Choosing Tags for Harsh Environments
Metal, Heat, Chemical, and Outdoor Tags
Selecting RFID tags for metal surfaces, high temperatures, chemicals, outdoor exposure, and industrial wash cycles.
RFID Tags for Harsh Environments
Standard paper/PET inlays fail within days in harsh conditions. Industrial, outdoor, laundry, and high-temperature deployments require speciality tag constructions — enclosures, substrates, and adhesives engineered for specific stress factors.
Harsh Environment Categories
| Environment | Stress Factors | Tag Construction | Typical Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metal surfaces | Detuning | Foam/PCB spacer, dedicated on-metal tag | IP67+ |
| High temperature (>85 °C) | Adhesive failure, IC damage | Polyimide substrate, ceramic housing | Up to 220 °C rated |
| Chemical exposure | Adhesive dissolution, label damage | HDPE/ABS enclosure, solvent-resistant ink | IP68 |
| Laundry / steam | Moisture, mechanical stress, heat | Woven antenna, silicone overmold | IEC 60529, ISO 15797 |
| Outdoor UV / weathering | UV degradation, moisture ingress | UV-stabilised polycarbonate, sealed housing | IP66/IP67, UL 746C |
| Cryogenic / freezer | Adhesive embrittlement, IC failure | Low-temp adhesive (−60 °C rated), flexible substrate | MIL-STD-810 |
On-Metal Tags
Metal detunes any antenna placed flush against it. On-metal tags solve this by incorporating a foam, epoxy, or PCB spacer that holds the antenna at a defined distance from the metal surface. Without this spacer, the metal reflects the tag's backscatter, creating a null point and near-zero read range.
PCB-based on-metal tags (e.g., Harting RFID, Turck) replace the inlay entirely with a tuned dipole printed on FR4, achieving 0.5–3 m read range on steel surfaces. Foam-spacer tags (e.g., Brady THT-59) are thinner and lower cost but achieve shorter range.
Laundry Tags
Laundry tags must survive 200+ industrial wash cycles at 75 °C with detergent and mechanical tumbling. Compliance with ISO 15797 (industrial laundering) is the standard benchmark. Construction requirements:
- Woven polyester antenna (no conductive ink — ink cracks under mechanical stress)
- Data retention guarantee: minimum 10 years / 100K write cycles
- Encapsulation in silicone or thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU)
- Operating temperature: −25 °C to +120 °C
Common suppliers: Confidex, Huansic, Datamars, Checkpoint Systems.
Thermal and Chemical Tags
High-temperature applications (autoclave sterilisation at 134 °C, powder-coat painting lines at 200 °C) require:
- ICs rated to the operating temperature — not all Gen 2 ICs survive >85 °C
- Write endurance specified at elevated temperature (writes at 120 °C consume more endurance than at 25 °C)
- Ceramic or PTFE housings; aluminium insert antennas
Chemical environments (oil, solvents, acids) require fully sealed enclosures with chemically resistant materials. Verify that the tag's IP rating was tested with the specific chemical, not just water.
Tag Selection by Environment
Use the RFID Tag Selector with the "environment" filter to shortlist tags rated for your specific conditions. The Read Range Calculator models performance for on-metal tags, which behave differently from standard free-space inlays.
See also: How to Choose an RFID Tag, RFID Tag Memory Planning.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
Our guides cover a range of experience levels. Getting Started guides introduce RFID fundamentals. Implementation guides help engineers design RFID solutions for specific industries. Advanced guides cover topics like dense reader mode, anti-collision algorithms, and EPC encoding schemes.
Most getting-started guides require only a basic UHF RFID reader (such as the Impinj Speedway or ThingMagic M6e) and a few sample tags. Some guides reference desktop USB readers for development. All hardware requirements are listed at the beginning of each guide.