WO2011135328A2 - Rfid tag location systems - Google Patents

Rfid tag location systems Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2011135328A2
WO2011135328A2 PCT/GB2011/050762 GB2011050762W WO2011135328A2 WO 2011135328 A2 WO2011135328 A2 WO 2011135328A2 GB 2011050762 W GB2011050762 W GB 2011050762W WO 2011135328 A2 WO2011135328 A2 WO 2011135328A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
antennas
tag
signal
signals
determining
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB2011/050762
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2011135328A3 (en
Inventor
Sithamparanathan Sabesan
Michael Crisp
Richard Plenty
Ian White
Original Assignee
Cambridge Enterprise Limited
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Family has litigation
First worldwide family litigation filed litigation Critical https://patents.darts-ip.com/?family=42270803&utm_source=google_patent&utm_medium=platform_link&utm_campaign=public_patent_search&patent=WO2011135328(A2) "Global patent litigation dataset” by Darts-ip is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Application filed by Cambridge Enterprise Limited filed Critical Cambridge Enterprise Limited
Priority to US13/643,267 priority Critical patent/US9367785B2/en
Priority to EP11719049.6A priority patent/EP2564229B2/en
Publication of WO2011135328A2 publication Critical patent/WO2011135328A2/en
Publication of WO2011135328A3 publication Critical patent/WO2011135328A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06KGRAPHICAL DATA READING; PRESENTATION OF DATA; RECORD CARRIERS; HANDLING RECORD CARRIERS
    • G06K19/00Record carriers for use with machines and with at least a part designed to carry digital markings
    • G06K19/06Record carriers for use with machines and with at least a part designed to carry digital markings characterised by the kind of the digital marking, e.g. shape, nature, code
    • G06K19/067Record carriers with conductive marks, printed circuits or semiconductor circuit elements, e.g. credit or identity cards also with resonating or responding marks without active components
    • G06K19/07Record carriers with conductive marks, printed circuits or semiconductor circuit elements, e.g. credit or identity cards also with resonating or responding marks without active components with integrated circuit chips
    • G06K19/0723Record carriers with conductive marks, printed circuits or semiconductor circuit elements, e.g. credit or identity cards also with resonating or responding marks without active components with integrated circuit chips the record carrier comprising an arrangement for non-contact communication, e.g. wireless communication circuits on transponder cards, non-contact smart cards or RFIDs
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S7/00Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00
    • G01S7/02Details of systems according to groups G01S13/00, G01S15/00, G01S17/00 of systems according to group G01S13/00
    • G01S7/42Diversity systems specially adapted for radar
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S13/00Systems using the reflection or reradiation of radio waves, e.g. radar systems; Analogous systems using reflection or reradiation of waves whose nature or wavelength is irrelevant or unspecified
    • G01S13/74Systems using reradiation of radio waves, e.g. secondary radar systems; Analogous systems
    • G01S13/82Systems using reradiation of radio waves, e.g. secondary radar systems; Analogous systems wherein continuous-type signals are transmitted
    • G01S13/84Systems using reradiation of radio waves, e.g. secondary radar systems; Analogous systems wherein continuous-type signals are transmitted for distance determination by phase measurement
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S13/00Systems using the reflection or reradiation of radio waves, e.g. radar systems; Analogous systems using reflection or reradiation of waves whose nature or wavelength is irrelevant or unspecified
    • G01S13/87Combinations of radar systems, e.g. primary radar and secondary radar
    • G01S13/878Combination of several spaced transmitters or receivers of known location for determining the position of a transponder or a reflector

Definitions

  • This invention relates to systems, methods and computer program code for locating RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tags, in particular UHF (Ultra High Frequency) RFID tags.
  • RFID Radio Frequency Identification
  • UHF Ultra High Frequency
  • RFID has become established in a wide range of applications for the detection and identification of items, allowing substantial amounts of data to be read at greater range than other technologies.
  • UHF high frequency
  • RFID tags are typically difficult to locate accurately because of multipath fading, and this can significantly restrict their use in applications where accurate location sensing is important.
  • a passive UHF RFID tag In order for a passive UHF RFID tag to be successfully read, it should receive sufficient radio frequency (RF) power for its internal logic to be activated and transmit back to the reader with sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). This requirement sets limits on the maximum tag range. However, due to the narrowband nature of the signals, fading effects in real environments generate large variations in the free space loss of both up- and downlink directions and can prevent successful reading of the tag, even well within the maximum read range. Therefore in order to fully deploy these passive UHF RFID tags in real applications, robust reading techniques are required for long range conditions.
  • RF radio frequency
  • SNR signal-to-noise ratio
  • Mojix http://www.mojix.com/ has a passive UHF RFID system with phased array of antennas (i.e. the antennas are in the near field region of one another). This allows phased array techniques to be employed, for example digital beam forming steering to maximise the link budget. This enables improved receiver sensitivity and transmitters which provide radio frequency (RF) signals in the industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band (902MHz and 928MHz) for activating the tags. Using this scheme a 99.9% tag detection is claimed. Details can be found, for example in: WO2007/094868, WO2008/1 18875 and WO2008/027650. Further background can be found in: EP2146304 and in US 2008/0024273.
  • RF radio frequency
  • EPC global UHF Class 1 Generation 2 RFID protocol standard allows frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) technique in the US and listen-before-talk technique in the UK to overcome interference in multiple- and dense-interrogator environment
  • FHSS frequency hopping spread spectrum
  • EPCglobal Specification for RFID Air Interface online available: http://www.epcqlobalinc.org/standards/uhfc1 q2/uhfc1 q2 1 2 O-standard- 2008051 1 .pdf :1
  • EPCglobal Class Gen 2 RFID Specification, Alien online available: http://www.rfidproductnews.com/whitepapers/files/AT wp EPCGIobal WEB.pdfl.
  • RSSI received signal strength indicator
  • TDOA time difference of arrival
  • PDOA phase difference of arrival
  • the PDOA technique can be applied to passive RFID. However, this only works well for line-of-sight communication (i.e. in free-space). In real environments, the PDOA technique suffers from multi-path fading as the fading introduces ambiguities in phase measurements (the phase shift of a direct path returned signal cannot accurately be determined from the sum of multi-path signals. This challenge is also addressed by Pavel V. Nikitin et al, in "Phase Based Spatial Identification of UHF RFID Tags", IEEE RFID 2010.
  • an RFID tag reading system for reading one or more RFID Tags, the system comprising an RF transmitter and an RF receiver, a plurality of transmit/receive antennas coupled to said RF transmitter and to said RF receiver, to provide spatial transmit/receive signal diversity, and a tag signal decoder coupled to at least said RF receiver, wherein said system is configured to combine received RF signals from said antennas to provide a combined received RF signal, wherein said RF receiver has said combined received RF signal as an input; wherein said antennas are spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, wherein said system is configured to perform a tag inventory cycle comprising a plurality of tag read rounds to read said tags, a said tag read round comprising transmission of an RF tag interrogation signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and receiving a signal from one or more of said tags, a said tag read round having a set of time slots during which a said tag is able to transmit tag data including a tag ID
  • the frequency/phase is changed on a relatively rapid time scale, for example over a time period of less than one second, 500ms or 300ms. Combining the RF signals from multiple antennas results in a reduced number of collisions compared with switching antennas.
  • An RFID tag is preferably configured to operate in accordance with a protocol for reading multiple passive RFID tags in a common region of space, for example the EPC Gen 2 protocol (ibid).
  • EPC Gen 2 protocol ibid
  • an estimate may be made of the total number of tags and rounded up to the next power of 2, thus defining the number of transmit slots for the tags to use. This number is transmitted to the tags and enables a tag to select a slot in which to transmit and, once read, to keep silent (eventually reawakening).
  • the phrase "inventory round” is defined in EPC Gen 2; this definition is explicitly incorporated by reference).
  • tags are read during the available time slots and, in embodiments, the frequency and/or relative phase is then changed before performing another tag read round.
  • the number of available slots for the tags is updated to the next power of 2 above the remaining total of number of tags to be read (noting that this may be an estimate as the total number of tags may be unknown). In embodiments this procedure is repeated, for example until no more tags can be read, or for a given or predetermined duration, or indefinitely (since tags eventually re - awake).
  • Some preferred implementations of the procedure change the relative phase of the transmitted signals at each antenna during the tag inventory cycle.
  • the transmitted signal phase at one antenna may be defined as a reference against which to determine the phases at the other antennas.
  • the system may also be configured to adjust a transmit power or receive antenna gain prior to combining the RF signals, to optimise the combined received RF signal, for example to maximise signal-to-noise ratio or minimise a bit or packet error ratio.
  • the system has at least three spatially diverse antennas which, unlike a switched antenna system, gives improved performance.
  • the RFID tags are passive UHF (300MHz-3000MHz) RFID tags, preferably operating at a frequency of less than 1 GHz, and preferably the antennas are mutually separated by at least 1 metre, 2 metres, 5 metres, 10 metres or 20 metres.
  • the above described system can provide greatly improved read/write performance, usable at increased ranges, with improved tag reading SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) - in particular in embodiments it has been found possible to read substantially 100% of tags present in a region bounded by lines joining the antennas, and to substantially eliminate the effects of nulls.
  • SNR signal-to-noise ratio
  • an RFID tag reading system for reading one or more RFID tags, the system comprising an RF transmitter and an RF receiver, a plurality of transmit/received antennas coupled to said RF transmitter and to said RF receiver, to provide spatial transmit/receive signal diversity, and a tag signal decoder coupled to at least said RF receiver, wherein said system is configured to combine received RF signals from said antennas to provide a combined received RF signal, wherein said RF receiver has said combined received RF signal as an input; wherein said antennas are spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, wherein said system is configured to perform a tag inventory cycle comprising a plurality of tag read rounds to read said tags, a said tag read round comprising transmission of one or more RF tag interrogation signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and receiving a signal from one or more of said tags, a said tag read round having a set of time slots during which a said tag is able
  • a method of locating an RFID tag comprising: transmitting tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a near field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal; receiving a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and processing said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two or more of said transmit signals (in embodiments resulting in a maxima in the returned signal RSSI) or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal.
