Source: https://patents.google.com/patent/JP4452865B2/en
Timestamp: 2019-11-23 03:11:10
Document Index: 126419698

Matched Legal Cases: ['Application No. 2004', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1']

JP4452865B2 - Wireless IC tag device and RFID system - Google Patents
Wireless IC tag device and RFID system Download PDF
JP4452865B2
JP4452865B2 JP2005131602A JP2005131602A JP4452865B2 JP 4452865 B2 JP4452865 B2 JP 4452865B2 JP 2005131602 A JP2005131602 A JP 2005131602A JP 2005131602 A JP2005131602 A JP 2005131602A JP 4452865 B2 JP4452865 B2 JP 4452865B2
JP2005131602A
JP2006311239A (en
英一 小川
2005-04-28 Application filed by 智三 太田 filed Critical 智三 太田
2005-04-28 Priority to JP2005131602A priority Critical patent/JP4452865B2/en
2006-11-09 Publication of JP2006311239A publication Critical patent/JP2006311239A/en
2010-04-21 Publication of JP4452865B2 publication Critical patent/JP4452865B2/en
The present invention relates to a wireless IC tag device used in, for example, an RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) system and the like, and an RFID system including the wireless IC tag device.
In recent years, a wireless IC tag in an RFID system has been attracting attention as an important element for use of the traceability of goods and construction of a ubiquitous communication society.
At present, wireless IC tags are mounted on various products and used in many fields such as efficiency in the production, distribution, sales, and recycling processes of goods, and management and safety of people and goods. Further applications are being studied. Since various characteristics and shapes are required for wireless IC tags depending on the form of use, various wireless IC tags have been developed.
The RFID system includes a reader (interrogator) having an information read / write function and a wireless IC tag (responder) (see, for example, Patent Document 1). A general configuration example of a wireless IC tag is shown in FIG. The wireless IC tag 4 shown in FIG. 12 includes a tag antenna 42 (dipole antenna) formed on a dielectric substrate 41 and a tag IC 43 mounted at an antenna feeding point of the tag antenna 42.
In a wireless IC tag having such a dipole antenna, a good gain can be obtained by setting the antenna length of the dipole antenna to the half wavelength (λg / 2) of the equivalent wavelength (inside tube wavelength) λg of the signal frequency. . In addition to the dipole antenna, for example, a meander line antenna or the like is applied as an antenna of the wireless IC tag (see, for example, Patent Document 2).
The tag IC 43 used in the wireless IC tag 4 is configured by a high-frequency signal modulator / demodulator 43a, a rectifier 43b, a memory 43c, a control circuit 43d, and the like as shown in FIG. 13, for example.
In the wireless IC tag 4 shown in FIG. 12 above, the radiation field distribution of the tag antenna (dipole antenna) 42 is such that the electric field component Et is parallel to the X axis when the antenna major axis is the X axis, and the X axis is the center. Radiates in all directions. On the other hand, no radiation of an electric field component occurs in the axial direction of the X axis. In the vicinity of the tag antenna 42 including the IC tag 43, there is also an electric field component that is not parallel to the X axis due to the shape discontinuity of the tag IC 43 and the IC connection part.
In the RFID system using the wireless IC tag 4 shown in FIG. 12, the wireless signal radiated from the reader is received by the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4, and the signal is supplied to the tag IC 43. In the tag IC 43, as shown in FIG. 13, the current generated by the received signal acts on the rectifier 43b and the tag IC 43 is activated. A part of the received signal is digitally modulated by the modulator / demodulator 43a in accordance with the tag information stored in the memory 43c in the tag IC 43, and the modulated radio signal is returned to the reader side via the tag antenna. The signal returned to the reader is received by the reader antenna of the reader, and tag information is obtained by digitally demodulating the response signal in the reader.
JP 2003-249820 A (paragraph [0003]) JP 2002-141727 A
By the way, an important condition for a wireless IC tag is high sensitivity to improve the communication quality between the reader and the wireless IC tag, and mounting without deteriorating tag characteristics for any object including a metal body. It is possible. Further, in mounting a wireless IC tag, it is also required that a circularly polarized signal wave can be efficiently received and transmitted in order to mount it without being aware of its mounting direction. Furthermore, the wireless IC tag is required to be small and thin, and to have a simple structure and can be formed at low cost. Moreover, in a general wireless IC tag, it is preferable that the characteristics can be easily changed corresponding to more usage forms, and it is also important to realize these.
However, a general wireless IC tag using a dipole antenna as shown in FIG. 12 is small and inexpensive, but has a problem that communication sensitivity is low. In addition, when mounted on various metal casings / articles, containers, containers filled with liquids, etc., there is a problem that the communication quality of the RFID system is adversely affected due to such influences.
The present invention has been made to solve such problems, and can achieve high sensitivity with a simple configuration, and is filled with an article / housing made of metal, a container, and a liquid. It is an object of the present invention to provide a wireless IC tag device that can be mounted on various objects such as a container, and to provide an RFID system including the wireless IC tag device having such characteristics.
The wireless IC tag device of the present invention includes a dielectric substrate having first and second surfaces, a ground conductor formed on the second surface of the dielectric substrate, and a first surface of the dielectric substrate. A plurality of patch conductors that are formed and planarly resonate at a resonance frequency, and a wireless IC tag including a tag antenna and a tag IC, and at least two of the plurality of patch conductors are in an electrically non-contact state The wireless IC tag is disposed at a position where the tag antenna can receive an electric field component radiated simultaneously with resonance of the at least two patch conductors on the upper side or the lower side of the at least two patch conductors. More specifically, the wireless IC tag is arranged such that a part of the wireless IC tag overlaps with the patch conductor above or below the at least two patch conductors. Or it is characterized in that arranged at a position between the at least two patch conductor.
According to the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, the ground conductor and the plurality of patch conductors are formed on the dielectric substrate, and at least two of the plurality of patch conductors are arranged in an electrically non-contact state. Therefore, a radio signal (for example, a signal wave sent from a reader) resonates in plane with the at least two patch conductors, and a strong electric field component radiated at the same time acts on the tag antenna of the radio IC tag. A strong current flows in the antenna. As a result, a highly sensitive wireless IC tag device can be realized. In addition, since the ground conductor is formed on one side (second surface) of the dielectric substrate, there is no radiation of radio waves (electric field components) on the ground conductor side, and therefore the ground conductor forming surface side of the dielectric substrate is the object. By using the mounting surface, mounting on an object made of metal, a container for storing a liquid, or the like becomes possible.
In addition, the wireless IC tag device of the present invention has a simple configuration only by adding a structure (a radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector) in which a patch conductor and a ground conductor are formed on two surfaces of a dielectric substrate. In addition, the above-described effects can be achieved.
