Passive Tag
GeneralAn RFID tag without an internal battery that harvests energy from the reader's RF field to power its IC and communicate.
Passive Tag
A passive RFID tag contains no internal battery. It harvests all operating energy from the interrogator's RF field, uses that energy to power its Tag IC, and communicates back to the reader by modulating the reflected signal -- a technique called backscatter.
How Passive Tags Work
When the reader's RF carrier wave reaches the tag antenna, an AC voltage is induced. The tag IC's charge pump rectifies this AC into DC, and a voltage regulator stabilises it to power the digital logic. Once the IC has sufficient charge (above the tag sensitivity threshold, typically -18 to -24 dBm), it begins processing the reader's commands and modulating its antenna impedance to encode data onto the reflected wave.
This impedance modulation creates amplitude or phase shifts in the backscattered signal that the reader decodes. The modulation scheme used for tag-to-reader communication is either FM0 or Miller encoding, selected by the reader based on the RF environment.
Performance Characteristics
| Parameter | UHF Passive | HF Passive |
|---|---|---|
| Frequency | 860 - 960 MHz | 13.56 MHz |
| Read range | 1 - 12 m | 0.01 - 1 m |
| Data rate (T-to-R) | 40 - 640 kbps | 26 - 848 kbps |
| Tag cost (volume) | $0.05 - $0.15 | $0.10 - $0.50 |
| Lifespan | 20+ years | 20+ years |
| Write endurance | 100,000 cycles | 100,000 cycles |
Advantages and Limitations
Passive tags excel in cost-sensitive, high-volume applications like item-level tagging in retail apparel, where billions of tags are consumed annually. Their thin, flexible form factor allows embedding in smart labels and product packaging. The absence of a battery means indefinite shelf life and no maintenance.
The primary limitation is range: passive UHF tags rarely exceed 12 m in ideal conditions and degrade significantly near liquids and metals (detuning). For assets requiring longer range or environmental sensing, active tags or semi-passive tags are preferred.
See also: Active Tag | Semi-Passive Tag | Tags
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The RFID glossary is a comprehensive reference of technical terms, acronyms, and concepts used in Radio-Frequency Identification technology. It is designed for engineers, system integrators, and project managers who work with RFID and need clear definitions of terms like EPC, backscatter, anti-collision, and ISO 18000.
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