Write Endurance
PerformanceNumber of times an RFID tag's EEPROM memory can be reliably rewritten, typically 100,000 cycles for modern UHF tags.
Write Endurance
Write endurance is the number of times an RFID tag's non-volatile memory can be reliably rewritten before the memory cells begin to degrade. This specification is critical for applications where tags are encoded, updated, or reprogrammed multiple times throughout their operational lifetime.
Memory Technology and Limits
Most passive UHF RFID tags use EEPROM (Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory) for storing the EPC, user memory, and passwords. EEPROM cells use floating-gate transistors that trap or release charge through quantum tunneling. Each write cycle stresses the thin oxide insulating layer, and after enough cycles, the oxide degrades to the point where the cell can no longer reliably retain charge.
Modern RFID tag ICs from Impinj and NXP typically specify 100,000 write cycles (10^5) for EEPROM memory. Some specialized ICs offer higher endurance, while older or cost-optimized designs may specify lower limits (10,000-50,000 cycles).
Practical Implications
For most RFID applications, write endurance is not a limiting factor. An item-level tagging deployment writes the EPC once during commissioning and never rewrites it. Even reusable asset tags that are re-commissioned weekly would need 40 years to reach 100,000 cycles.
However, some applications involve frequent writes:
- WIP tracking in manufacturing, where process data is written to user memory at each station (potentially 10-50 writes per production cycle)
- Reusable container tracking with temperature or event logging to on-tag memory
- Test and calibration environments where engineers repeatedly write and verify tag memory during development
Monitoring and Failure Modes
Write endurance failures are gradual, not sudden. As EEPROM cells approach their endurance limit, the data retention time (how long the cell holds its charge) decreases first. A cell that originally retained data for 20+ years might retain data for only months or weeks as it nears end of life. This means a tag can appear to write successfully during verification but lose data days later.
Tags used in high-write-cycle applications should be periodically verified through read-back testing and proactively replaced before reaching the manufacturer's specified endurance limit. The TID memory bank is factory-programmed and read-only, making it immune to write endurance concerns and a reliable identifier even when EPC memory degrades.
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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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