In the wireless IC tag device according to the present invention, the wireless IC tag device may be configured by forming two patch conductors in an electrically non-contact state on the first surface of the dielectric substrate. The wireless IC tag device may be configured by forming three or more patch conductors in an electrically non-contact state on the first surface of the substrate. Even when three or more patch conductors are formed on the dielectric substrate, the wireless IC tag is disposed at a position where the tag antenna can efficiently receive the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the three or more patch conductors.
The wireless IC tag device of the present invention includes a plurality of dielectric substrates having first and second surfaces, a ground conductor formed on the second surface of each dielectric substrate, and a first of the dielectric substrates. One or a plurality of patch conductors formed on one surface and planarly resonating at a resonance frequency, and a wireless IC tag including a tag antenna and a tag IC, and at least two dielectrics among the plurality of dielectric substrates The substrate is arranged such that the patch conductor of one dielectric substrate and the patch conductor of the other dielectric substrate are in an electrically non-contact state, and the wireless IC tag includes the at least two It is characterized in that the tag antenna is disposed at a position where the tag antenna can receive the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the at least two patch conductors on the upper side or the lower side of the patch conductor of the dielectric substrate, More specifically, the wireless IC tag is disposed at a position where a part of the wireless IC tag overlaps the patch conductor above or below the at least two patch conductors, or a position between the at least two patch conductors. There is a feature in the point.
According to the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, the ground conductor and the patch conductor are respectively formed on the plurality of independent dielectric substrates, and the patch conductors of at least two dielectric substrates among the plurality of dielectric substrates are electrically connected. The wireless signal (for example, a signal wave transmitted from the reader) is plane-resonated with the patch conductors (at least two patch conductors) of at least two dielectric substrates. A strong electric field component radiated simultaneously acts on the tag antenna of the wireless IC tag, and a strong current flows in the tag antenna. As a result, a highly sensitive wireless IC tag device can be realized. In addition, since the ground conductor is formed on one side (second surface) of the dielectric substrate, there is no radiation of radio waves (electric field components) on the ground conductor side, and therefore the ground conductor forming surface side of the dielectric substrate is the object. By using the mounting surface, mounting on an object made of metal, a container for storing a liquid, or the like becomes possible.
In the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, the wireless IC tag device may be constituted by two dielectric substrates on which the patch conductor and the ground conductor are formed, or three or more on which the patch conductor and the ground conductor are formed. A wireless IC tag device may be configured with a dielectric substrate. When a wireless IC tag device is configured with two dielectric substrates, a plurality of patch conductors may be formed in an electrically non-contact state on one or both of the dielectric substrates. In this case, the wireless IC tag is disposed at a position where the tag antenna can efficiently receive the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of a plurality (three or more) patch conductors formed on the two dielectric substrates. Similarly, when a wireless IC tag device is constituted by three or more dielectric substrates, similarly, a plurality of patch conductors are formed on one or a plurality of dielectric substrates in a non-contact state, respectively. You may make it arrange | position a radio | wireless IC tag in the position which can receive efficiently the electric field component radiated | emitted simultaneously with the resonance of several (4 or more) patch conductors formed in the 3 or more dielectric substrate with a tag antenna.
Here, the present applicants have already proposed a wireless IC tag device that has high communication sensitivity and can be mounted on a metal object (Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-114426).
In this proposed technique (hereinafter referred to as “prior art 1”), as shown in FIG. 14, a ground conductor 503 is formed on the lower surface of the dielectric substrate 501, and two (or a plurality) of the upper surfaces of the dielectric substrate 501 are formed. The patch conductors 502A and 502B are formed, and the two patch conductors 502A and 502B are electrically connected by a connection transmission line (microstrip line including a strip conductor) 510 having an electrical length of ½ wavelength (λg / 2). A radio polarized wave conversion resonance reflector D5 is configured by connecting to the radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflector D5, and the radio IC tag 4 is combined with the radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflector D5, thereby realizing a radio IC tag device T5 having a simple structure and high sensitivity. is doing.
However, since the prior art 1 uses a 1/2 wavelength connection transmission line to improve communication sensitivity, there is a limit to reducing the shape and size of the wireless IC tag device. In addition, since it is necessary to form (simultaneously) two (or a plurality) patch conductors and a connection transmission line at the time of manufacture, an appropriate wireless IC that takes into account the size of the tag, the required sensitivity and application, etc. There is a problem that it is difficult to design and manufacture the tag device.
In contrast, in the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, as described above, two patch conductors arranged in a non-contact state on a dielectric substrate (one dielectric substrate) are planarly resonated at a resonance frequency. Or a structure in which patch conductors are formed on separate dielectric substrates (two dielectric substrates), and the two patch conductors are planarly resonated at the resonance frequency. Without using a transmission line, high sensitivity can be achieved by utilizing the effect of planar resonance of the two patch conductors (the effect of increasing the current flowing in the tag antenna). Therefore, the wireless IC tag device of the present invention is superior to the prior art 1 in terms of downsizing and manufacturability of the device.
The wireless IC tag device of the present invention includes a dielectric substrate having first and second surfaces, a ground conductor formed on the second surface of the dielectric substrate, and a first surface of the dielectric substrate. A patch conductor formed and planarly resonating at a resonance frequency, and a wireless IC tag including a tag IC including a tag antenna and at least a high-frequency signal modulator / demodulator, the wireless IC tag being provided on a lower side of the patch conductor. On the (dielectric substrate side), all the tag antennas are arranged so as not to overlap with the patch conductors.
According to the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, a wireless signal (for example, a signal wave sent from a reader) resonates between the patch conductor and the ground conductor, and the direction from the ground conductor to the patch conductor or the reverse direction due to this resonance. Since the electric field component is radiated to the tag IC and the electric field component acts on the tag antenna of the wireless IC tag, the current flowing in the tag antenna becomes strong. As a result, a highly sensitive wireless IC tag device can be realized.
Further, in the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, since the wireless IC tag is disposed on the lower side (dielectric substrate side) of the patch conductor, the wireless IC tag device can be thinned. Furthermore, since protrusions can be eliminated on the surface side of the patch conductor, physical damage of the wireless IC tag due to an external object can be prevented. In addition, by embedding the wireless IC tag inside the dielectric substrate, it is possible to prevent the tag IC from being damaged by static electricity.
Furthermore, in the wireless IC tag device according to the present invention, a structure (a radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector) in which a patch conductor and a ground conductor are formed on two surfaces of a dielectric substrate is simply added. In addition, the above-described effects can be achieved.