  • a combination of signal phase and received signal strength indication is used in combination with a plurality of separated antennas in order to provide a more accurate tag location.
  • the antennas are sufficiently separated to be outside the near field region of one another, that is spaced apart such that D 2 /(4 ) is greater than 1 where D is a maximum dimension of the antenna.
  • the technique determines a rate of change of phase with frequency, and use this to determine tag range.
  • the change of phase with change in frequency is, in some preferred embodiments, determined by one of two techniques, one which employs a switched antenna system in which the transmit and receive antennas are selected from a set of two or more antennas, another using a distributed antenna system (DAS) in which signals are transmitted from a plurality of antennas simultaneously.
  • DAS distributed antenna system
  • signals at two different frequencies with a fixed offset are used, varying one of the frequencies (and hence varying both) and determining a difference between transmit signal and return signal phase.
  • a variable frequency offset may be employed.
  • the transmitted signal comprises a transmission at a plurality of different frequencies, but these different frequencies may be transmitted separately or at the same time (we describe later systems which transmit multiple frequencies simultaneously).
  • the receive and transmit antennas may be alternated or exchanged, for example to provide an extra data point at each frequency (the multipath in the two cases is different because the tag response is nonlinear, that is the tag reflection is generally a function of the received power).
  • the transmit and receive antenna polarisations may be altered.
  • each channel to the tag comprises an amplitude and a phase modulation due to multipath, but the sum of the two channels still comprises just one amplitude and one phase modulation.
  • phase measurement based upon on change in phase with change in frequency to multipath fading is improved by, in broad terms, weighting the phase measurements based upon received signal strength.
  • weighting the phase measurements based upon received signal strength is improved by, in broad terms, weighting the phase measurements based upon received signal strength.
  • one or both of two approaches are employed.
  • the method thresholds the phase measurement based upon received signal strength, more particularly disregarding measurements where the RSSI is less than a threshold.
  • a prediction- correction filter such as a Kalman filter or particle filter is employed to predict variation of phase difference with frequency change, correcting this using the phase measurement data.
  • the RSSI of a signal or signals from which the phase measurements are derived is used as a measure of the variance of the phase measurements, in effect a phase variance weighting for the, for example, Kalman filter.
  • a frequency sweep is employed to provide a series of phase measurements for input to the prediction- correction filter, but in other approaches a selected or random scatter of frequency data points within a range may be employed to gather the data for the filter.
  • the prediction-correction filter is predicting the trajectory of change of phase with change of frequency.
  • the method may include a calibration step, for example to calibrate out a fixed phase shift to an antenna in a co-ax or RF-over-fibre system.
  • a Kalman filter it is preferable to tune the coefficients to provide optimum location information; this can be achieved through routine experimentation.
  • phase of one transmitted signal may be used as a reference, the phase of the signals from the second and third transmit antennas both being varied with respect to this to achieve maximum RSSI.
  • back-end Kalman filter is similar for both the switched and distributed antenna approaches, in principle common hardware may be employed and the system may be configured to use either or both of these approaches to determining the location of a tag.
  • the invention also provides a tag location system comprising modules for implementing the various aspects and embodiments of the invention described above.
  • the invention provides a system for locating an RFID tag, the system comprising: a transmitter to transmit tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a new field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal; a receiver to receive a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and a processor to process said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal
  • the system still further provides a data carrier carrying processor control code to, when running, process said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted in responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal
  • the invention provides a method of determining tag-related data from a tag employing modulation of a reflected signal, the method comprising: transmitting data towards said tag from at least one transmit antenna, wherein said transmitted signal comprises a signal having at least two different discrete transmit frequencies simultaneously, and wherein either the same tag command data is transmitted on each of said discrete frequencies, or one or more of said discrete frequencies consists of a carrier and one or more others of said discrete frequencies transmit the or the same tag command data; modulating, at said tag, said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time to generate a modulated return signal having said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time; receiving said modulated return signal at at least one receive antenna; and determining said tag- related data from signals received from said tag at said different discrete frequencies.
  • an RFID tag has a relatively broadband response, in particular where it employs backscatter modulation (amplitude or phase shift keying).
  • a UHF RFID tag is often designed to work in both Europe and the United States, and thus over a band of 860-930 MHz.
  • This recognition in turn leads broadly to the above described aspect of the invention, in which multiple frequencies are transmitted simultaneously from the same, or different antennas to, in effect, parallelise the tag reading and/or location operation, which in embodiments is according to one of the improved techniques previously described.
  • the different frequencies employed are discrete frequencies and, unlike say a multiple-carrier system, are all modulated with the same baseband data so that the tag receives the same command on each of the different frequencies and is therefore not confused. (Because the data rates involved in communicating with RFID tags are relatively slow there is no significant skew problem). It will be appreciated that the reader/receiver is frequency selective.
  • signals are transmitted from at least two transmit antennas in a distributed antenna system (DAS) approach.
  • DAS distributed antenna system
  • the transmitted signal phase at each frequency may be independently adjustable to enable a DAS-based tag location technique as previously described to be employed.
  • the phase measurement information is weighted by received signal strength as previously described.
  • a method of determining tag- related data from a tag employing backscatter modulation of a reflected signal comprising: transmitting data towards said tag from a plurality of transmit antennas using a plurality of transmitted signals, wherein the same tag command data is transmitted from each said antenna, and wherein each of said transmitted signals comprises a signal having at least two different discrete transmit frequencies simultaneously; modulating, at said tag using backscatter modulation, said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time to generate a plurality of modulated backscatter signals each having said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time; receiving said modulated backscatter signals at at least one receive antenna; and determining said tag-related data from a combination of said modulated backscatter signals at said different discrete frequencies.
  • the above described techniques can be employed to rapidly read data from a tag additionally or alternatively to locating the tag.
  • a simple selection of the strongest return signal at one of the multiple simultaneous frequencies is selected for use in retrieving data from the tag.
  • the tag is a passive RFID tag.
  • the invention provides an interrogation transceiver system for use in a method as described above.
  • the interrogation transceiver system comprises a plurality of transceiver circuits for simultaneous operation, each configured to transmit at a different frequency, wherein each of the transceiver circuits is coupled to a common antenna interface.
  • the antenna interface may comprise, for example, an RF-over-fibre interface; the same antenna may be used for both transmitting and receiving, or separate may be employed.
  • the transceiver includes a transceiver controller to apply one or both of frequency control and phase control to each of the transceiver circuits. In embodiments this may be coupled to a common tag data protocol handling module for communicating with a tag.
  • a separate RF front end is employed for each frequency, and then the signals are mixed down to base band and low pass filtered before being digitized. In other approaches the signals are together mixed down to approximately base band, digitized using a fast digitizer, and then frequency separation is performed in software. The skilled person will be aware of other approaches which may be employed.
  • Once digitized signal data is available measurement of received signal strength at each frequency, and optionally if locating a tag, phase, is performed in software.
  • preferred embodiments also include software and/or hardware for RSSI-dependent tag reading and/or tag location, in embodiments of the latter employing RSSI-weighted phase measurement data preferably in combination with a prediction-correction filter such as a Kalman filter.
  • the invention further provides a method of locating an RF device using an RF device interrogation system having a plurality of antennas to communicate with said RF device, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said RF device simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the method comprising: calibrating a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RF device over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RF device interrogation system, wherein said calibrating further comprises: i) changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and i
  • RFID tags are particularly applicable to locating RFID tags but may, in principle, be employed in other location systems, for example to locate an RF device in a WiFi (RTM) system.
  • said RF device is an RFID tag, in particular a passive RFID tag.
  • Embodiments of the technique can be employed in situations where multiple tags may be present in a common region of space.
  • the technique by sweeping phase and/or frequency and recording a combined RF received signal strength together with other individual or combined antenna received signal strengths much more accurate tag location is possible than hitherto. Further embodiments of the technique may be employed for reading and locating multiple passive RFID tags within the region of space defined by the antennas.
  • the calibration data defines, in effect, a calibration of the tag interrogation system in terms of the frequencies/phases, position in two (optionally three) dimensions, and received signal strength(s). It will be appreciated that in embodiments the combined RF signals are received simultaneously from the plurality of antennas from a single tag at a time.
  • the calibration data may be used to locate the tag either by matching data from the tag to be located to a map defined by the calibration data, or by using the calibration data to define one or more environmental parameters in an analytical expression relating the tag locating data to a location for an RFID tag.
  • a tag location is determined by determining the closest match of the combined received signal strength at one or more specified relative phases and/or frequencies (used in the location procedure) to a known location of the calibration process.
  • interpolation between known calibration points may be employed.
  • the combined RF signal strength will not in general define an unambiguous location for a tag - for example it may define a set of locations comprising an approximate ring around location of each antenna.
  • the RF signal from a nearest predicated individual antenna may be employed to disambiguate the location of the RFID tag.
  • the signal strength from the nearest predicted individual antenna and the combined RF signal strength may be differently weighted, for example giving the signal strength from the nearest predicted individual antenna a greater weight than the combined RF signal strength.
  • the calibration data defines one or more parameters of an analytical expression as previously mentioned, for example an ITU (International Telecommunication Union) path loss equation for the relevant radio propagation environment.
  • ITU International Telecommunication Union
  • path loss equation for the relevant radio propagation environment.
