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Radio Frequency Identification and Sensors
There is an unprecedented enthusiasm for radio frequency identification (RFID) technologies today. RFID is based on the exchange of information carried by electromagnetic waves between a label, or tag, and a reader. This technology is currently in full economic expansion, which has manifested itself in widely backed research activities, some of which will be examined in this book. There are multiple annual international conferences dedicated specifically to this theme, and RFID sessions are included in every conference revolving around microwaves, RF systems or issues of communication. This can be explained by the versatile quality of this approach, which makes it possible to address extremely broad domains ranging from software to components. Today, there are thousands of applications that involve RFID. Here too, the spectrum is a considerable one, ranging from logistics to passports but also including niche domains, some of which are quite unexpected. This extremely wide variety of applications has yielded a large number of limitations, which differ according to the intended field of use, necessitating the creation of tags of various sizes, able (or not) to resist high mechanical- or temperature-based stresses or to ensure secure data exchange. To respond to these needs, which can sometimes prove incompatible, different RFID technologies have appeared over time. It is why radio frequency technology is pluralist. Simply attempting to categorize RFID technologies into groups is in itself a fairly complicated undertaking.
Etienne Perret - Personal Name
978-1-84821-766-9
NONE
Information Technology
English
2014
1-255
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