Here, in the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, it is preferable that the first surface (for example, the upper surface) and the second surface (for example, the lower surface) of the dielectric substrate are parallel, but the first surface of the dielectric substrate. The present invention can be implemented even when a dielectric substrate having a shape whose surface is inclined with respect to the second surface is used.
The RFID system according to the present invention includes a wireless IC tag device having the above-described characteristics and a reader that reads and writes stored information of the wireless IC tag device by wireless signals.
According to the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, the wireless IC tag uses the strong planar resonance of two patch conductors formed on one dielectric substrate or at least two patch conductors formed on independent dielectric substrates. Since the current flowing through the tag antenna is increased, a small and highly sensitive wireless IC tag device can be realized. Furthermore, since the ground conductor is formed on the dielectric substrate, the wireless IC tag device can be mounted on an object made of metal or a container for storing a liquid.
According to the wireless IC tag device of the present invention, a structure in which a patch conductor and a ground conductor are formed on a dielectric substrate is combined with the wireless IC tag, and the wireless IC tag is placed on the dielectric substrate side of the patch conductor. A small and highly sensitive wireless IC tag device is arranged in such a manner that all of the antennas do not overlap with the patch conductor, and the tag antenna of the non-overlapping portion receives electric field radiation due to planar resonance of the patch conductor. In addition, physical damage of the wireless IC tag and breakage of the tag IC due to static electricity can be prevented. Furthermore, since the ground conductor is formed on the dielectric substrate, the wireless IC tag device can be mounted on an object made of metal or a container for storing a liquid.
And by using the wireless IC tag device having the above-mentioned features, in various fields such as efficiency in the production, distribution, sales, recycling process of goods, management of people and goods, ensuring safety, An RFID system having high communication sensitivity and excellent communication reliability can be easily constructed.
FIG. 1 is a plan view showing an example of a wireless IC tag device of the present invention. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken along the line II of FIG.
The wireless IC tag device T1 of this example includes a flat dielectric substrate 1, two rectangular patch conductors 2A and 2B formed on the upper surface (first surface) 1a of the dielectric substrate 1, and a dielectric The dielectric substrate includes a grounding conductor 3 formed on the entire lower surface (second surface) 1b of the substrate 1, a wireless IC tag 4, and a dielectric base 5 on which the wireless IC tag 4 is placed. A radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1 is constituted by the two patch conductors 2A, 2B and the ground conductor 3 formed in FIG.
This example shows an example in which the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1 effectively acts on a linearly polarized signal in which the axial ratio of elliptically polarized waves is infinite. When receiving and transmitting a circularly polarized signal, a circularly polarized radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector is used. Its configuration will be described later.
The wireless IC tag 4 has the same structure as that shown in FIG. 12, and includes a tag antenna (dipole antenna) 42 formed on the dielectric substrate 41 and a tag IC 43 mounted on the antenna feeding point of the tag antenna 42. It is configured.
In this example, the two patch conductors 2A and 2B that are radio wave radiating conductors are not connected by the half-wavelength line (see FIG. 14), and the two patch conductors 2A and 2B are brought close to each other (electricity The wireless IC tag 4 is disposed between the two independent patch conductors 2A and 2B, and the electromagnetic field component radiated from the two patch conductors 2A and 2B is wireless IC. It is characterized in that the communication sensitivity is increased by configuring the tag 4 to be received by the tag antenna 42.
Here, in the structure shown in FIG. 1 and FIG. 2, the distance d between the patch conductors 2A and 2B is preferably shorter than ½ wavelength (λg / 2) of the signal frequency (communication frequency). Therefore, by adopting the structure shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, high sensitivity can be achieved with a simple configuration, and the overall size and shape of the wireless IC tag device T1 can be reduced.
In the structure of FIGS. 1 and 2, in order to increase the sensitivity of the wireless IC tag device T1, these two patches are provided on one or both of the two patch conductors 2A and 2B on the dielectric substrate 1. Other patch conductors (formed on the upper surface 1a of the dielectric substrate 1) different from the conductors 2A and 2B may be connected by a connection transmission line (microstrip line) having an electrical length of ½ wavelength.
Next, the mounting position of the wireless IC tag 4 will be described.
1 and 2, the axis passing through the center of the vertical width w of the patch conductors 2A and 2B is taken as the X axis, and the vertical axis perpendicular to the X axis is the center between the two patch conductors 2A and 2B on the X axis. The Y axis is assumed. An axis passing through the intersection of these X and Y axes and orthogonal to the paper surface is taken as the Z axis.
As shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, a dielectric base 5 is provided on two patch conductors 2A and 2B formed on the upper surface 1a of the dielectric plate 1, and the dielectric base 5 is wirelessly provided on the dielectric base 5. An IC tag 4 is mounted. The wireless IC tag 4 is arranged so that the antenna major axis of the tag antenna 42 is parallel to the X axis. Note that both end portions (both end portions in the X direction) of the wireless IC tag 4 may be arranged on the patch conductors 2A and 2B according to the form of the tag antenna of the wireless IC tag 4, The patch conductors 2A and 2B may be arranged so as not to overlap.
The position of the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged such that the tag antenna 42 can efficiently receive the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the patch conductors 2A and 2B. Note that the optimal placement position of the wireless IC tag 4 may be obtained experimentally such that the communication sensitivity of the wireless IC tag device T1 is maximized.
The dielectric base 5 on which the wireless IC tag 4 is placed is optimal for the wireless IC tag 4 with respect to the upper surfaces of the patch conductors 2A and 2B or the upper surface of the dielectric substrate 1 so that the communication sensitivity is maximized as the wireless IC tag device T1. Used to define distance (distance in Z direction). Further, due to the antenna configuration of the wireless IC tag 4, when the tag antenna 42 and the patch conductors 2A and 2B are in direct contact, the tag IC 43 is short-circuited in a direct current, and the tag IC 43 becomes inoperable. It is also used when avoiding Note that the dielectric base 5 may be omitted depending on the configuration of the wireless IC tag 4.
-Operation of wireless IC tag device-
Next, the operation of the wireless IC tag device T1 will be described.
First, a state where the wireless IC tag 4 is removed in FIGS. 1 and 2 is assumed. The state is shown in FIGS. 3 (A) and 3 (B).
In FIG. 3, two patch conductors 2A and 2B are open boundaries at both ends of the X-axis, and in a planar circuit formed between the ground conductor 3 and the patch conductors 2A and 2B via the dielectric substrate 1. The length L of each patch conductor 2A, 2B is set to approximately ½ of the equivalent wavelength (in-tube wavelength) λg for the signal frequency F0 to be used. At this time, the two patch conductors 2A and 2B are accompanied by planar circuit resonance at the signal frequency F0. Note that the broken line in FIG.
The radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1 composed of the two patch conductors 2A and 2B and the ground conductor 3 formed on the dielectric substrate 1 has an X axis that arrives at the two patch conductors 2A and 2B. It effectively resonates with a linearly polarized signal component having a directional electric field component. When the incoming signal wave resonates with the two patch conductors 2A and 2B, the electric field component E in the resonant electromagnetic field has a distribution as shown by the broken line in FIG. 3, and the electric field component E is radiated simultaneously with the resonance. The The radiated electric field component E is radiated in the upward direction, the lateral direction, and the obliquely upward direction of the patch conductors 2A and 2B.
Here, when the two patch conductors 2A and 2B are arranged close to each other, the two patch conductors 2A and the patch conductor 2B have the same strength and the electromagnetic field is distributed in the same direction. Further, of the two patch conductors 2A and 2B, the direction of the electric field component E which resonates from the right open end of one patch conductor 2A and the left open end of the other patch conductor 2B and is radiated by each resonance is They are opposite to each other. When the wireless IC tag 4 is disposed, these electric field components E strengthen the current generated in the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 in the same direction, and cause a strong current to flow through the tag antenna 42.
Next, a state where the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged above the patch conductors 2A and 2B in the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1 (the state shown in FIGS. 1 and 2) will be described.
First, when the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged so that the antenna major axis of the tag antenna 42 is parallel to the X axis of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1, the radiation electric field Et of the wireless IC tag 4 is parallel to the X axis. It becomes. At this time, the radiated electric field of the patch conductor 2A mainly acts on (receives) the tag antenna 42 from the left side in the figure, and the radiated electric field of the patch conductor 2B acts on (receives) from the right side of the figure. A current is induced in The direction of the radiated electric field component from the two patch conductors 2A and 2B is the same as the antenna major axis of the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 placed parallel to the X axis, and the electric field component E is Therefore, the current induced in the tag antenna 42 is added and a stronger current flows. In this way, compared to the case where one patch conductor is used, a strong current is generated in the tag IC 43 by using the electric field component that resonates and radiates the two patch conductors 2A and 2B, and the wireless IC The operation of the tag 4 becomes more reliable.
Using the wireless IC tag device T1 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, a system as shown in FIG. 11, that is, an RFID system including the reader 101, the reader antenna 102, and the wireless IC tag device T1 can be constructed. it can. The RFID operation will be described.
First, the signal wave transmitted from the reader 101 undergoes plane resonance by the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1. A resonant electromagnetic field is generated by this plane resonance, and at the same time, a resonant electromagnetic field is radiated. The radiated electric field component E acts on the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 arranged along the radiation direction, and generates a current in the tag antenna 42. At this time, as described above, the radiated electric field components from the two independent patch conductors 2A and 2B are taken and added on both sides of one tag antenna 42, so that the current flowing through the tag antenna 42 is one It is stronger than the patch conductor.
The current flowing in the tag antenna 42 acts on the rectifier 43b (see FIG. 13) in the tag IC 43 to generate a drive voltage for the tag IC 43. As a result, the tag IC 43 is activated, and the current flowing in the tag antenna 42 is modulated by the information in the memory 43c (see FIG. 13). The signal current accompanied by the modulation at the tag antenna 42 generates and radiates a radiation electric field Et parallel to the tag antenna 42. The modulated signal wave radiated from the wireless IC tag 4 in this way follows the reverse process to that described above, and is sent to the reader antenna 102 of the reader 101 via the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1. The reader 101 receives and demodulates this signal wave, and the memory information in the wireless IC tag 4 is recognized.
As described above, according to the wireless IC tag device T1 of this example, in the RFID operation, the signal wave transmitted from the reader 101 is caused by resonance by the two patch conductors 2A and 2B of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1. Since a stronger signal wave can be given to the wireless IC tag 4, the communication sensitivity can be increased and the communication distance can be extended.
Further, in the wireless IC tag device T1 of this example, since the ground conductor 3 is formed on one side (lower surface) of the dielectric substrate 1, there is no radio wave radiation on the ground conductor 3 side. By using the surface on which the ground conductor is formed as a mounting surface on an object, mounting on an object made of metal, a container for storing a liquid, or the like is also possible.
Further, in the above wireless IC tag device T1, a general wireless IC tag 4 can be used. Therefore, the wireless IC tag 4 is used alone or has the structure shown in FIGS. Thus, it can be used in a form combined with the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D1, and there is also an advantage that one wireless IC tag 4 can be widely used according to the application.
Here, in the above embodiment, an example in which a linearly polarized signal is transmitted and received has been shown. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and the present invention can also be applied to the case of receiving and transmitting a circularly polarized signal. it can. An example of the specific structure is shown in FIG.
In the structure shown in FIG. 4, two patch conductors formed on the upper surface 1a of the dielectric substrate 1 are substantially square and are provided with notches (chamfers) C1 at a pair of opposite corners (diagonals). The conductors 12A and 12B are characterized in that the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D11 that effectively acts on the circularly polarized signal is formed. In addition, as a patch conductor effective for a circularly polarized signal, those having various shapes as shown in the prior art 1 can be used.
In the above embodiment, the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged above the patch conductors 2A and 2B. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and as shown in FIG. You may arrange | position below 2A and 2B. In this case, physical damage to the wireless IC tag 4 and damage to the tag IC 43 due to static electricity can be prevented.
In the above embodiment, an example in which a λg / 2 long open-ended patch conductor that effectively resonates with linearly polarized waves is used. In this case, as is generally known, FIG. The voltage between the patch conductors 2A, 2B and the ground conductor 3 is 0 on the central point P of the patch conductors 2A, 2B shown in FIG. Therefore, if the patch conductors 2A and 2B and the ground conductor 3 are short-circuited along the Y-axis direction at the central point P of each patch conductor 2A and 2B to make the patch conductor length λg / 4, the wireless IC tag Further downsizing of the device T1 can be achieved. In this case, although not shown in the figure, the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged between the end portions (between the open ends) where the patch conductor 2A and the patch conductor 2B which are open at one end and short-circuited at one end face each other.
In the above embodiment, the two patch conductors 2A and 2B are formed on the upper surface 1a of the dielectric substrate 1 in an electrically non-contact state. However, various other forms of patch conductors can be considered. . Specifically, for example, three or more patch conductors are formed in an electrically non-contact state on the upper surface 1a of the dielectric substrate 1, and an electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the three or more patch conductors. For example, the wireless IC tag may be arranged at a position where the tag antenna can efficiently receive the signal.
FIG. 5 is a plan view showing another example of the wireless IC tag device of the present invention. 6 is a cross-sectional view taken along line JJ in FIG.