  • incremental path loss (in dB) is given by 10 ⁇ log 0 (d/do) where d 0 is a reference distance and ⁇ is a path loss exponent
  • the calibration data may be employed to define a value for ⁇ dependent on the frequency and/or phase(s). This will, in general, define a locus of permitted locations for the RFID tag to be located.
  • the nearest predicted individual antenna to the tag may then be determined, for example by selecting the antenna with the maximum signal strength, thus defining, for example, a locus comprising a ring around this antenna.
  • the relative signal strength from two other antennas may then be used to define a position on a line between these antennas; this position together with the location of the nearest predicted antenna defining a direction or vector which incepts the aforementioned ring to define an estimated location for the RFID tag to be located.
  • combinations or subsets of the plurality of antennas may be employed, with the aim of avoiding severe nulls.
  • a combination of signals from two antennas a reduced risk of not seeing a tag located in null.
  • signal strengths from pairs, for example all possible pairs, of antennas are also generated by combining the RF signals from these pairs of antennas and these are then employed in finding a location for the tag, for example by finding the closest match to the tag locating data or map.
  • a single antenna for example the middle antenna of a pattern of six may serve as a communications cell antenna for a communications system such as Wifi or the like, and may also serve as one antenna for each of six triangles within the set of six surrounding antennas to provide RFID tag location regions.
  • the communications system and RFID tags may employ different communications frequencies and/or polarisations - for example circular polarisation can be preferred for UHF RFID tag location.
  • the invention provides a system for locating an RF device using an RF device interrogation system having a plurality of antennas to communicate with said RF device, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said RF device simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the system comprising: means for calibrating a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RF device over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RF device interrogation system, wherein said means for calibrating further comprises: i) means for changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antenna
  • the invention further provides an RFID tag interrogation system signal processor for locating an RFID tag using an RFID tag interrogation system having a plurality of antennas, to communicate with said tag, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said tag simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the signal processor comprising: a calibration module to calibrate a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RFID tag over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RFID tag interrogation system, said calibration module being configured to: change one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmittal from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmittal fro said plurality of antennas; determine combined
  • the invention further provides processor control code to implement the above- described systems and methods, for example on a general purpose computer system or on a digital signal processor (DSP).
  • the code may be provided on a carrier such as a disk, CD- or DVD-ROM, programmed memory such as read-only memory (Firmware).
  • Code (and/or data) to implement embodiments of the invention may comprise source, object or executable code in a conventional programming language (interpreted or compiled) such as C, or assembly code, code for setting up or controlling an ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit) or FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), or code for a hardware description language such as Verilog (Trade Mark) or VHDL (Very high speed integrated circuit Hardware Description Language).
  • ASIC Application Specific Integrated Circuit
  • FPGA Field Programmable Gate Array
  • Verilog Trade Mark
  • VHDL Very high speed integrated circuit Hardware Description Language
  • the RF signals to and/or from the antennas or antenna units are carried by RF-over-fibre apparatus/methods.
  • co-ax, or twisted pair cables i.e. CAT-5/6 are preferred.
  • FIG. 1 Triple antenna distributed antenna system (DAS) combined with Symbol reader.
  • DAS distributed antenna system
  • Figure 2 Plot of power at tag as a function of distance away from an antenna for a triple antenna DAS.
  • Figure 3 Two ray model; red line represents the direct path and blue line represents the reflected path from the floor.
  • Figure 4 Antenna arrangement in a 20mx20m area. Blue crosses represent the position of the antennas and red crosses indicates the grid points where the power is calculated.
  • FIG. 5 Plot of power at tag as a function of distance for a triple antenna DAS. This shows how nulls move with frequency. Red and blue represent 860MHz and 920MHz respectively.
  • Figure 6 Plot of power at tag as a function of distance for a triple antenna DAS. This shows how nulls move with phase. Red and blue represent 0, 0, 0 and 8, 0, ⁇ phase angle of each antenna respectively.
  • Figure 7 A plot of spatial variation in the signal power using a 2-ray model. Green represents above - 15dBm power level and red represents below - 15dBm power level which represents nulls. The number of read locations is 55.7%.
  • Figure 8 A plot of spatial variation in the signal power with each antenna shifted by ⁇ (180°) in turn. Green represents above - 15dBm power level and red represents below - 15dBm power level which represents nulls. The number of read locations is now increased to 77% with the phase diversity.
  • Figure 1 1 Variation of returned signal strength with range for a triple antenna with adaptive frequency selection.
  • the numbers in red represent the Tx frequencies in MHz at which nulls disappear.
  • Figure 13 Experimental setup for phase dithering.
  • Figure 14 Empirical cumulative probability distributions of the experimentally measured returned signal strength indicator (RSSI) for a triple antenna DAS, a triple antenna DAS with optimization (phase dithering) and a switched three antenna system.
  • RSSI returned signal strength indicator
  • FIG. 15 Empirical cumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured returned signal strength indicator (RSSI) for a triple antenna DAS, a triple antenna DAS with power diversity in downlink and in uplink.
  • RSSI returned signal strength indicator
  • FIG. 140 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 25cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area.
  • Figure 21 Cumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured returned signal power for both conventional switched antenna system and fully optimised DAS system.
  • FIG 22 A schematic of Gen 2 protocol; Inventory is mainly controlled by Count and Q factor.
  • the Tag Select command wakes all tags and count read attempts with Q slots are then made.
  • FIG 23 A plot number of read tags aginst time for a conventional swithced antenna and a optimised DAS RFID system.
  • Figure 24 This shows that the number of collisions is reduced in optimised DAS system over a conventional multi-antenna system
  • Figure 25 Incorporating the phase dithering in the RF front end using an Intel R1000 reader development kit.
  • Figure 26 This shows the random variation in control voltage i.e. random phase dithering. This is done by making use of a random number generator in C/C++.
  • Figure 28 80 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 50cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area.
  • Figures 29a to 29g show, respectively, a plot number of read tags against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; : a plot number of RN16 timeouts against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of RN16 received against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of good EPC reads against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of read tags against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of RN16 timeouts against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of RN16 received against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; and a plot number of good EPC reads against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system.
  • Figure 30 Plan view of the antenna arrangement. The positions of the antennas are indicated in meters in the form of (x, y) coordinates. Red crosses represent the tag measurement locations. The measurements are taken on a 0.6 m grid interval over a 10 m x 7.6 m area.
  • Figure 31 a Flowchart of a fingerprint tag location algorithm according to an
  • Figure 31 b Error distribution plot for a triple antenna DAS, a commercial RFID reader and a random algorithm over a 10 m x 7.6 m area.
  • Figure 32 Cumulative probability distribution (CDF) of error for a triple antenna DAS, a commercial RFID reader and a random algorithm location systems.
  • CDF Cumulative probability distribution
  • Figure 33 Plot of spatial variation in the location accuracy for a triple antenna DAS system over a 10 m x 7.6 m area.
  • FIG. 34a Flowchart of an analytical tag location algorithm according to an embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 34b Radiation pattern of a circular polarised antenna.
  • Figure 34c Modelled Combined RSSI over the area based on a two ray model, signal propagation model (and a radiation pattern).
  • Figure 35a An analytical model for a passive UHF RFID system using a 3 rd order polynomial.
  • FIG. 35b The dashed circles represent the three possible loci for a measured optimum RSSI of 640.7. Green circle locus is then chosen due to the highest number successful reads. The probability of successful reads and RSSI from AU1 & AU3 and AU1 & AU2 are then taken into account to estimate the angle and thus it gives a fix position which is represented by the blue circle.
  • the black circle represents the measurement location at (1 .5, 2.8) in this case.
  • Figure 36 Plots spatial variation in the location accuracy for a triple antenna optimised DAS system using an analytical algorithm over a 10m x 7.6m area.
  • Figure 37 (a) Typical tag dipole radiation pattern, and (b) effective radiation pattern when three read antennas are used at the indicated angular separations. Note the different radial scales
  • FIG. 38 An example tracking/location system graphical user interface (GUI).
  • GUI graphical user interface
  • Figure 39 A hexagonal structure with 20m antenna spacing.
  • Figure 40 Shows reader to tag and tag to reader communications.
  • Figure 41 Shows the effect of multipath fading on phase difference.
  • Figure 42 Shows an example experimental arrangement of an embodiment of the invention using a 4 antenna DAS combined with an R2000 tag reader; the demodulated tag backscatter signals are fed into an oscilloscope to sample and acquire I and Q signals which are processed in MatlabTM (a preamble-found signal is used as a trigger signal for the oscilloscope).
  • MatlabTM a preamble-found signal is used as a trigger signal for the oscilloscope.
  • Figure 43 Shows an example response of a digital Butterworth and Kass filter for removing unwanted signals.
  • FIG 44 Shows I and Q components of the tag backscatter signals (the Q component is the larger/red signal).
  • FIG 45 Shows a constellation diagram illustrating tag backscatter signals; RSSI and phase angle of the tag signals can be calculated from this diagram.
  • Figure 47 Shows a number of phase samples (triangles), actual phase (solid line), and corrected phase (dashed line) for these samples using a Kalman filter technique.
  • Figure 48 Shows estimated range values (crosses) and expected values (dashed line).
  • Figure 49 Shows an accumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured range error for a 3 antenna (averaging), 4 antenna (averaging), and 4 antenna (Kalman filtering) system; the upper line is for Kalman filtering, the middle line is for 4 antenna averaging, and the lower line for 3 antenna averaging.
  • Figures 50a and 50b Show, respectively, functional and structural block diagrams of a first embodiment of an RFID tag location system according to a first aspect of the invention.
  • Figure 51 Shows a vector illustration of a received signal at a tag due to direct and indirect paths; frequency dithering varies both amplitude and the phase of the direct and indirect path signals while phased dithering only varies the phase of both signals.
