RFID Antenna Placement Guide

Optimal Positioning for Read Zones

Optimal antenna positioning for dock doors, portals, conveyors, and overhead installations with read zone design principles.

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RFID Antenna Placement Guide

Antenna placement determines whether your RFID system achieves its designed read rate and read range. Poor placement is the leading cause of post-deployment performance failures. This guide provides installation principles for the four most common deployment geometries.

Core Principles

Every antenna placement decision starts with the link budget. The forward link (reader to tag) and reverse link (tag backscatter to reader) must both close with adequate margin. Use the Link Budget Calculator to model margin before committing to a mount position.

Key variables: - EIRP: Regulated maximum transmit power (30 dBm in the US, 33 dBm ERP in the EU) - Antenna gain: Higher gain = narrower beam, longer range in that direction - Tag sensitivity: Worst-case threshold at which the tag's chip activates (typically −18 to −22 dBm for modern ICs) - Path loss: Free-space loss at 900 MHz is 31.5 dB at 1 m, increasing 6 dB per distance doubling

1. Dock Door Portals

The dock door portal is the most common fixed-reader deployment. The goal is a read zone 1.0–1.5 m deep centered at the dock plate threshold.

Standard configuration: - Two antennas per portal, mounted on stanchions at 1.0–1.2 m and 2.0–2.2 m height on opposite sides of the door - Aim each antenna inward at 10–15° angle toward the center of the read zone - Use circular polarization to handle tags on all pallet faces - Power: maximum allowed EIRP for maximum margin on dense pallets

Overhead alternative: A single high-gain circular antenna mounted at 3.5–4 m height, aimed straight down at the dock plate. Effective for floor-level tags but may miss tags on pallet tops. Add a side antenna if full pallet coverage is required.

2. Conveyor Installations

Conveyor antennas must account for belt speed and tag orientation variability.

Belt Speed Minimum Dwell Time in Read Zone Recommended Zone Depth
0.3 m/s 2.0 s 0.6 m
0.5 m/s 1.2 s 0.6 m
1.0 m/s 0.6 s 0.6 m
2.0 m/s 0.3 s 0.6 m

At 2 m/s, use higher-gain antennas and reduce the Q parameter in EPC Gen2 inventory rounds to read fewer tags per round faster. For mixed orientation, pair an above-belt antenna with a below-belt antenna in a waterproof enclosure. Side antennas are needed for cases with labels only on lateral faces.

3. Overhead Area Coverage

Overhead antennas are used for sales-floor inventory, warehouse zone coverage, and overhead RTLS deployments.

Mount at 3–6 m height. At 4 m with a 6 dBic circular antenna at 30 dBm EIRP, the −15 dBm contour (sufficient to activate most passive tags) covers approximately a 4 m diameter footprint. Tile antennas with 20% overlap to avoid dead zones.

Avoid mounting directly above metal shelving — the shelving reflects multipath that creates nulls in the read zone at specific tag positions. Tilt antennas 15° off vertical and stagger heights between adjacent antennas to minimize coherent multipath.

4. Portal and Chokepoint Tunnels

Forklift lanes, cold-storage entry points, and dock vestibules can be instrumented as read tunnels — essentially enclosed portals.

Build a 4-antenna arrangement: left, right, top, and optionally bottom (recessed floor plate, IP69K-rated). This configuration handles tags on all six faces of a carton or pallet. Set antennas to alternate between two session flags so tags moving through the tunnel are read by all four positions without re-inventory in the same pass.

5. Linear vs. Circular Polarization Selection

Scenario Preferred Polarization Rationale
Unknown tag orientation Circular Equal sensitivity to both polarization axes
Consistent tag orientation Linear 3–4 dB gain advantage over circular
Long-range portal (>5 m) Linear Maximizes forward link margin
Dense tag environment Circular Reduces orientation-dependent nulls

Use the Frequency Comparator to check antenna specifications across frequency bands if deploying in multiple regulatory regions.

See also: Site Survey Best Practices, Link Budget Calculation, Dense Reader Optimization

常见问题

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.