capacitive element C1 is in parallel on capacitive element C2 and their respective values add to each other. In reader mode, switch K is off and capacitance C1 takes part in the impedance matching circuit at the frequency of the carrier driving the oscillating circuit (for example, 13.56 MHz).
Consider an output stage (not shown) of block 12 exhibiting an output impedance Rs. In practice, the output impedances of the amplifiers of the reader mode are smaller than some ten ohms and thus do not match, at the operating frequency of the device, the impedance of the antenna. This requires an impedance matching scheme.
The matching in read mode comprises using a so-called “L” topology with two elements. Given the values of the elements to be matched, both elements are capacitive (C1 and C2).
To pass from the parallel equivalent model (
where Xs represents the series admittance of output amplifier 31 and Q represents the quality factor of series circuit L1-R1.
R1p=(Q2+1)·R1; and
where XL1p represents the admittance of inductance L1.
In card mode, the sum of capacitances C1 and C2 need to be such that the oscillating circuit has the frequency of the field emitted by a distant terminal as a resonance frequency.
In reader mode, the matching is obtained in an “L” topology of elements C1 and C2 as illustrated in
The components of oscillating circuit 2 are thus sized according to the tuning and matching frequencies. Preferably, the values of capacitors C1 and C2 are determined based on the impedance matching needs in reader mode, knowing the value of the inductance of the antenna. Generally, this inductance value of the antenna is linked to its geometry.
Taking into account the above-disclosed conditions, the values of elements C1 and C2 may be determined as follows:
The value given to capacitance C2 needs not only take into account the above elements (for example, be calculated by the above relation), but also take into account the input capacitance of the device, that is, the capacitance connected to the oscillating circuit. For example, if the elements of the device connected to oscillating circuit 2 provide a 20-pF capacitance, the value of capacitance C2 obtained by the above relation is decreased by 20 pF. The value of capacitance C1 is unmodified.
A processing unit 41 (PU) is used to exploit the data to be transmitted and the received data. In reader mode, unit 41 controls a transmit circuit 42 comprising, among others, a modulator 421 (MOD) and an output amplifier or buffer 31 capable of being switched to high impedance.
In card mode, unit 41 receives data extracted from oscillating circuit 2 via a demodulator 43 (DEMOD) and can modulate the load formed on the oscillating circuit by means of a modulator 44 (MOD). In this operating mode, the device supply may be extracted from the high-frequency field radiated by the distant terminal by means of a rectifying element 45 (for example, a rectifying bridge) having its inputs connected to terminals 21 and 22 of the oscillating circuit and having its outputs connected to a supply circuit 46 (ALIM). Circuit 46 is, for example, a voltage regulator providing the voltages to the different circuits 41, 42, 43, 44 of the device.
In reader mode, regulator 46 for example receives a supply voltage Valim from a battery of the electric distribution network.
Such an arrangement may also be envisaged in the embodiment of
For example, in the idle state, switches K and K′ are off and the device is supposed to operate in reader mode. For the case where a supply voltage is detected at the level of rectifier 45, even with a matched and non-tuned circuit, the recovered voltage is sufficient for circuit 13 to turn on switches K and K′ and to switch to the card mode.
According to an alternative embodiment of switch K′, the switch may be integrated in voltage regulator 46 to form a controlled regulator.
It is now possible to share a single antenna (a single inductive winding) for a device capable of operating in reader mode and in card mode. The provided system is particularly simple. On this regard, advantage is taken from the parallel-series structure of the oscillating circuits of the readers and cards of the systems to which the embodiments apply. In particular, conversely to π- or T-type structures, the specific arrangement of the capacitive and inductive elements of the oscillating circuits enables an L matching resulting in a tuned circuit in card mode.
As a specific embodiment, a device intended to operate according to one of the 14443 standards with a 13.56-MHz frequency may be formed with an antenna having a 1-μH inductance and capacitive elements C1 and C2 which, in the embodiment of
Various embodiments of the present invention have been described. Different variations and modifications are within the abilities of those skilled in the art. In particular, the selection of the values to be given to the capacitive elements according to the used antenna is within the abilities of those skilled in the art based on the functional indications given hereabove and on the matching and tuning frequencies respectively intended for the reader mode and for the card mode. Further, although the present invention has been more specifically described in relation with an example applied to standards 14443, it more generally applies to any radio-frequency transceiver system in which a device is capable of operating in reader mode and in card mode.
Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be part of this disclosure, and are intended to be within the spirit and the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description is by way of example only and is not intended to be limiting. The present invention is limited only as defined in the following claims and the equivalents thereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0852103 | Mar 2008 | FR | national |