B
Bob Masta
The lastest issue of EDN (Oct 14, 2004) has an article
on RFID that includes a line that has me puzzled:
"With all other things being equal, high-frequency RFIDs
have longer range than their low-frequency counterparts,
fundamentally because near-field effects don't degrade
high-frequency RFIDs' signals. If a tag is less than one
wavelength away from a reader, the signal decays with the
cube of the distance; beyond one wavelength the signal
decays with the square of the distance."
I don't recall any "cube of the distance" stuff from my
school days, but I haven't done any RF since then.
It sounds counter-intuitive to me, and certainly not the
way sound waves behave in the near-field. ( Where
sound wave fronts are nearly parallel, the decay is greatly
reduced.) Can somebody explain why RF should be
different? Or is the article wrong?
Thanks!
Bob Masta
dqatechATdaqartaDOTcom
D A Q A R T A
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
www.daqarta.com
on RFID that includes a line that has me puzzled:
"With all other things being equal, high-frequency RFIDs
have longer range than their low-frequency counterparts,
fundamentally because near-field effects don't degrade
high-frequency RFIDs' signals. If a tag is less than one
wavelength away from a reader, the signal decays with the
cube of the distance; beyond one wavelength the signal
decays with the square of the distance."
I don't recall any "cube of the distance" stuff from my
school days, but I haven't done any RF since then.
It sounds counter-intuitive to me, and certainly not the
way sound waves behave in the near-field. ( Where
sound wave fronts are nearly parallel, the decay is greatly
reduced.) Can somebody explain why RF should be
different? Or is the article wrong?
Thanks!
Bob Masta
dqatechATdaqartaDOTcom
D A Q A R T A
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
www.daqarta.com