Semi-Passive Tag
GeneralAn RFID tag with a battery to power its IC but using backscatter communication, combining long battery life with extended range.
Semi-Passive Tag
A semi-passive RFID tag (also called battery-assisted passive or BAP) includes an internal battery to power its Tag IC but still communicates with the reader using backscatter, exactly like a passive tag. This hybrid design combines the extended range benefits of battery power with the simplicity of backscatter communication.
How Semi-Passive Tags Work
In a purely passive tag, the IC must harvest enough energy from the reader's RF field to both power its logic and modulate the backscatter response. This energy-harvesting requirement sets the tag sensitivity threshold, which is the primary range-limiting factor. A semi-passive tag removes this bottleneck: its battery keeps the IC perpetually powered, so the incoming RF energy only needs to be strong enough for the reader to detect the modulated backscatter response.
The result is a tag that can be read at distances 2-3x greater than an equivalent passive tag, while consuming far less battery than a full active tag because it never generates its own RF transmission.
Comparison with Other Tag Types
| Attribute | Passive | Semi-Passive | Active |
|---|---|---|---|
| Battery | None | Yes (IC only) | Yes (IC + TX) |
| Communication | Backscatter | Backscatter | Active broadcast |
| UHF read range | 1 - 12 m | 5 - 30 m | 30 - 100+ m |
| Tag cost | $0.05 - $0.15 | $2 - $15 | $15 - $75 |
| Battery life | N/A | 3 - 7 years | 1 - 5 years |
| Sensor support | Limited | Yes | Yes |
Applications
Semi-passive tags are ideal for applications needing moderate range extension and onboard sensing without the cost and complexity of active infrastructure. Common use cases include temperature monitoring in cold-chain logistics, tamper detection on high-value containers, and toll collection systems where reliable reads at vehicle speed are essential.
The EPC Gen2 standard explicitly supports BAP tags through its battery-assisted mode, ensuring interoperability with standard UHF readers.
See also: Passive Tag | Active Tag | Tag Sensitivity
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