  • Figure 52 Shows a vector representation of a signal at a tag resulting from signals transmitted from antennas AU1 and AU2; the AU2 signal needs to be rotated by ⁇ and 6 2 with respect to the AU1 to obtain maximum RSSI at respective frequencies fi and f 2 , and the phase angles of the received signals at AU1 or AU2 are measured at both frequencies ( ⁇ 3 and ⁇ 4 ) for range estimation.
  • Figures 53a and 53b Show, respectively, functional and structural blocked diagrams of a second embodiment of an RFDI tag location system according to a first aspect of the invention.
  • Figures 54a and 54b Show first and second examples of interrogation transceiver systems in an embodiment of a second aspect of the invention, showing systems configured for concurrent frequency dithering over multiple antennas (as opposed to sequential frequency dithering) to parallelise operations in a DAS RFID system, using multiple transceiver circuits transmitting multiple frequencies simultaneously over each antenna unit (in Figure 54a the numbers in brackets show the frequency channels).
  • FIGS 55a and 55b Show, respectively, a blocked diagram of an embodiment of an RFID tag read/location system according to a second aspect of the invention, and an example transceiver for the system.
  • the RFID tags operate over a range of carrier frequencies which, although small, is sufficient so that frequency dithering can allow the movement of nulls from specific positions, and along with control of the amplitude transmitted at each antenna, the depth of remaining nulls can be reduced.
  • substantially error-free reading and writing as well as enhanced returned signal strength (RSSI) can be achieved for distances, in embodiments of up to 20 m.
  • RSSI enhanced returned signal strength
  • three antennas are placed in 20m apart and a simple 2-ray model ( Figure 3) is used to calculate the power along the red crosses as shown in Figure 4. It is clearly shown that the nulls move with the frequency and phase dithering as shown in Figures 5 and 6 respectively. Therefore, if a tag interrogation procedure is carried out in several frequency and phase configurations, a tag at any given location will not experience a null in one of the combinations
  • the "correct" combination of amplitudes and frequencies which result in constructive interference at the tag may be found by an exhaustive search.
  • Figure 7 shows the received signal power from the three antennas each transmitting +33dBm is shown on a 5cm grid interval. It is then used to determine whether a successful read will be possible by considering a tag threshold power of -15dBm and assuming that the tag threshold power will be the limiting factor. The number of read locations is shown to have increased from 55.7% to 77% with a phase dithering technique as shown in Figure 8.
  • the phase dithering technique here carries out the modelling with all the DAS antennas being phase matched and then each shifted by 180 degrees with respect to the others; the maximum returned power from the 4 cases is then plotted.
  • the number of nulls can be moved and thus can be reduced by altering the RFID carrier frequency.
  • two signal generators are used in this experiment for the purpose of transmitting two different frequencies simultaneously, one to transmit RFID carrier signals within the global tag frequency band (from 860MHz to 960MHz) which feeds to AU1 and AU2 and the other one to transmit the same frequency band signals which feeds to AU3.
  • UK regulations allow a 2MHz band between 865.5MHz and 867.5MHz for passive RFID split into 10, 200 kHz channels; the US regulations allow a 25MHz band between 902MHz and 928MHz.
  • Figure 10 shows the antenna locations within a 10mx4m laboratory. The positions of the antennas are chosen to achieve overlapping areas of coverage within the constraints of a cluttered room. The backscattered signal power is measured at 10cm intervals along a line away from AU1 in this and the following experiments.
  • the carrier frequency is varied with the aim of eliminating it.
  • the variation of returned signal strength with range for a triple antenna with adaptive frequency selection is shown in Figure 1 1 .
  • the numbers in red represent the Tx frequencies in MHz at which nulls disappear.
  • the optimum frequency selection improves the number of read locations to 95%, as shown in Figure 12.
  • the reason for the enhancement is that at different frequency, the RFID signal has a different multi path effect and gain. Consequently, at an optimum frequency, the path losses are reduced; resulting in reducing the chance of a fade.
  • the frequency dithering technique we describe improves passive RFID coverage and is different to the FHSS (Frequency hopping spread spectrum) technique of the EPC Class 1 Gen 2 RFID protocol previously mentioned.
  • FHSS Frequency hopping spread spectrum
  • Phase and power control are shown to provide improved performance in the multi- antenna system (Figure 13).
  • the coverage can be improved further by combining the received signals from each antenna and applying a different gain to the signal from each antenna to optimise the combined received signal SNR; for example, by altering the gain of uplink of each antenna unit (AU) in 10dB steps or less between OdB and 30dB.
  • the three antenna DAS system is formed by splitting the signals in the downlink and combining the signals from the antennas in the uplink.
  • the conventional switched three antenna system is tested by transmitting and receiving the signals from one antenna at a time and then obtaining the best received signal strength from all three antennas.
  • Figure 15 shows that the power control in uplink suppressing interference from other receiving antennas) enhances the received signal strength indication (RSSI) as the number of nulls is reduced from 24% to 20% in a triple antenna with power dithering over a triple antenna DAS system.
  • the gain of the uplink and downlink is varied from OdB to 30dB in 10dB steps in the proposed optical UHF RFID system.
  • a proof of principle demonstration for the improved passive RFID coverage has been carried out with a single tag in the field; the system is shown in Figure 16.
  • a signal generator and an analyser have been chosen to illustrate the improvement.
  • a Labview program is designed to automatically vary the phase difference between two of the antennas in 24° steps between 0 ° to 360° while the frequency is varied from 860MHz to 960MHz in 1 MHz steps. This demonstration is carried out over a 20mx6m area as shown in Figure 17.
  • the antenna diversity combined with frequency dithering technique is shown to increase the probability of a successful read to 100% from 67% as shown in Figure 18. This result is achieved with +30dBm EIRP at each antenna.
  • the antenna diversity combined with frequency dithering technique is shown to increased the tag read accuracy from 79% (1 1 1 tags) to 100 % (140 tags) in a fully optimized DAS over a conventional switched multi-antenna system as shown in Figure 21 .
  • RFID coverage can be enhanced by dithering phase and frequency.
  • this approach could be used alongside other techniques such as polarisation switching (i.e. switching the polarisation (vertical or circular) of Tx and Rx antennas at a particular location), or switching which antennas are employed for Tx and Rx, to enhance the coverage further. This is due to the fact that the locations of constructive interference occurring due to phase and frequency dithering vary with antenna polarisation and radiation pattern. Read rate/speed enhancement of multiple passive tags
  • the Alien RFID 8800 reader uses two main parameters to tune the reading of multiple tags.
  • the Q-factor determines how many slots (2 e ) are allocated in the Aloha algorithm. In an inventory the Q-factor can be varied for each count.
  • the DAS RFID system is configured to perform a tag inventory cycle comprising a plurality of tag read rounds to read tags, a tag read round having a set of time slots, determined by the Q- bit random number in the tag slot counter, during which a tag decrements its slot counter and is able to transmit tag data including a tag ID for reception by antenna when the tag slot counter is 0.
  • read tags have the inventorised bit set so that they do not compete in subsequent cycles speeding up the inventory.
  • the Tag Select command wakes all tags and sets their inventorised bit to zero.
  • Count read attempts are then made. Each read attempt assigns 2 2 slots for the tags to compete for.
  • the number (Q) is transmitted to the tags and enables a tag to load a Q bit random number into their slot counter.
  • Tags are then requested to decrement the value of their slot counter and are allowed to transmit if and only if their slot counter is zero.
  • they are instructed to keep silent for a period set by the session flag persistence time (eventually re-awakening).
  • Successfully read tags have the inventorised bit set so they do not compete for slots in future counts until a new cycle is started.
  • the DAS optimization settings are changed for each count ( Figure 22).
  • FIG. 23 shows that a 47% improvement (from 809 tags/sec to 1 188 tags/sec) tag read rate can be achieved in optimised DAS system compared to a conventional switched antenna RFID system through modelling. This is achieved by reducing the number of collisions (Figure 24) within each read as the DAS optimisation technique allows us to move the nulls around the field. Hence, only a certain number of tags are active at any time. (The peaks in Figure 24 are where the number 2 N of available timeslots is decreased). The number of active tags for every DAS setting is obtained from experimental results. It is then used to simulate the optimised DAS in our analytical model. DAS optimisation technique operates on a loop just above the count (such that the Q factor is adjusted for each DAS setting combination). This enables the inventorised bit of the tags to be exploited to prevent the re-reading of tags.
  • a proof of principle demonstration for the improved read speed/rate has been carried out.
  • a prototype based on an Intel R1000 development board is developed as shown in Figure 25.
  • the R1000 supports host side applications (Intel Transceiver interface).
  • the transceiver interface includes a C/C++ functional interface to communicate with the firmware module using USB communication.
  • the R1000 returns data from the Intel firmware over the USB interface in a sequential of packets to the host PC.
  • Phase is randomly varied using voltage controlled phase shifters (as shown in Figure 26) controlled by the PC when the R1000 returns the inventory-round-begin packet which indicates the beginning of an inventory round (as shown in Figure 25).
  • the developed triple antenna DAS RFID system is configured to transmit signals in the UK RFID band and a +30dBm EIRP is transmitted from each antenna as shown in Figure 27.
  • 80 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 50cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area as shown in Figure 28.
  • An inventory using the fixed Q algorithm is performed with the system operating as a conventional (where a triple antenna system is used to transmit signals simultaneously) and an optimised triple antenna DAS RFID system (where frequency and phase dithering is applied over a triple antenna system).
  • the conventional antenna system reads tags at a rate of 38 tags/sec while the optimised DAS RFID is at a rate of 68 tags/sec.
  • an 81 % improvement in read rate is demonstrated in the DAS RFID system over a conventional system.
  • an initial read rate of >1 10 tags/sec is sustained for a greater proportion of the total tag population using the DAS RFID system as shown in Figure 29a.
