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RFID tag hardware

  • Thread starter Dimitris Stafylarakis
  • Start date
D

Dimitris Stafylarakis

Hi,
I'm looking for an RFID tag Analog Front-End IC, if any, to connect to a
microcontroller. Up to now, I've found some separate chips but they were all
for reader designs, not for the tag. Otherwise, any advice on building it
out of discrete components could help.

Thanx in advance
 
J

Jim Thompson

Hi,
I'm looking for an RFID tag Analog Front-End IC, if any, to connect to a
microcontroller. Up to now, I've found some separate chips but they were all
for reader designs, not for the tag. Otherwise, any advice on building it
out of discrete components could help.

Thanx in advance

What are you trying to accomplish?

I've done analog chip designs for Intermec, SAVI and Single Chip
Systems. I don't think ANY of them will sell you a chip.

...Jim Thompson
 
W

Wayne Shanks

Dimitris said:
Hi,
I'm looking for an RFID tag Analog Front-End IC, if any, to connect to a
microcontroller. Up to now, I've found some separate chips but they were all
for reader designs, not for the tag. Otherwise, any advice on building it
out of discrete components could help.

Thanx in advance
what kind of RFID? HF or UHF?


--
"Anyone over 27 years of age that's not married is a menace to society"
Brigham Young

"Dam Right"
Wayne Shanks
 
D

Dimitris Stafylarakis

Wayne Shanks said:
what kind of RFID? HF or UHF?

This is about an MSc thesis project and is dealing with PHILIPS ICODE
readers (thus 13.56 MHz). I want to play with a tag's crypto
capabilities and therefore use a tag analog front-end with my own code
in a microcontroller. I guess this being an MSc project and all, won't
change much in those companies' attitude right (Jim?)?

regards
 
J

Jim Thompson

This is about an MSc thesis project and is dealing with PHILIPS ICODE
readers (thus 13.56 MHz). I want to play with a tag's crypto
capabilities and therefore use a tag analog front-end with my own code
in a microcontroller. I guess this being an MSc project and all, won't
change much in those companies' attitude right (Jim?)?

regards

Maybe, maybe not. Write to them on official university stationery
pleading your case. Imply that your thesis might uncover something
useful for them. Who knows, you might get a bunch of samples.

...Jim Thompson
 
F

Frithiof Andreas Jensen

Maybe, maybe not. Write to them on official university stationery
pleading your case. Imply that your thesis might uncover something
useful for them. Who knows, you might get a bunch of samples.

If it's just samples, he wants, the O.P. might have the best luck
approaching the National Distributor instead - being salespeople at heart
they tend to have quantitites of 'freebees' to give away with a little
justification; The manufacturer themselves are usually too large to bother
talking to you.

To approach a company as a student, it is best to be introduced by a
'connected' researcher or professor - most businesses have persistent
contacts with universities through a 'connected' person in the business but
it is often hard to see from the outside who to talk to and the majority of
the employees will not even know that there are such links.

The advantage is that many larger businesses have potential research
projects that nobody inside have the time or skills to carry out, so there
is potential for some serious work *if* one can get to the right person.

Here we have done a lot of work with system desing and evaluation using
Coloured Petri Nets, outsourcing most of the basic research work to Aarhus
University - there is a Free CPN tool from Aarhus University that is not so
hard to use, but still it takes time that the typical pointy-haired project
sponsor will deem wasted - especially if there are no major errors as a
result - because "then that job was too easy, you did not need those guys".
 
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