Circular Polarization
HardwareAntenna polarization where the electric field rotates in a circle, tolerant of tag orientation but with 3 dB lower gain vs linear.
Circular Polarization
Circular polarization (CP) is an antenna polarisation mode where the radiated electric field vector rotates in a circle as the wave propagates. In RFID, circular-polarised reader antennas are widely used because they can read tags regardless of the tag's rotational orientation -- a critical advantage in applications where tag alignment cannot be controlled.
How Circular Polarization Works
A circularly polarised antenna radiates two orthogonal linear components (horizontal and vertical) with a 90-degree phase offset. The resulting electric field vector traces a helix as it propagates. The rotation direction defines two variants:
- RHCP (Right-Hand Circular Polarization) -- field rotates clockwise when viewed from behind the antenna.
- LHCP (Left-Hand Circular Polarization) -- field rotates counter-clockwise.
Most RFID reader antennas use RHCP by convention, though the choice is arbitrary as long as it is consistent within a deployment.
Trade-offs vs. Linear Polarization
| Attribute | Circular | Linear |
|---|---|---|
| Orientation tolerance | Excellent -- reads tags at any angle | Poor -- 20 dB loss at 90 deg cross-pol |
| Gain (same aperture) | 3 dB lower | 3 dB higher |
| Read range (aligned tag) | Shorter | Longer |
| Multipath resilience | Better -- reflected CP reverses handedness | Worse -- multipath retains polarisation |
| Best for | Portals, retail, conveyors with random tag orientation | Tunnels, conveyors with fixed tag orientation |
The 3 dB circular-polarisation loss is inherent: a linearly polarised tag antenna receives only one of the two orthogonal CP components, discarding half the power. However, this 3 dB cost is almost always acceptable because the alternative -- missing tags due to polarisation mismatch -- is far more costly.
Application in Portal Readers
Portal readers at warehouse dock doors typically mount two to four circular-polarised patch antennas (6-9 dBi) at the sides and top of the doorway. As cases and pallets pass through, individual item tags may be oriented randomly. Circular polarisation ensures consistent reads regardless of whether a tagged garment is folded, rolled, or hanging.
Axial Ratio
The quality of circular polarisation is measured by the axial ratio (AR) -- the ratio of major to minor axis of the polarisation ellipse. Perfect CP has AR = 1 (0 dB). Practical RFID antennas achieve AR < 3 dB across the operating bandwidth. At wider angles from boresight, the AR degrades and the antenna becomes increasingly elliptically polarised.
See also: Linear Polarization | Antenna Gain | Portal Reader
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