DocumentCode :
1051496
Title :
An Ultra-Low-Power Long Range Battery/Passive RFID Tag for UHF and Microwave Bands With a Current Consumption of 700 nA at 1.5 V
Author :
Pillai, Vijay ; Heinrich, Harley ; Dieska, David ; Nikitin, Pavel V. ; Martinez, Rene ; Rao, K. V Seshagiri
Author_Institution :
Intermec Technol., Everett
Volume :
54
Issue :
7
fYear :
2007
fDate :
7/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1500
Lastpage :
1512
Abstract :
We present for the first time, a fully integrated battery powered RFID integrated circuit (IC) for operation at ultrahigh frequency (UHF) and microwave bands. The battery powered RFID IC can also work as a passive RFID tag without a battery or when the battery has died (i.e., voltage has dropped below 1.3 V); this novel dual passive and battery operation allays one of the major drawbacks of currently available active tags, namely that the tag cannot be used once the battery has died. When powered by a battery, the current consumption is 700 nA at 1.5 V (400 nA if internal signals are not brought out on test pads). This ultra-low-power consumption permits the use of a very small capacity battery of 100 mA-hr for lifetimes exceeding ten years; as a result a battery tag that is very close to a passive tag both in form factor and cost is made possible. The chip is built on a 1-mum digital CMOS process with dual poly layers, EEPROM and Schottky diodes. The RF threshold power at 2.45 GHz is -19 dBm which is the lowest ever reported threshold power for RFID tags and has a range exceeding 3.5 m under FCC unlicensed operation at the 2.4-GHz microwave band. The low threshold is achieved with architectural choices and low-power circuit design techniques. At 915 MHz, based on the experimentally measured tag impedance (92-j837) and the threshold spec of the tag (200 mV), the theoretical minimum range is 24 m. The tag initially is in a "low-power" mode to conserve power and when issued the appropriate command, it operates in "full-power" mode. The chip has on-chip voltage regulators, clock and data recovery circuits, EEPROM and a digital state machine that implements the ISO 18000-4 B protocol in the "full-power" mode. We provide detailed explanation of the clock recovery circuits and the implementation of the binary sort algorithm, which includes a pseudorandom number generator. Other than the antenna board and a battery, no external components are used.
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; EPROM; Schottky diodes; UHF integrated circuits; clocks; low-power electronics; microwave integrated circuits; radiofrequency identification; random number generation; voltage regulators; EEPROM; ISO 18000-4 B protocol; RF threshold power; Schottky diodes; UHF bands; antenna board; binary sort algorithm; clock recovery circuits; current 700 nA; current consumption; data recovery circuits; digital CMOS process; digital state machine; dual poly layers; frequency 2.4 GHz; frequency 915 MHz; integrated battery powered RFID IC; low-power circuit design techniques; microwave bands; on-chip voltage regulators; pseudorandom number generator; ultra-low-power long range battery/passive RFID tag; voltage 1.5 V; Batteries; Clocks; EPROM; Microwave bands; Microwave integrated circuits; Passive RFID tags; Radiofrequency identification; UHF circuits; UHF integrated circuits; Voltage; 18000–4B; International Standards Organization (ISO); RFID; Schottky diode; active; battery; microwave; passive; tag; ultra-high frequency (UHF); ultra-low power;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1549-8328
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TCSI.2007.897768
Filename :
4268418
Link To Document :
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