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Philips Demos Polymer HF Tags

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The read range of the printed Philips tag is very short, measured in millimeters. Warmerdam attributes this to the type of antenna used in the demonstration (which utilizes capacitive coupling). He notes the tag could easily be built with an inductive coil antenna, used in most RFID tags, which would boost its read range to the standard for 13.56 MHz: 5 to 10 centimeters.

Once RFID tags are printable in large quantities, they can be produced directly in, or on, packaging materials and be used to identify any number of consumer or other types of products, including pharmaceuticals. While most current applications of RFID for item identification within the supply chain use ultrahigh frequency (UHF) tags, some companies, including those in the pharmaceutical industry, are considering and testing HF tags for item-level tagging.

Instead of containing a conventional, silicon-based chip, the Philips' printed tag uses a chip built with a combination of conductive and semiconductive polymers. The main advantage of manufacturing a printed RFID tag is that the chip and antenna are printed together, eliminating the need for a separate step to join them. With conventional, silicon-based tags, the chip-to-antenna assembly is a distinct, time-consuming process. Printed tags will likely be manufactured more quickly and in larger quantities than conventional silicon-based tags.

Warmerdam says Philips has proven that polymer tags are capable of storing and transmitting data at the level of complexity needed for most passive RFID applications for product identification. He notes that the tag Philips has created contains 2,000 transistors, enabling it to store 64 bits of data. To store 96 bits, it would be need 2,500 to 3,000 transistors, which would not, he says, be significantly more difficult to create than 2,000.

The next major challenges Philips and other companies developing printed tags face, he says, are determining the best chemicals, polymers and printing processes to use, and devising a means of mass-producing the tags.

OrganicID a startup based in Colorado Springs, Colo., is also developing technology to print tags from organic polymers. Last April, it announced it had successfully printed rectifier circuits that can process radio waves at frequencies of 13.56 MHz and higher (see OrganicID Proves HF Capability of Organic Circuit). Rectifiers convert alternating current to direct current, which is used to power a tag. Then, in August of last year, IMEC, an independent nonprofit research center, developed an organic rectifier diode capable of powering a passive RFID tag operating at frequencies as high as 50 MHz (see IMEC Announces Organic Rectifier for Tags). And in mid-2005, Poly IC announced it had printed a rectifier from polymer semiconductor polythiophene that works at 13.56 MHz.
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