  • the improvement in the tag read rate is due to the fact that the number of collisions within each inventory round is reduced and read success rate is enhanced using the DAS optimisation technique as it moves the nulls around the field. Hence, only a certain number of tags are active at any time.
  • the DAS optimisation technique operates on a loop just above the count (such that the Q factor is adjusted for each DAS setting combination). This enables the inventorized bit of the tags to be exploited to prevent the re-reading of tags.
  • Figure 29b shows a plot of number of RN16 timeouts against time for the conventional RFID system and the optimised DAS RFID system.
  • the RN16 timeouts occur due to both collided and empty slots. It is clearly shown that DAS RFID encounters fewer collided and empty slots compared with a conventioal RFID system. For a complete comparison, the number of RN16 received and good EPC reads (successful tag reads) are shown in Figures 29c and 29d respectively for both DAS RFID and conventional systems. The results clearly illustrate that a high sustained tag throughput with large tag populations can be obtained in a DAS RFID that can outperform conventional RFID readers.
  • Figure 29f shows a plot of number of RN16 timeouts against time for the conventional RFID system and the optimised DAS RFID system. It is again shown that DAS RFID encounters fewer collided and empty slots compared with a conventioal RFID system. The number of RN16 received and good EPC reads are shown in Figures 29g and 29h respectively for both DAS RFID and conventional systems. The results again indicate that a high sustained tag throughput is possible in a DAS RFID system.
  • the demonstrator shows that while an enhanced tag read rate is achieved in the DAS RFID system, the initial tag read rate is sustained for a greater proportion of the total tag population. This improvement is due to both a reduction in the number of collisions (result of dynamic grouping) and an improvement in the read success rate (result of enhanced radio coverage). It is anticipated that the projected tag read rate of >1000 tags per second is possible with next iteration of reader development with closer integration and also by configuring the tag to reader protocol to achieve the maximum data rate. The closer integration will be achieved by editing the R1000 reader firmware to provide an indication of each read attempt resulting in perfect synchronisation with phase dithering at each read attempt within an inventory round.
  • Figure 30 shows a plan view of the physical arrangement of the three AUs used in this work and of the measurement locations over a 10 m x 7.6 m area in an open atrium.
  • the atrium area is bounded by solid walls at the left and right extremes of the figure and encompasses a concrete pillar. It is a realistic in-building environment.
  • the tag is orientated such that its antenna is vertically polarized to match the AU antennas and is held fixed throughout the experiments. This matching of the tag and reader antenna polarization gives a 3 dB benefit in both the uplink and downlink performance over orientation-insensitive circularly polarized antennas which are often used for RFID readers.
  • the AU locations are chosen to provide overlapping coverage.
  • a fingerprint algorithm based on combined received signal strength indicator (RSSI) from multiple antennas is implemented as shown in Figure 31 a.
  • the area of interest is first mapped by recording the combined RSSI from all the AUs and the individual RSSI from each AU in turn.
  • the mapping/calibration is done by placing tags at each of the measurement locations and then performing the RSSI measurements simultaneously. Depending upon the operating environment, it is, however, anticipated that the calibration may need to be repeated a number of times (for example if furniture is moved). In this work, the measurements are repeated five times at each grid point with the optimum phase (which gives the maximum RSSI) and different frequency combinations.
  • the AU with the highest combined signal strength is identified for each tag location.
  • the tag location is then estimated for an unknown point by finding the closest match between the pre-recorded values and the measured maximum combined three antenna RSSI, the RSSI from the closest predicted antenna and the probability that each antenna is closest to the tag amongst the other grid points.
  • a maximum likelihood weighting is applied to the data, with coefficients chosen empirically, to give the greatest location accuracy on a test dataset.
  • the recorded optimized three antenna RSSI and RSSI from the nearest predicted antenna for this tag are first searched within the mapped data set as shown in Table 1 below.
  • a table is then calculated for the root mean square difference between each of the data set elements of known location and the observed data of the tag to be located as shown in Table 2.
  • the data from position (0.6, 1 .8) m is found to be the closest match, so the best estimate of the location of the tag is (0.6, 1 .8) m. Since the actual location of the tag was (0, 1 .8) m this represents an error of 0.6 m.
  • the tag location was then estimated for an unknown point by finding the closest match between the pre-recorded values and the measured maximum combined three antenna RSSI, the RSSI from the closest predicted antenna and the probability that each antenna is closest to the tag.
  • a maximum likelihood weighting was applied to the data, with coefficients chosen empirically, to give the greatest location accuracy.
  • a table is then calculated for the root mean square difference between each of the data set elements of known location and the observed data of the tag to be located.
  • the data from position (0.6, 1 .8) m is found to be the closest match, so the best estimate of the location of the tag is (0.6, 1 .8) m. Since the actual location of the tag was (0, 1 .8) m this represents an error of 0.6 m.
  • the performance of the DAS location technique is compared with that of a commercial RFID reader which can estimate range using RSSI.
  • location is found by estimating the distance between the tag and each AU in turn using the range estimation feature. The position is then calculated using triangulation.
  • This approach is expected to give a fixed position.
  • the RSSI is a weak function of distance and hence the three antennas do not always result in an exact fix. In such cases a least mean squared error approach is used.
  • Figure 31 b shows the location accuracy error distributions for the fingerprint algorithm for a triple antenna DAS, for a random algorithm and for a commercial RFID reader using RSSI.
  • An average accuracy of 1 .9 m is achieved for the DAS RFID system, this comparing with an average 4.6 m accuracy (standard deviation of 3.6 m) if the location is picked at random from the set of measurement locations.
  • the average location accuracy using the commercial reader is found to be 4.1 m (standard deviation of 2.1 m).
  • a 2.2 m improvement in location accuracy is achieved by the optical DAS RFID system over the commercial multi-antenna RFID system.
  • the mean location accuracy is improved to be 1 .7 m (standard deviation of 0.9 m), and 80% of measurements have an accuracy of better than 2.2 m as opposed to the 3.0 m otherwise.
  • An analytical algorithm based on a signal propagation model is also investigated to determine whether an enhancement in location accuracy is possible.
  • An analytical algorithm based on a two ray model, signal propagation model (and a radiation pattern) was implemented as shown in Figure 34a.
  • the radiation pattern gives the gain, G(x, y, z) in the direction of interest ( ) as shown in Figure 34b.
  • the two 2-ray model is used to predict the RFID fading occurring due to the interaction between a direct path and a single reflection from the floor as previously shown in Fi ure 3.
  • the direct path, r l and indirect path, r 2 are given respectively; where and h 2 are highest of the antenna and tag respectively and r is the distance of the tag away from the antenna location.
  • the amplitudes of the direct and indirect path of the transmitted signal from each antenna at the tag location are calculated at the random signal frequency ( ) between 865-868 MHz and are written as M l and M 2 respectively; where P is the transmitted power.
  • the path loss (in dB) on each of the direct and indirect paths are first estimated using the ITU model, the antenna gain is added to the total transmitted power ( G(x, y, z) ) in the direction of the direct and reflected ray making use of the antenna pattern to estimate the power at the tag location. This gives the magnitude of the direct and indirect signals.
  • X e 2 rem ⁇ — x 2 ⁇ ) + ⁇ ,2 ⁇ ) ; where remQ are the functions that return the ⁇
  • V The linear sum of the complex representation of the signals gives a vector representation, V of the signal strength at the location.
  • V 10 ⁇ x exp(j ⁇ 1 ) + 10 1 ⁇ x exp(j ⁇ 2 )
  • the maximum power received by the tag is then calculated by combing the vector representations of the signal power from all three antennas in the direct and the reflected signal path at the optimum frequency and phase combination.
  • the power received by the receiving antenna (RSSI) is calculated in the similar manner and the tag loss is assumed to be x%.
  • a map is then built up over a matrix of X, Y values.
  • the value of the loss exponent (n) in the ITU model and the tag loss, x dB are determined from experimentally record RSSI values which are fitted to the calculated model through an empirical process, n is varied from 1 to 40 while x is dithered from 0.1 to 0.9 and the values of n and x which gives the best fit are then selected. Once the values of n and x are determined, the calculated model ( Figure 34c) is then used to estimate the location. The combined RSSI from a tag of unknown location with 1 dB tolerance (if no solution find then the tolerance is incremented by 1 dB until a solution is found) is compared with the pre-calculated map of RSSI's from the three antennas to give a contour of possible positions.
  • Single antenna RSSI is used to select the appropriate locus within the contour of 1 dB variation (if no solution find then the tolerance is incremented by 1 dB until a solution is found).
  • RSSI from individual antennas are then used to find the direction (angle) of the tag location from the nearest antenna location. The angle is estimated using the ratio between the RSSI from the two furthest antennas. The intersection between the locus and the direction (a line) gives a fix position.
  • a measured combined RSSI of 128 from the three antennas gives a number of possible loci within 1 dB tolerance as shown in Figure 34d.
  • the AU with the highest RSSI is selected as the most likely closest antenna to the tag location.
  • AU1 gives the highest RSSI as shown in Table 3 and hence the most appropriate locus is selected within the antenna range as shown in Figure 6.
  • the RSSI values from AU3 and AU2 are then used to estimate the angle (direction) by taking the ratio between them (i.e RSSI of AU3 : RSSI of AU2). Solving the locus and the line (based on the direction) gives the estimated location at (0.5, 1 .8) - see Figure 34e.
  • measured combined RSSI values from multiple antennas are fitted with a 3rd order polynomial function in order to achieve a minimum error as shown in Figure 35a.
  • the analytical model is then used to estimate distance which gives an average range accuracy of 1 .1 m.
  • the combined optimum RSSI from the three antennas gives three loci of possible positions (circles with the radius of the range).
  • Single antenna RSSI is used to select the appropriate locus among the three loci.
