By Claire Swedberg
Sept. 12, 2007—After 10 years' use by the
U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), a technology known as "super
RFID" has been licensed by Washington, D.C.-based technology developer
Gentag, which plans to commercialize the technology for civilian use. Initially, Gentag and
Sandia National Laboratories co-owned the rights to the U.S. patent (6,031,454) that covers the non-military version of the technology. Now, Sandia and the U.S. government have released the full rights of the patent to Gentag.
Super RFID technology uses long-range radar responsive (RR) tags, so named during their initial development for the military. Originally, the active 430 MHz tags were designed using technology derived from a radar device requiring line-of-sight for reading. Since then, Sandia has modified the technology to its current form, which employs RFID to transmit ID numbers instead of radar. Gentag's founder and president, John Peeters, says Gentag's RR tags can be
read from a distance of up to 12 miles, using highly sensitive interrogators.
Readers range from 5 watts (for small applications, such as within a building) to 100 watts (for broad-range search-and-rescue purposes). In either scenario, a
tag's location can be pinpointed to within 3 feet via a triangulation involving three Gentag fixed-position interrogators, or one
mobile reader with a built-in
GPS satellite receiver that helps provide triangulation coordinates related to a specific tag's position.
The tag is the result of a development partnership Gentag started with Sandia and the DOD in the late 1990s, Peeters says, to create tracking devices for the military able to penetrate obstacles such as buildings and thick undergrowth, which often interfere with GPS tracking. The system, which uses 3,500-watt interrogators made by a manufacturer the government is not disclosing, was intended as a long-range radio
frequency device for identifying and locating people and objects, and is still used today by the military to avoid friendly fire. RR tags affixed to U.S. and allied tanks are read by RR readers in aircraft up to 100 miles away. The
interrogator captures the unique IDs, and the built-in GPS receiver provides coordinates to pinpoint the location. The military can then precisely identify whether the tanks are friendly.
To create a commercial version of the system, Peeters explains, Gentag will develop the RR tag using an application-specific
integrated circuit (
ASIC) built into a credit-card-size, battery-powered tag. The system could be deployed at a hospital, children's theme park or other confined area, employing triangulation to track the movement of tagged people or assets.
Because of the long
read range, Peeters notes, only a few fixed-position RR interrogators (also known as base stations) would need to be deployed. At a hospital, for instance, only three fixed readers would typically be needed, he says—one on the roof, and two in the parking area or on the campus perimeter. "Therefore, the triangulation can be created and people can know exactly where doctors are [and] who is going out of the hospital when they are not supposed to."