The wireless IC tag device T2 of this example has two flat dielectric substrates 21A and 21B and rectangular shapes formed on the upper surfaces (first surfaces) 21Aa and 21Ba of the respective dielectric substrates 21A and 21B. Patch conductors 22A and 22B, ground conductors 23A and 23B formed on the entire lower surfaces (second surfaces) 21Ab and 21Bb of the dielectric substrates 21A and 21B, the wireless IC tag 4, and the wireless IC tag 4, respectively. Is provided.
Of the two dielectric substrates 21A and 21B, the patch conductor 22A and the ground conductor 23A formed on one dielectric substrate 21A constitute a radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D21, and the other dielectric substrate 21B. A radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D22 is configured by the patch conductor 22B and the ground conductor 23B formed in the above. This example is characterized in that these two radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22 are arranged close to each other.
In this example as well, the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22 show an example in which they effectively act on linearly polarized signals in which the axial ratio of elliptically polarized waves is infinite.
Next, the mounting position of the wireless IC tag 4 in this example will be described.
5 and 6, the axis passing through the center of the vertical width w of the patch conductors 22A and 22B is taken as the X axis, and the vertical axis perpendicular to the X axis is the center between the two patch conductors 22A and 22B on the X axis. The Y axis is assumed. An axis passing through the intersection of these X and Y axes and orthogonal to the paper surface is taken as the Z axis.
As shown in FIGS. 5 and 6, a dielectric base 25 is provided on patch conductors 22A and 22B formed on the upper surfaces of the dielectric plates 21A and 21B, and a wireless IC is provided on the dielectric base 25. Tag 4 is implemented. The wireless IC tag 4 is arranged so that the antenna major axis of the tag antenna 42 is parallel to the X axis. Note that both end portions (both end portions in the X direction) of the wireless IC tag 4 may be arranged on the patch conductors 22A and 22B in accordance with the form of the tag antenna of the wireless IC tag 4, The patch conductors 22A and 22B may be arranged so as not to overlap.
The position of the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged such that the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the patch conductors 22A and 22B can be efficiently received by the tag antenna 42 in the wireless IC tag 4. Note that the optimal placement position of the wireless IC tag 4 may be obtained experimentally such that the communication sensitivity of the wireless IC tag device T2 is maximized.
The dielectric base 25 on which the wireless IC tag 4 is placed has the wireless IC tag 4 with respect to the upper surfaces of the patch conductors 22A and 22B or the upper surfaces of the dielectric substrates 21A and 21B so that the communication sensitivity of the wireless IC tag device T2 is maximized. Is used to define the optimum distance (distance in the Z direction). In addition, due to the antenna configuration of the wireless IC tag 4, when the tag antenna 42 and the patch conductors 21A and 21B are in direct contact with each other, the tag IC 43 is short-circuited in a direct current, and the tag IC 43 becomes inoperable. It is also used when avoiding The dielectric base 25 may be omitted depending on the configuration of the wireless IC tag 4.
Next, the operation of the wireless IC tag device T2 will be described with reference to FIGS. 7 (A) and (B). FIG. 7 shows a state where the wireless IC tag 4 is removed.
First, in FIG. 7, the patch conductors 22A and 22B become open boundaries at both ends of the X axis, and are formed between the ground conductors 23A and 23B and the patch conductors 22A and 22B via the dielectric substrates 21A and 21B, respectively. If the length L of each patch conductor 22A, 22B is set to approximately ½ of the equivalent wavelength (in-tube wavelength) λg with respect to the signal frequency F0 to be used, the patch conductors 22A, 22B have a signal frequency. F0 is accompanied by planar circuit resonance. In addition, the broken line of FIG. 7 shows the electric field component E by resonance.
In FIG. 7, for example, when a signal wave is received with the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D22 removed, the electric field component indicated by the broken line E in FIG. The components are emitted simultaneously. In this state, when the wireless IC tag 4 is disposed on the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D21, the wireless IC tag 4 operates by receiving the resonance / radiation electric field. At this time, since the antenna major axis of the tag antenna (dipole tag antenna) 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 is parallel to the electric field component E, a signal current flows in the tag antenna 42 and the tag IC 43 operates.
Next, as shown in FIG. 7, the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D22 is disposed close to the radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflector D21 and the wireless IC tag 4, and the radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflectors D21, D22. When the signal wave is received, the radio wave component E is radiated by the plane resonance of the patch conductors 22A and 22B of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22. The electric field components E radiated by the plane resonance of the patch conductors 22A and 22B have the same strength and have distributions opposite to each other when viewed from the Z axis. Therefore, the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 is generated by the electric field components E. The currents generated in are in the same direction and strengthen each other. As a result, a stronger signal wave is supplied to the tag IC 43 of the wireless IC tag 4, and the wireless IC tag device T2 as a whole can exhibit higher sensitivity characteristics.
Also in this example, the distance (interval) between the patch conductor 22A of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D21 and the patch conductor 22B of the radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflector D22 should be shorter than the length of λg / 2. Is preferred.
-RFID operation-
Using the wireless IC tag device T2 shown in FIGS. 5 and 6, a system as shown in FIG. 11, that is, an RFID system including the reader 101, the reader antenna 102, and the wireless IC tag device T2 can be constructed. it can. The RFID operation will be described.
First, the signal wave sent from the reader 101 is plane-resonated by the respective radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22. A resonance electromagnetic field is generated by the plane resonance, and the resonance electromagnetic field is radiated. The radiated electric field component E acts on the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 arranged along the radiation direction, and generates a current in the tag antenna 42. At this time, as described above, the current flowing in the tag antenna 42 by the electric field component E radiated from the two independent patch conductors 22A and 22B becomes stronger than in the case of one patch conductor.
Then, the current flowing in the tag antenna 42 acts on the rectifier 43b (see FIG. 13) in the tag IC 43 to generate a driving voltage for the tag IC 43. As a result, the tag IC 43 is activated and the current flowing through the tag antenna 42 is modulated by the information in the memory 43c (see FIG. 13). The signal current accompanied with the modulation by the tag antenna 42 generates and radiates a radiation electric field parallel to the tag antenna 42. The modulated signal wave radiated from the wireless IC tag in this way follows the reverse process to that described above, and is sent to the reader antenna 102 of the reader 101 via the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22. The reader 101 receives and demodulates this signal wave, and the memory information in the wireless IC tag 4 is recognized.
As described above, according to the wireless IC tag device T2 of this example, in the RFID operation, the signal wave transmitted from the reader is transmitted by the patch conductors 22A and 22B of the two radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22. Due to the resonance, a strong signal wave can be given to the wireless IC tag 4, so that the communication sensitivity can be increased and the communication distance can be extended.