  • Combined RSSI from two antennas are then used to give a fix position.
  • a measured optimum RSSI of 640.7 from the three antennas gives three possible loci (dashed circles with a radius of 3.2m) as shown in Figure 35b.
  • the AU (antenna unit) with the highest number successful reads is selected as the most likely closest antenna to the tag location. In this case AU1 gives the highest probability. Therefore, green dashed circle locus is selected to be the appropriate one.
  • the probability of successful reads as well as RSSI values from AU1 & AU3 and AU1 & AU2 are then used to estimate the angle and hence gives the estimated location at (1 .5, 2.8) as illustrated in Figure 35b.
  • tag orientation can have a strong effect on the RSSI at a particular reader antenna.
  • the effect of tag orientation on RSSI is reduced for the DAS approach due to antenna diversity. For example, consider a tag with a radiation pattern shown in Figure 37(a). If the RSSI is summed from 3 antennas, in the best case directions (0°, 120°, 240°) and worst case (0°, 90°, 180°), the orientation dependence of the RSSI is reduced from 50dB to 3 dB (best case) and 10 dB (worst case) using the DAS, as shown in Figure 37(b). This orientation insensitivity also gives a much higher probably of tag detection. We thus expect tag orientation to have a relatively small impact on location accuracy in our triple antenna DAS RFID system compared with a conventional RFID system.
  • a prototype real time location system based is demonstrated based on low cost passive UHF RFID (Figure 27).
  • the analytical algorithm is implemented using a piece of Matlab (RTM) programme and the screen shot of a GUI is shown in Figure 38.
  • the green circles represent the real time location of an array of passive tags. The location accuracy is shown to be 1 .8m over a 10m x 4m area.
  • DAS distributed antenna
  • the fading can be reduced by using the antenna diversity and frequency dithering technique.
  • the read range can be extended similar to a value comparable with a wireless local area network (WLAN) and ubiquitous coverage can then be achieved with common infrastructure.
  • WLAN wireless local area network
  • the invention not only provides enhanced coverage for passive UHF RFID, but it can also deliver improved performance for any RF powered system.
  • Embodiments substantially eliminate nulls using RFID signal sources to transmit two or more frequencies from each antenna and vary (dither) the carrier frequency between them in steps.
  • Embodiments also substantially eliminate nulls using phase shifts between two or more antennas and varying (dithering) the phase between them in steps.
  • Further embodiments substantially eliminating the nulls by manipulating the phase differences and carrier frequency where the phase is varied between two of the antennas in 24° steps between 0 ° to 360° while the frequency is varied from 860MHz to 960MHz in 1 MHz steps. In each case, where more than two antennas are used an exhaustive search may be employed.
  • the methods/systems combine the received signals from two or more antennas and then process them at the base station.
  • the methods/systems apply a different gain to the signal from each antenna to optimise the combined received signal SNR; this may be by altering the gain of uplink of each antenna unit (AU) in 10dB steps or less between OdB and 30dB.
  • Embodiments provide enhanced passive UHF RFID and sensor coverage using the phase and power diversity.
  • Embodiments also improve read range of a RFID and sensor system with the phase and power diversity, and/or improve the read speed/rate of a RFID and sensor system with the phase and power diversity, and/or improve the location accuracy of a RFID and sensor system with the combined RSSI from multiple antennas, phase diversity and power diversity.
  • the antennas are fed either by co-ax or by radio over fibre techniques.
  • one or more of the transmit/receive antennas may comprise a leaky feeder.
  • preferred embodiments of the system first aim to minimize the effect of multipath fading on location accuracy, and second use joint phase information and RSSI to increase location accuracy, in particular by Kalman filtering techniques.
  • Some preferred embodiments operate over a distributed antenna system (DAS), and although coax-based systems or other transmission media may be employed, some preferred embodiments use radio over fibre (ROF) systems to transmit and receive signals from antenna units (AUs) to RFID tags.
  • DAS distributed antenna system
  • ROF radio over fibre
  • a preferred approach uses radio over fibre (RoF) systems to transmit and receive signals from antenna units (AUs) to RFID tags.
  • the distance between the reader and tag can be estimated by measuring the phase shifts between the transmitted carrier and received tag signals at two different carrier frequencies. For instance, for a bi-static reader system as shown in Figure 40, the phase shift ( ⁇ ) of the coherent tag backscatter signals at fi frequency (wavelength ⁇ ) can be given by equation (1 ). Similarly, the phase shift ( ⁇ 2 ) of the coherent tag backscatter signals at f 2 frequency (i.e ⁇ 2 corresponding wavelength) can be given by equation (2).
  • ⁇ 1 (( ( _ ⁇ + ( _ 2 ) - ⁇ )/ ⁇ ⁇ 2 ⁇ (1 )
  • di and d 2 are the forward and return distances and k is an integer number.
  • di+d 2 (c/27t) x ( ⁇ - 0 2 )/(f 1 -f 2 ) (3)
  • RTLS based on a combination of RSSI and phase of backscatter signals with frequency dithering and antenna diversity
  • This approach for locating RFID tags uses information from (a) frequency dithering and (b) a combination of RSSI and phase of the tag signals. Hence, we determine them as follows.
  • FIG. 42 An example experimental setup using a four antenna DAS combined with an Intel R1000TM reader is shown in Figure 42.
  • the demodulated tag backscatter signals are fed into an oscilloscope to sample and acquire I and Q signals which are then processed in MatlabTM.
  • the preamble-found signal is used as a trigger signal in the oscilloscope.
  • a +30 dBm equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) is transmitted from each antenna unit (AU) at a time.
  • EIRP isotropically radiated power
  • Tx and Rx antennas are switched to each perform both transmit and receive operations in each AU. This provides extra measurements which are used later with signal processing techniques to accurately estimate the phase difference.
  • the received tag backscatter signals are demodulated in the R1000 reader module which provides baseband I and Q components of the backscatter signals.
  • the signals are then sampled using an oscilloscope and processed in Matlab to estimate the amplitude (i.e RSSI) and phase angle.
  • a digital Butterworth band pass filter is implemented in MatlabTM to remove unwanted signals.
  • the filter frequency response is shown in Figure 43.
  • MatlabTM processing gives the desired I and Q of the tag backscatter signals as shown in Figure 44.
  • Figure 45 shows a constellation diagram of the tag backscatter signals.
  • the RSSI and phase of the signals are determined from this. It should be noted that the phase shift due to fibre length is calibrated out to give the actual phase shift over the wireless transmission range between the AU and tag.
  • the RSSI and phase of the backscatter signals are measured over six frequencies in this example, from 902.75 to 912.75 MHz with a 2MHz step.
  • the measured RSSI and phase values are used to provide the best estimate of the range by employing a Kalman filtering algorithm.
  • the most weight is given to the value with the least uncertainty (i.e. phase angle at maximum RSSI).
  • the weights are calculated from the covariance.
  • the Kalman filter produces an estimate of the actual phase based on the recorded phase values by computing a weighted average of the measured phase values.
  • the estimated phase values are much closer to the known ideal values than the original measurements as the weighted average has a better estimated uncertainty.
  • the Kalman filtering algorithm predicts the actual value based on the measurements using equations 4 and 5, using the RSSI as an indicator of confidence. It then corrects the values (equations 6, 7, 8 and 9).
  • K(k) P 1 (k)/(P 1 (k)+R(k)) (6)
  • X(k) X 1 (k)+K(k) x (z(k) - X 1 (k)) (7)
  • k labels the measurement in a frequency sweep
  • Q is the process variance and assumed to be a predetermined, preferable small value, for example 1 x 10 ⁇ 5
  • z is the phase measurement
  • X is corrected phase value
  • P is an initial guess of error estimate
  • R (1 / normalised RSSI" is an estimate of measured phase variance based on the measured RSSI.
  • the normalised RSSI is calculated by taking the ratio between the RSSI and maximum RSSI.
  • the filter is optimised by tuning the filter parameters R (and Q) and the empirical coefficient, n, which in one implementation was chosen to be 0.23 for minimum range error.
  • the weighting by K (the blending factor) is such that as the measurement error covariance approaches zero, the actual measurement is "trusted" more and more, while the predicted measurement is trusted less and less.
  • Figure 47 shows the corrected phase measurement over 7 samples for an example location.
  • the samples were obtained by dithering the carrier frequency as well as switching the Tx and Rx antennas at the particular location (phase shifts are calculated between the adjacent frequencies with a 2MHz frequency offset/bandwidth (fi - f 2 ).
  • the antenna switching and frequency dithering provide measurements to accurately estimate the phase difference as this technique minimises the multipath fading that causes inaccurate measurements. This leads to enhanced location accuracy. It can be seen that Kalman filtering algorithm tends to estimate phase values very close to the ideal calculated phase.
  • the corrected phase angles are then used to estimate the range using the range equation (9) below.
  • the estimates are plotted against the actual range in Figure 48. An average range accuracy of 0.54 m was achieved using this approach.
  • Figure 49 shows cumulative probability distributions of the experimentally measured range error for three different algorithms namely a three antenna DAS with phase averaging over the frequency channels, a four antenna DAS with phase averaging over frequency channels, and a four antenna DAS with a Kalman filtering algorithm. It is shown that adding an extra antenna improves the range error due to an improvement in multi-path robustness. However, by applying Kalman filtering algorithms to the four antenna DAS, it is possible to achieve a much enhanced accuracy in a passive RFID system.
  • the additional antennas may be used to enhance the location resolution further by providing additional degrees of freedom, i.e. a better chance that all the antennas in the array do not suffer substantial multipath for a particular tag location, and a better chance of a favourable geometric arrangement of the antennas and tag.
  • Signal processing may be employed to exploit and improve the accuracy of detection of low SNR signals, for example by (cross) correlation with high SNR signals.
