Electronic – How to design 125Khz Antenna for 1 meter RFID reader

rfid

Firstly, I'm not from electronics background so my knowledge is limited in this area.

Target System – I am looking to build/ extend the range of 125khz RFID reader upto 1 meter (~ 3ft) to be captured while walking through a gate detector (kind of like two pillar antenna in pic below).

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Reason: Commercial gate readers are way too costlier to implement so am looking to build my own.

Current State – The below current 10x10cm loop antenna provides me a range upto (~1 ft).

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Question: How do i design an Antenna in such a way it has a read range of 5 – 6 feet (throughout the height of pillar) and having read distance up to 3 feet (distance where the tag is presented)? Here the read range is as important as the read distance.

Considerations:

  1. Going for a RF Gate Antenna (the ones you find in clothing store) and plug & play with RFID reader?
  2. Increasing the size/ length of the antenna coil but maintaining
    the same inductance.
  3. Adding multiple small antennas (like an Array) across the length of the pillar.
  4. Making a dual loop antenna to cover the broader range.

Any help would be appreciated towards moving from my current state to target? I prefer to stick with 125 Khz LF frequency range.

Many thanks!

Best Answer

LF RFID at 125 kHz uses magnetic fields to power tags and load modulation to communicate with them. Your reader does not appear to be powerful enough to generate a magnetic field that has sufficient strength. You need to consider a reader that can supply more current to the antenna or some way to boost it.

Look for a "long range" reader (RFID industry term) for a better solution. The small RFID reader boards are "proximity" (industry term) devices that are only designed to work at close range, such as with a handheld.

You do not mention the tag size which also has an effect. A larger one would increase read range. Tiny glass tags have short range even with powerful readers.

Orientation of the tag to the antenna also affects the read range. If your application could allow the tag to be point in any direction you will definitely need a more powerful reader to detect them at a non-optimal orientation.

With FDX, the tag increases and decreases the resistance (shorts) across its internal coil to cause slight changes in the reader antenna voltage to communicate the 1's and 0's (load modulation). A tiny tag does not put a lot of load to an antenna with a weak magnetic field that is 1m away.

Make sure the antenna is properly tuned. The magnetic field strength, current consumption and read range are highest when in tune.

Good luck!

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