Further, in the wireless IC tag device T2 of this example, since the ground conductors 23A and 23B are formed on one side (lower surface) of the dielectric substrates 21A and 21B, there is no radio wave radiation on the ground conductors 23A and 23B side. Therefore, by making the grounding conductor forming surface side of each dielectric substrate 21A, 21B a mounting surface (grounding surface) on an object, mounting on an object made of metal or a container for storing a liquid is also possible. Become. The ground planes of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22 do not have to be the same plane. If the two patch conductors 22A and 22B are installed in different directions, the wireless IC tag is used. It becomes possible to change the radiation characteristics of the device.
Further, in the above-described wireless IC tag device T2, a general wireless IC tag 4 can be used. Therefore, the wireless IC tag 4 is used alone, or the structure shown in FIGS. 5 and 6 is used. As described above, it can be used in combination with the two radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22, and there is also an advantage that one wireless IC tag 4 can be widely used according to the application.
Further, in the above-described wireless IC tag T2, the two radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 and D22 can be divided, and therefore any one of the two radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflectors D21 and D22 is selected. Either a radio IC tag device is configured using two radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflectors D21 or D22, or a radio IC tag device is configured using two radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflectors D21, D22. It becomes possible to select. Thereby, the wireless IC tag device can be easily realized according to the usage form (for example, the purpose of use and performance).
Here, in the above embodiment, an example in which a linearly polarized signal is transmitted and received has been shown. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and the present invention can also be applied to the case of receiving and transmitting a circularly polarized signal. it can. In this case, the patch conductors 22A and 22B are replaced with patch conductors each having a notch (chamfer) C1 at a pair of corners (diagonals) facing each other in a substantially square shape as shown in FIG. That's fine.
In the above embodiment, the wireless IC tag 4 is arranged above the patch conductors 22A and 22B. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and as shown in FIG. You may arrange | position below 22A, 22B. In this case, physical damage to the wireless IC tag 4 and damage to the tag IC 43 due to static electricity can be prevented.
In the above embodiment, an example in which a λg / 2 long open-ended patch conductor that effectively resonates with linearly polarized waves is used. In this case, as is generally well known, FIG. The voltage between the patch conductors 22A and 22B and the ground conductors 23A and 23B is 0 on the central point P of the patch conductors 22A and 22B shown in FIG. Therefore, if the patch conductor length is λg / 4 by short-circuiting between the two patch conductors 22A and 22B and the ground conductors 23A and 23B at the center of each patch conductor 22A and 22B, the wireless IC tag device T2 Further downsizing can be achieved. In this case, although not shown in the figure, the wireless IC tag 4 is disposed between the ends where the patch conductor 22A and the patch conductor 22B, which are short-circuited at one end and the patch conductor 22B face each other (between the open ends).
In the above embodiment, the wireless IC tag device T2 is configured using the two dielectric substrates 21A and 21B on which the patch conductors 22A and 22B and the ground conductors 23A and 23B are formed. Various other forms are possible.
Specifically, for example, when a wireless IC tag device is configured with two dielectric substrates, a plurality of patch conductors are formed in an electrically non-contact state on one or both of the dielectric substrates, There can be mentioned a form in which the wireless IC tag is arranged at a position where the tag antenna can efficiently receive the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the (three or more) patch conductors. In addition, the wireless IC tag device is configured by three or more dielectric substrates on which patch conductors and ground conductors are formed, and a plurality of dielectric substrates are provided on one or more of the three or more dielectric substrates. The patch conductor is formed in an electrically non-contact state, and the electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the multiple (four or more) patch conductors formed on the three or more dielectric substrates is efficiently received by the tag antenna. A form in which the wireless IC tag is arranged at a position where it can be used can be exemplified.
In the first and second embodiments described above, an example in which a wireless IC tag using a dipole antenna as a tag antenna is shown. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and for example, a meander line antenna or a folded dipole antenna is used. Various IC tags can be used as long as they have linearly polarized electric field components, such as wireless IC tags.
In addition, when a wireless IC tag using a meander line as a tag antenna is used, the antenna length is shortened, so the distance between two patch conductors can be narrowed, and the entire wireless IC tag device can be further miniaturized. .
FIG. 8 is a plan view showing another example of the wireless IC tag device of the present invention. 9 is a cross-sectional view taken along the line KK of FIG.
The wireless IC tag device T3 of this example includes a flat dielectric substrate 31, a rectangular patch conductor 32 formed on the upper surface (first surface) 31a of the dielectric substrate 31, and the lower surface of the dielectric substrate 31. (Second surface) A ground conductor 33 formed on the entire surface of 1b and the wireless IC tag 4 are provided. The radio wave polarization conversion resonance is performed by the patch conductor 32 and the ground conductor 33 formed on the dielectric substrate 31. A reflector D3 is configured.
This example shows an example in which the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D3 effectively acts on a linearly polarized signal in which the axial ratio of elliptically polarized waves is infinite.
In this example as well, the length L of the patch conductor 32 is set to approximately ½ of the equivalent wavelength (in-tube wavelength) λg with respect to the signal frequency F0 to be used.
The dielectric substrate 31 is provided with a cavity 31c extending at a constant width along the X axis to the end of the dielectric substrate 31 below the patch conductor 32, and the wireless IC tag 4 is placed in the cavity 31c. Insertion is arranged. The wireless IC tag 4 is disposed inside the cavity 31c so that the antenna major axis of the tag antenna (dipole antenna) 42 is parallel to the X axis. Further, as shown in FIG. 8, the left portion of the dipole antenna as the tag antenna 42 in the figure and the tag IC 43 are located below the patch conductor 32 (dielectric substrate 31 side), and the right portion of the dipole antenna Most of the tag antennas 42 are arranged so as not to overlap the patch conductors 32 (a state in which all of the tag antennas 42 do not overlap the lower side of the patch conductors 32 and project outside) in plan view.
The operation of the wireless IC tag device T3 of this example will be described with reference to FIGS. 10 (A) and 10 (B). FIG. 10 shows a state where the wireless IC tag 4 is removed.
First, as shown in FIGS. 10A and 10B, when the wireless IC tag 4 is removed, the signal wave transmitted from the reader resonates between the patch conductor 32 and the ground conductor 33. The distribution of the electric field component of the resonant electromagnetic field at this time is shown as an electric field component E. The electric field component E is distributed between the patch conductor 32 and the ground conductor 33 via the dielectric substrate 31 as shown by a broken line E in the figure. At the same time, the electric field component E is radiated upward and obliquely upward in the patch conductor 32 and in the lateral direction of the dielectric substrate 31.
