RFID on Metal and Challenging Materials

Physics, Antenna Design, and Tag Selection

Physics of RFID near metal and liquid, tag antenna design approaches, and selecting on-metal tags for industrial applications.

| 4 min read

RFID on Metal and Challenging Materials

Metal and liquid are the two most problematic materials for RFID. Metal reflects and detunes tag antennas; liquid absorbs RF energy. Standard inlays placed directly on metal or near liquid exhibit dramatically reduced read range — often zero. Specialised tag designs and deployment strategies restore reliable performance in these environments.

Physics of Metal Interference

A UHF RFID inlay antenna is designed to resonate at 865–928 MHz in free space, typically ±10 mm from a non-conductive surface. When a conductive surface (metal) is placed within the near field of the antenna (< λ/4 ≈ 75 mm at 915 MHz), several effects occur:

  • Image current cancellation — the metal surface induces an opposing current that partially cancels the antenna's radiation, reducing effective gain
  • Detuning — the resonant frequency shifts, moving the antenna out of the intended band and reducing coupling to the tag IC
  • Impedance mismatch — the changed impedance at the IC port reduces power transfer efficiency

The net result is a null point in the antenna pattern and severely reduced read range — a tag rated at 8 m in free space may read at 0.3 m directly on steel.

Detuning and Its Measurement

Detuning magnitude depends on:

  • Metal conductivity (copper > aluminium > steel)
  • Distance from metal (closer = more detuning)
  • Tag antenna geometry (compact loops detune less than long dipoles)
  • Dielectric spacer material and thickness

Detuning shifts the tag's reflection coefficient. You can measure it with a network analyser: attach the tag to the target surface and sweep 800–1000 MHz; the S11 dip reveals the actual resonant frequency. A well-designed on-metal tag should show a clear resonance at 915 MHz (or 868 MHz for EU) on the intended surface.

On-Metal Tag Design Principles

On-metal tags incorporate several design features absent in standard inlays:

Feature Function Typical Implementation
Ferrite / foam spacer Creates electrical distance from metal 1.6–5 mm layer behind antenna
Patch or PIFA antenna Radiates parallel to metal surface Etched copper on PCB or PET
Meandered or folded dipole Maintains resonance in confined space Serpentine copper trace
Ground plane isolation Shields IC from metal surface Copper backplane on PCB
Rugged enclosure IP67+, vibration resistance Polycarbonate housing, epoxy fill

The spacer is the critical element — it moves the antenna far enough from the metal that image-current cancellation is reduced. Ferrite materials absorb eddy currents and provide additional isolation in a thinner profile than foam alone.

Near-Field Antenna Approach

For tagging small metal parts (fasteners, tools, surgical instruments) where a spacer-based far-field tag is impractical, near-field coupling provides an alternative. A small loop antenna on the tag resonates in the inductive near-field with a corresponding loop antenna on the reader. Near-field HF (13.56 MHz, ISO 15693) is immune to metal detuning problems that plague UHF — HF electromagnetic fields penetrate and couple through metal-free apertures without the reflection issues that affect far-field UHF.

Orientation Sensitivity on Metal

Orientation sensitivity is more acute with on-metal tags than standard inlays because the patch/PIFA antenna has a narrow beam pattern — it radiates strongly in one direction (away from the metal surface) and poorly in others. A tag mounted on the side of an I-beam may read well when the portal reader faces the tag face but not at all when the reader approaches from the side.

Mitigation strategies: - Use two tags on perpendicular faces of the object - Use circular polarisation reader antennas to reduce sensitivity to tag orientation in the azimuth plane - Map read zones before finalising tag placement in deployment

Selecting an On-Metal Tag

Parameter What to Specify Typical Range
Read range on target surface Measured at installation EIRP 0.5–4 m
Operating temperature Min/max continuous −40 to +85 °C typical
IP rating Ingress protection IP67 for industrial
Mounting method Adhesive, screw, weld stud Application-specific
IC and memory epc-memory/" class="glossary-term-link" data-term="EPC memory" data-definition="Writable tag memory for item identity." data-category="Data & Encoding">EPC memory + user memory 128–512-bit EPC
Regulatory compliance FCC / ETSI Per deployment region

Use the Read Range Calculator to model expected read range with your reader power and antenna gain, then verify with the RFID Tag Selector using the "on-metal" filter to find rated products for your surface type.

See also: RFID Link Budget Calculation, RFID Tag Form Factors, Dense Reader Mode Optimisation.

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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.