  • the resulting phase and RSSI information is provided to module 508 which discards data resulting from received signals with a RSSI below a threshold, and then the remaining data is Kalman filtered 510 as previously described to provide coaxed change of phase with frequency data, which is in turn used for a range calculation 512.
  • Figure 50a may conveniently be implemented in software controlling a interrogation transceiver system.
  • Figure 50b shows the same system implemented as an interrogation transceiver system 524 having multiple transmit/receive antennas 522 in communication with a passive RFID tag 520, and under control of a data processing system 526.
  • the data processing system 526 provides frequency controlled data to the transceiver system 524 to control the frequencies employed and receives digital phase and RSSI data from system 524 which it processes to output tag range data.
  • RTLS based on a combination of RSSI and phase of backscatter signals with frequency dithering, phase dithering and antenna diversity
  • FIG. 51 shows a vector illustration of signal at tag due to direct and indirect paths. Phase dithering alters the phase of both the direct and the indirect signals together, but does not vary the amplitude. Hence, the resultant signal at tag can be rotated to any desired direction on the IQ plane.
  • R 1 -R 2 c x (6 1 - ⁇ 2 ) / 2pi x (f 2 -fi) (10)
  • Ri and R 2 are the distances to tag from AU1 and AU2 antennas respectively. It should be noted that this equation only represents one way fading instead of two way fading as this was the case previously.
  • Ranges Ri and R 2 can then be estimated from equations (10) and (1 1 ) and this will improve the location accuracy further as the DAS will reduce the fading.
  • One potential drawback is that phase step to find the maximum RSSI may need to be small, which can slow down the location update speed.
  • FIGS 53a and 53b show functional and structural block diagrams of a second embodiment of an RFID tag location system 600 according to a first aspect of the invention.
  • a frequency is set and, optionally in module 604, a set of wide and/or narrow beamwidth antennas is selected for use.
  • the system then enters a loop 606, 607 in which the relative phase of signals transmitted from two transmit antennas is adjusted and the received RSSI is observed, the relative phase being adjusted to maximise the return signal. At this point the phases of the two transmitted signals are substantially equal at the tag.
  • the phase and RSSI data from this measurement is then passed to the backend processing, which may be substantially the same as that described with reference to Figure 50a.
  • this comprises discarding low RSSI signals 608, Kalman filtering 601 the result and using the filtered data to calculate an estimated range at 612 as previously described.
  • a data processing system 626 controls a (tag) interrogation transceiver system 624 having a plurality of antennas 622 to communicate with tag 620.
  • the implementation of Figure 53b is broadly similar to that shown in Figure 50b; the skilled person will appreciate that the functional modules of Figure 53a may be implemented in hardware, software, or a combination of the two. Concurrent frequency dithering over multiple antennas using multiple interrogation transceivers
  • Frequency dithering in particular randomly selecting a frequency out of many, applied over multiple antennas, which transmit radio frequency (RF) signals simultaneously, can improve RFID coverage. This is due to the fact that varying the frequency over multiple antennas (which transmit simultaneously) results in both constructive and destructive interference signals from multiple antennas, and in areas of constructive interference the signal level is enhanced. Therefore applying frequency dithering (particularly when combined with phase dithering) over a multi-casting antenna system tends to show a further improvement in radio frequency identification (RFID) coverage compared to a switched antenna system.
  • RFID radio frequency identification
  • the tag locating system is partly based on measuring RSSI and phase shift of the coherent received tag backscatter signals and the measurements are taken over a number of frequencies from each antenna unit (AU). This can be done through a sequential frequency dithering over each AU. However, if we measure them simultaneously through parallelising the operations (i.e. multiple frequency transmission from each AU) then it is possible to improve the location update rate.
  • This parallelised operation can be implemented with multiple reader/transceiver chips 700 (leading to multiple RF front ends), which can enable transmission of multiple frequencies simultaneously over each AU as shown in Figure 54a.
  • an integrator which comprises 12 reader/transceivers, as shown in Figure 54a, is capable of transmitting 4 frequencies to each of 3 antennas simultaneously.
  • Figure 54b shows a block diagram of an alternative RFID interrogation transceiver system 702 for providing a set of multiple frequency, phase controlled outputs to a corresponding set of antenna units.
  • the system of Figure 54b comprises a set of controllable frequency sources 702 each having a respective phase control unit 704 providing multiple outputs each with a controllable phase, preferably providing independent phase control for each of the outputs.
  • Outputs from each of the phase control blocks 704 are combined to provide a signal for one of the antenna units.
  • 4 frequencies and 4 antenna unit outputs are provided, but the skilled person will recognise that different number of frequencies and/or antenna unit outputs may be provided.
  • FIG. 55a shows a block diagram of an RFID tag reading/location system 800 according to an embodiment of a second aspect of the invention.
  • the system comprises a plurality of transceivers 802 each for example as shown in Figure 55b, configured to provide frequency and phase control via a bus.
  • the outputs from the transceivers are combined in a power combiner or summer 804 which in turn is coupled to an antenna unit 806.
  • a master controller 808 controls the frequency and phase of the transceivers 802 via a control bus 810 in order to provide frequency and phase dither.
  • a logic controller 812 handles the tag protocol and provides an interface for reading and/or writing data from/to a tag using transceivers 802. The controller 812 cooperates with the master controller 808 to implement a multiple concurrent frequency communication/location protocol as described above.
  • a. Use several antennas so that the likelihood of nulls is reduced b. Dynamically spatially shift any nulls by frequency dithering, phase dithering and antenna switching so that location accuracy is enhanced. c. Reduce the likelihood of indirect paths causing interference which leads to nulls by using beamed antennas (i.e. narrow beam-width antennas)

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Radar, Positioning & Navigation (AREA)
  • Remote Sensing (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Radar Systems Or Details Thereof (AREA)
  • Position Fixing By Use Of Radio Waves (AREA)
  • Near-Field Transmission Systems (AREA)

Abstract

We describe a methods of locating an RFID tag. One method comprises: transmitting tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a near field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal; receiving a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and processing said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two or more of said transmit signals resulting in a maxima in the returned signal RSSI or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal. Further data which may be used for averaging may be generated by using the above techniques along with changes in the polarisation state of the transmit and receive antennas and/or physical reconfiguration of the antennas (e.g. switch the transmit and receive elements).

Description

RFID TAG Location systems
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to systems, methods and computer program code for locating RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tags, in particular UHF (Ultra High Frequency) RFID tags.
BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTION
RFID has become established in a wide range of applications for the detection and identification of items, allowing substantial amounts of data to be read at greater range than other technologies. Of particular interest is the high frequency (UHF) passive RFID system which promises to offer read ranges of the order of ten metres using tags which do not require their own power source. Improved techniques for longer range reading of a RFID tag in turn stimulates a desire for improved tag location techniques. However RFID tags are typically difficult to locate accurately because of multipath fading, and this can significantly restrict their use in applications where accurate location sensing is important.
In order for a passive UHF RFID tag to be successfully read, it should receive sufficient radio frequency (RF) power for its internal logic to be activated and transmit back to the reader with sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). This requirement sets limits on the maximum tag range. However, due to the narrowband nature of the signals, fading effects in real environments generate large variations in the free space loss of both up- and downlink directions and can prevent successful reading of the tag, even well within the maximum read range. Therefore in order to fully deploy these passive UHF RFID tags in real applications, robust reading techniques are required for long range conditions.
By expanding the range of view of a single RFID reader, as well as improving the likelihood of successful tag detection, one can envisage RFID systems with wide coverage areas as opposed to the portal systems currently in use today, where sensitivity constraints require the objects to pass close to the reader antennas for detection. In a portal system however, the location of a tagged object can be inferred from the fact that it has passed close enough to the reader to be read. In a wide area RFID system, the simple reading of a tag will not provide sufficient location resolution for many applications. As a result interest has also arisen in being able to estimate the location of the tag in such systems. Due to the complex multipath environment commonly encountered in RFID implementations, fading and nulls result in the RSSI being only a weak function of range and hence providing location in passive RFID system is a major challenge.
Several studies have been undertaken to enhance passive UHF RFID system performance. However, standard RFID systems currently cannot prevent errors (i.e. 100% probability of a successful read). By way of example, "The RF in RFID - passive UHF RFID in practice" by Daniel M. Doubkin proposes a number of ways of improving SNR: The author suggests that inclusion of a 90° phase shift either the in in-phase (I) or quadrature (Q) channel in the conventional direct-conversion l/Q demodulator improves the SNR of the tag backscattered signal since the phase of the backscattered signal is unpredictable due to its dependent on the distance from the tag.
By way of further example, Mojix (http://www.mojix.com/) has a passive UHF RFID system with phased array of antennas (i.e. the antennas are in the near field region of one another). This allows phased array techniques to be employed, for example digital beam forming steering to maximise the link budget. This enables improved receiver sensitivity and transmitters which provide radio frequency (RF) signals in the industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band (902MHz and 928MHz) for activating the tags. Using this scheme a 99.9% tag detection is claimed. Details can be found, for example in: WO2007/094868, WO2008/1 18875 and WO2008/027650. Further background can be found in: EP2146304 and in US 2008/0024273.