Next, in a state where the wireless IC tag 4 is inserted and disposed in the cavity 31 c of the dielectric substrate 31, the radiation electric field Et of the wireless IC tag 4 has radiation characteristics parallel to the antenna major axis of the tag antenna 42. The tag antenna 42 can effectively capture the electric field component E parallel to the X axis in the lateral direction or obliquely upward direction in the dielectric substrate 31 among the electric field components E that resonate and radiate simultaneously with the conversion resonant reflector D3. . As a result, a strong current flows through the tag antenna (dipole antenna) 42 of the wireless IC tag 4. Thereby, communication sensitivity can be raised and communication distance can be extended.
Here, in FIG. 10, since the resonant electric field E is orthogonal to the X axis in the tag antenna portion located below the patch conductor 32, the effect of the electric field component E on this portion on the tag antenna 42 is small. Considering such points, radio signal waves that resonate and radiate inside the dielectric substrate 31 or near the surface of the dielectric substrate 31 outside the open end of the patch conductor 32 can be captured by the wireless IC tag antenna. As described above, the tag antenna 42 is preferably disposed at a position away from the ground conductor 33, that is, at a position close to the surface of the dielectric substrate 31.
A system as shown in FIG. 11, that is, an RFID system including the reader 101, the reader antenna 102, and the wireless IC tag device T3 can be constructed using the wireless IC tag device T3 shown in FIGS. it can. The RFID operation will be described.
First, the signal wave sent from the reader 101 undergoes plane resonance by the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D3. A resonance electromagnetic field is generated by the plane resonance, and the resonance electromagnetic field is radiated. The radiated electric field component acts on the tag antenna 42 of the wireless IC tag 4 arranged along the radiation direction, and generates a current in the tag antenna 42.
The current flowing in the tag antenna 42 acts on the rectifier 43b (see FIG. 13) in the tag IC 43 to generate a drive voltage for the tag IC 43. As a result, the tag IC 43 is activated, and the current flowing in the tag antenna 42 is modulated by the information in the memory 43c (see FIG. 13). The signal current accompanied by the modulation at the tag antenna 42 generates and radiates a radiation field parallel to the tag antenna 42. The modulated signal wave radiated from the wireless IC tag 4 in this way follows the reverse process to that described above, and is sent to the reader antenna 102 of the reader 101 via the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D3. The reader 101 receives and demodulates this signal wave, and the memory information in the wireless IC tag 4 is recognized.
As described above, according to the wireless IC tag device T3 of this example, in the RFID operation, the signal wave transmitted from the reader is resonated by the patch conductor 32 of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D3, and the wireless IC tag 4 Since a strong signal wave can be applied to the signal, high sensitivity can be realized.
Further, in the wireless IC tag device T3 of this example, since the ground conductor 3 is formed on one side (lower surface) of the dielectric substrate 31, there is no radio wave radiation to the ground conductor 3 side. By using the surface on which the ground conductor is formed as a mounting surface on an object, mounting on an object made of metal, a container for storing a liquid, or the like is also possible.
Furthermore, in the wireless IC tag device T3 of this example, since the wireless IC tag 4 is disposed on the lower side (dielectric substrate 31 side) of the patch conductor 32, the wireless IC tag device T3 can be reduced in thickness. Further, since the protrusions can be eliminated on the surface side of the patch conductor 32, physical damage to the wireless IC tag 43 due to an external object can be prevented. Furthermore, since the wireless IC tag 4 is disposed inside the cavity 31c of the dielectric substrate 31, it is possible to prevent the tag IC 43 from being damaged by static electricity.
In the above embodiment, an example is shown in which a wireless IC tag using a dipole antenna is applied as a tag antenna. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and for example, a meander line antenna or a folded dipole antenna is used. Various IC tags can be used as long as they have linearly polarized electric field components such as wireless IC tags.
In the above embodiment, the cavity 31c is provided in the dielectric substrate 31, and the wireless IC tag T3 is disposed in the cavity 31c. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and the wireless IC tag 4 is, for example, a dielectric film. In the case where the wireless IC tag 4 is formed, the wireless IC tag 4 may be sandwiched between the patch conductor and the dielectric substrate.
Here, in the above embodiment, an example in which a linearly polarized signal is transmitted and received has been described. However, the present invention is not limited to this, and the present invention can also be applied to a case where a circularly polarized signal is received and transmitted. In this case, as shown in FIG. 4 described above, the patch conductor 32 may be a patch conductor in which a notch (chamfer) C1 is provided in each of a pair of corner portions (diagonal portions) that are substantially square and face each other. Moreover, the patch conductor of the other shape shown by the above prior art 1 can be utilized.
Each performance of the above-described wireless IC tag device of Embodiment 1 and its comparative example was evaluated by experiments. However, in the experiment, a 2.4 GHz band RFID system was used, the output of the reader was 300 mW at 2.45 GHz, and a circularly polarized antenna with a gain of 14 dBi was used as the reader antenna. Further, as a wireless IC tag, a general wireless IC tag in which a dipole antenna (tag antenna) is formed on a polypropylene dielectric substrate and a tag IC is mounted at the center of the dipole antenna is used.
-Experimental results-
First, at 2.45 GHz, the communication distance of the wireless IC tag alone was measured using the reader and the reader antenna, and the communication distance was 88 cm.
Next, in the structure of FIG. 4, the patch conductor 12B is not formed, but only one circularly polarized patch conductor 12A is formed to constitute a radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector, and the upper side of the patch conductor 12A is formed. A wireless IC tag device was manufactured by mounting the wireless IC tag described above on When the communication distance of the wireless IC tag device was measured using the reader and the reader antenna, the communication distance was extended to 252 cm.
The communication distance is extended in this way because the left-handed circularly polarized signal is converted to linearly polarized wave by the patch conductor 12A of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector, and the signal wave is efficiently supplied to the wireless IC tag. This is a result of adding about 3 dB of improvement of 3 dB by wave conversion and about 6 dB of gain increase effect of the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector. The radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector is formed using the same foamed dielectric substrate and patch conductor described below.
In the structure of FIG. 4, a foamed dielectric substrate having a thickness of 3 mm is used, and a ground conductor is formed by a metal foil film on the back surface of the foamed dielectric substrate, while a circle shown in FIG. 4 is formed on the top surface of the foamed dielectric substrate. Two polarization conductors for polarization, that is, patch conductors 12A and 12B having a substantially square shape and a notch C1 in the diagonal portion are formed in a close proximity to produce a radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector D11. Note that one side of each of the patch conductors 12A and 12B was about 53 mm, and the distance d between the two patch conductors 12A and 12B was 13 mm.
