We present a novel radio-frequency identification (RFID) system with capability of localization and tracking of passive or semi-passive tags. Localization and tracking features are enabled by backscatter modulation on ultra-wide bandwidth tag's antenna. A ultra-high frequency signal allows the wake-up of the tags enabling the reduction of energy consumption and ensuring compatibility with existing RFID systems. The overall system as well as the reader and tag architectures are introduced. The localization and tracking performance evaluation is presented in some reference scenarios
International audiencePassive UWB-RFID technology represents an emerging solution capable of guaranteeing extremely low energy consumption and high-accuracy localization at the same time. One of the most critical tasks is the acquisition of the tag code at reader side, which can be complex, time-and resource-consuming when multiple UWB tags are deployed. This letter proposes a simple and effective approach, based on a specific assignment strategy of the tag code, which drastically simplifies code acquisition by guaranteeing high tag detection performance. A real system implementation adopting this strategy is shown to prove its feasibility in terms of real-time multiple tags detection and localization
In this paper we present an innovative UHF-UWB Radio-Frequency IDentification (RFID) system adopting semi-passive tags, which is capable of overcoming several limitations of available systems while avoiding the use of active devices, ensuring both identification and real-time item localization. Implementation challenges are described, preliminary measurement results are shown and an example of the localization performance is presented
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