When the communication distance of the above wireless IC tag device was measured using the reader and the reader antenna, the communication distance was 350 cm. This extension of the communication distance can be regarded as an addition of about 3 dB of the gain increase due to the patch conductor 12B, as compared with Comparative Example 1-2.
Thus, if the structure of Embodiment 1 is applied, the communication distance of a general wireless IC tag can be extended to about four times the length. This results in a significant improvement in communication quality as an RFID system. As a result, the transmission power of the reader can be reduced, or a smaller tag antenna can be used. An RFID system can be provided.
Each performance of the above-described wireless IC tag device of Embodiment 3 and its comparative example was evaluated by experiments. However, in the experiment, a 2.4 GHz band RFID system was used, the output of the reader was 300 mW at 2.45 GHz, and a circularly polarized antenna with a gain of 14 dBi was used as the reader antenna. In addition, as a wireless IC tag, a tag IC mounted on a dipole antenna (tag antenna) and a casing made of a polypropylene material was used. The external dimensions of the wireless IC tag were thickness: 4 mm, length: 74 mm, and width: 15 mm.
First, at 2.45 GHz, the communication distance of the wireless IC tag alone was measured using the reader and the reader antenna, and the communication distance was 99 cm.
8 and 9, a foamed dielectric substrate having a thickness of 4 mm is used, and the patch conductor 32 has a substantially square shape with a side of 53 mm, and a pair of corner portions (diagonal portions) of the substantially square shape facing each other. A patch conductor (see FIG. 4) provided with a notch (chamfer) C1 is formed to form a radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflector, and in the cavity 31c of the dielectric substrate 31 of the radio wave polarization conversion resonance reflector, The wireless IC tag device was manufactured by inserting and arranging the wireless IC tag described above. The insertion position of the wireless IC tag was experimentally adjusted so that the maximum communication distance was obtained.
When the communication distance of the above wireless IC tag device was measured using the reader and the reader antenna, the communication distance was 211 cm, and the performance could be improved by about twice or more compared to the wireless IC tag alone. It was. From this result, it is understood that the communication performance of the wireless IC tag can be improved even if the wireless IC tag is disposed inside the dielectric substrate.
It is a top view which shows an example of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus of this invention. It is II sectional drawing of FIG. FIG. 2 is an operation explanatory diagram of the wireless IC tag device of FIG. 1. It is a top view which shows the modification of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus of FIG. It is a top view which shows the other example of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus of this invention. It is JJ sectional drawing of FIG. It is operation | movement explanatory drawing of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus of FIG. It is a top view which shows another example of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus of this invention. It is KK sectional drawing of FIG. It is operation | movement explanatory drawing of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus of FIG. It is a figure which shows the structural example of a RFID system. It is a top view which shows an example of a radio | wireless IC tag. It is a block diagram which shows the structural example of tag IC used for a wireless IC tag. It is the figure which writes together and shows the top view and longitudinal cross-sectional view which show an example of the radio | wireless IC tag apparatus which combined the radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector and the radio | wireless IC tag.
T1 wireless IC tag device D1 radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector 1 dielectric substrate 1a upper surface (first surface)
1b Bottom surface (second surface 2A, 2B Patch conductor 3 Ground conductor 4 Wireless IC tag 41 Dielectric substrate 42 Tag antenna (dipole antenna)
43 Tag IC
5 Dielectric base T2 Wireless IC tag device D21, D22 Radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector 21A, 21B Dielectric substrate 21Aa, 21Ba Upper surface (first surface)
21Ab, 21Bb Lower surface (second surface)
22A, 22B Patch conductors 23A, 23B Ground conductor 25 Dielectric base T3 Wireless IC tag device D3 Radio wave polarization conversion resonant reflector 31 Dielectric substrate 31a Upper surface (first surface)
31b Lower surface (second surface 31c Cavity 32 Patch conductor 33 Ground conductor 101 Reader 102 Reader antenna
A dielectric substrate having first and second surfaces, a ground conductor formed on the second surface of the dielectric substrate, and formed on the first surface of the dielectric substrate, and planarly resonates at a resonance frequency. A plurality of patch conductors and a wireless IC tag including a tag antenna and a tag IC,
Among the plurality of patch conductors, at least two patch conductors are disposed in an electrically non-contact state, and the wireless IC tag is arranged on the upper side or the lower side of the at least two patch conductors. A wireless IC tag device, wherein the tag antenna is disposed at a position where the tag antenna can receive an electric field component radiated simultaneously with the resonance of the patch conductor.
A plurality of dielectric substrates having first and second surfaces; a ground conductor formed on the second surface of each dielectric substrate; and a resonance frequency formed on the first surface of each dielectric substrate. One or a plurality of patch conductors that resonate in plane, and a wireless IC tag including a tag antenna and a tag IC,
Among the plurality of dielectric substrates, at least two dielectric substrates are arranged such that the patch conductor of one dielectric substrate and the patch conductor of the other dielectric substrate are in an electrically non-contact state. In addition, the wireless IC tag has a position at which the tag antenna can receive an electric field component radiated simultaneously with resonance of the at least two patch conductors above or below the patch conductors of the at least two dielectric substrates. The wireless IC tag device is arranged in
3. The wireless IC tag device according to claim 1, wherein the wireless IC tag partially overlaps the patch conductor on the upper side or the lower side of the at least two patch conductors, or the at least two patch conductors. A wireless IC tag device, wherein the wireless IC tag device is disposed at a position between.
RFID systems for the wireless IC tag according to any one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that it comprises a reader for reading and writing storage information of the wireless IC tag device by a wireless signal.
JP2005131602A 2005-04-28 2005-04-28 Wireless IC tag device and RFID system Active JP4452865B2 (en)
JP2005131602A JP4452865B2 (en) 2005-04-28 2005-04-28 Wireless IC tag device and RFID system
JP2006311239A JP2006311239A (en) 2006-11-09
JP4452865B2 true JP4452865B2 (en) 2010-04-21
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JP2005131602A Active JP4452865B2 (en) 2005-04-28 2005-04-28 Wireless IC tag device and RFID system
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JP4411555B2 (en) 2007-03-26 2010-02-10 ブラザー工業株式会社 Tag label making device
JP4916468B2 (en) * 2008-03-11 2012-04-11 Ｎｅｃトーキン株式会社 Antenna device and RFID tag
JP5050021B2 (en) * 2009-09-11 2012-10-17 東芝テック株式会社 Antenna device
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TWI491103B (en) 2015-07-01 Wireless communication improvement sheet body, wireless IC tag, antenna and wireless communication system using the same
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