The EPC global UHF Class 1 Generation 2 RFID protocol standard allows frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) technique in the US and listen-before-talk technique in the UK to overcome interference in multiple- and dense-interrogator environment [EPCglobal Specification for RFID Air Interface, online available: http://www.epcqlobalinc.org/standards/uhfc1 q2/uhfc1 q2 1 2 O-standard- 2008051 1 .pdf :1 [EPCglobal Class Gen 2 RFID Specification, Alien, online available: http://www.rfidproductnews.com/whitepapers/files/AT wp EPCGIobal WEB.pdfl. To date, a number of location schemes for passive RFID have been proposed. The most common techniques are based on received signal strength indicator (RSSI) location algorithms:
A. Hatami and K. Pahlavan, "A Comparative Performance Evaluation of RSSI-Based Positioning Algorithms Used in WLAN Networks," in Proc IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference, pp. 2331 -2337, 2005]; [ A. Hatami and K. Pahlavan, "Comparative Statistical Analysis of Indoor Positioning Using Empirical Data and Indoor Radio Channel Models," in Proc IEEE CCNC 2006, pp. 1018-1022, 2006]; [B. Xu and W. Gang, "Random Sampling Algorithm in RFID Indoor Location System," in Proc Third IEEE International Workshop on Electronic Design, Test and Applications, pp. 168-176, 2006]; [J. Zhao, Y. Zhang and M. Ye, "Research on the Received Signal Strength Indications Algorithm for RFID System," in Proc ISCIT 2006, pp. 881 -885, 2006]; [F. Guo, C. Zhang, M. Wang and X. Xu, "Research of Indoor Location Method Based on the RFID Technology," in Proc 11th Joint Conference on Information Sciences 2008, 2008]; [A. Chattopadhyay and A. Harish, "Analysis of UHF passive RFID tag behaviour and study of their applications in Low Range Indoor Location Tracking," IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, pp. 1217-1220, 2007.
However due to the complex multipath environment commonly encountered in RFID implementations, fading and nulls result in the RSSI being only a weak function of range.
In active RFID, radar and other wireless systems, a number of powerful location techniques such as time difference of arrival (TDOA) and phase difference of arrival (PDOA) are used. Due to narrow bandwidth available for passive RFID, the TDOA technique cannot be applied to locating passive tags. This is because the narrow bandwidth gives insufficient time resolution for typical RFID ranges.
The PDOA technique can be applied to passive RFID. However, this only works well for line-of-sight communication (i.e. in free-space). In real environments, the PDOA technique suffers from multi-path fading as the fading introduces ambiguities in phase measurements (the phase shift of a direct path returned signal cannot accurately be determined from the sum of multi-path signals. This challenge is also addressed by Pavel V. Nikitin et al, in "Phase Based Spatial Identification of UHF RFID Tags", IEEE RFID 2010.
However, a number of researchers claim to estimate range using this technique. For example, Ville Viikari et al, in "Ranging of UHF RFID Tag Using Stepped Frequency Read-Out", IEEE RFID 2010 and Xin Li et al, in "Multifrequency-Based Range Estimation of RFID Tags", IEEE RFID 2009. By way of further example, a number patents also claim to estimate location based on PDOA. For example, Alien technology and Symbol technologies outlines location technique based on PDOA technique as described in WO 2006/099148 A1 and AU 2010200808 A1 respectively. However, to our knowledge this technique only works reliably for up to a short range (i.e. up to 3 or 4 m) due to multi-path fading.
A technique for transmitting signals at a plurality of antenna polarisations for improved reading of an RFID tag is described in US 2010/0052857. Mojix also outlines a location approach using PDOA technique over a phased array antenna system as described in WO2009151778 (A2).
However there is a need for improved techniques for reading in particular UHF passive RFID tags, and for locating such tags.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
To aid in understanding the invention we first describe some techniques for tag reading.
Thus we first describe an RFID tag reading system for reading one or more RFID Tags, the system comprising an RF transmitter and an RF receiver, a plurality of transmit/receive antennas coupled to said RF transmitter and to said RF receiver, to provide spatial transmit/receive signal diversity, and a tag signal decoder coupled to at least said RF receiver, wherein said system is configured to combine received RF signals from said antennas to provide a combined received RF signal, wherein said RF receiver has said combined received RF signal as an input; wherein said antennas are spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, wherein said system is configured to perform a tag inventory cycle comprising a plurality of tag read rounds to read said tags, a said tag read round comprising transmission of an RF tag interrogation signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and receiving a signal from one or more of said tags, a said tag read round having a set of time slots during which a said tag is able to transmit tag data including a tag ID for reception by said antenna, and wherein said system is configured to perform, during a said tag inventory cycle, one or both of: a change in a frequency of said tag interrogation signal transmitted simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, and a change in a relative phase of a said RF tag interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to another of said antennas.
By combining the RF Signals from the antennas in a system which employs spatial diversity (that is the antennas are spaced so as not to comprise a phased array), and by changing one or both of the transmit frequency and relative phase during an inventory cycle more tags can be read. Counter-intuitively the system also allows a large population of tags to be inventorised more quickly because there are fewer collisions (although one might expect more if more tags are visible). Evidence for this is provided later. In embodiments the frequency/phase is changed on a relatively rapid time scale, for example over a time period of less than one second, 500ms or 300ms. Combining the RF signals from multiple antennas results in a reduced number of collisions compared with switching antennas.
An RFID tag is preferably configured to operate in accordance with a protocol for reading multiple passive RFID tags in a common region of space, for example the EPC Gen 2 protocol (ibid). In such a protocol an estimate may be made of the total number of tags and rounded up to the next power of 2, thus defining the number of transmit slots for the tags to use. This number is transmitted to the tags and enables a tag to select a slot in which to transmit and, once read, to keep silent (eventually reawakening). (The phrase "inventory round" is defined in EPC Gen 2; this definition is explicitly incorporated by reference). During the tag read round we refer to above tags are read during the available time slots and, in embodiments, the frequency and/or relative phase is then changed before performing another tag read round. This is because a proportion, for example around half, of the tags are read in a read round; in some preferred embodiments the number of available slots for the tags is updated to the next power of 2 above the remaining total of number of tags to be read (noting that this may be an estimate as the total number of tags may be unknown). In embodiments this procedure is repeated, for example until no more tags can be read, or for a given or predetermined duration, or indefinitely (since tags eventually re - awake).
Some preferred implementations of the procedure change the relative phase of the transmitted signals at each antenna during the tag inventory cycle. In such an approach the transmitted signal phase at one antenna may be defined as a reference against which to determine the phases at the other antennas.
The system may also be configured to adjust a transmit power or receive antenna gain prior to combining the RF signals, to optimise the combined received RF signal, for example to maximise signal-to-noise ratio or minimise a bit or packet error ratio.
In some preferred implementations the system has at least three spatially diverse antennas which, unlike a switched antenna system, gives improved performance. In embodiments the RFID tags are passive UHF (300MHz-3000MHz) RFID tags, preferably operating at a frequency of less than 1 GHz, and preferably the antennas are mutually separated by at least 1 metre, 2 metres, 5 metres, 10 metres or 20 metres.
The above described system can provide greatly improved read/write performance, usable at increased ranges, with improved tag reading SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) - in particular in embodiments it has been found possible to read substantially 100% of tags present in a region bounded by lines joining the antennas, and to substantially eliminate the effects of nulls.
As further background we also describe a method of using an RFID tag reading system for reading one or more RFID tags, the system comprising an RF transmitter and an RF receiver, a plurality of transmit/received antennas coupled to said RF transmitter and to said RF receiver, to provide spatial transmit/receive signal diversity, and a tag signal decoder coupled to at least said RF receiver, wherein said system is configured to combine received RF signals from said antennas to provide a combined received RF signal, wherein said RF receiver has said combined received RF signal as an input; wherein said antennas are spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, wherein said system is configured to perform a tag inventory cycle comprising a plurality of tag read rounds to read said tags, a said tag read round comprising transmission of one or more RF tag interrogation signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and receiving a signal from one or more of said tags, a said tag read round having a set of time slots during which a said tag is able to transmit tag data including a tag ID for reception by said antenna, the method comprising changing, during a said tag inventory cycle, one or both of: a relative phase of a said RF tag interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to another of said antennas, and a frequency of said tag interrogation signal transmitted simultaneously from said plurality of antennas.
Tag Location
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a method of locating an RFID tag, the method comprising: transmitting tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a near field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal; receiving a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and processing said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two or more of said transmit signals (in embodiments resulting in a maxima in the returned signal RSSI) or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal.
Thus in embodiments of this method a combination of signal phase and received signal strength indication (RSSI) is used in combination with a plurality of separated antennas in order to provide a more accurate tag location. The antennas are sufficiently separated to be outside the near field region of one another, that is spaced apart such that D2/(4 ) is greater than 1 where D is a maximum dimension of the antenna.
Broadly speaking embodiments of the technique determine a rate of change of phase with frequency, and use this to determine tag range. The change of phase with change in frequency is, in some preferred embodiments, determined by one of two techniques, one which employs a switched antenna system in which the transmit and receive antennas are selected from a set of two or more antennas, another using a distributed antenna system (DAS) in which signals are transmitted from a plurality of antennas simultaneously.
In embodiments of the former approach signals at two different frequencies with a fixed offset are used, varying one of the frequencies (and hence varying both) and determining a difference between transmit signal and return signal phase. (Alternatively, in other approaches, a variable frequency offset may be employed). The transmitted signal comprises a transmission at a plurality of different frequencies, but these different frequencies may be transmitted separately or at the same time (we describe later systems which transmit multiple frequencies simultaneously). In embodiments the receive and transmit antennas may be alternated or exchanged, for example to provide an extra data point at each frequency (the multipath in the two cases is different because the tag response is nonlinear, that is the tag reflection is generally a function of the received power). In an alternative embodiment, the transmit and receive antenna polarisations may be altered.
In the second, distributed antenna system approach two or more transmit signals are transmitted simultaneously towards the RFID tag and their relative phase is adjusted or dithered to identify a reference relative phase angle between each pair. In embodiments preferably, but not necessarily, the phase shift which provides a maximum received signal strength is identified. This effectively measures the signal phase at the tag since the two transmitted signals are in phase at the tag when there is a maximum reflected return (although in principle other fiducial phase shifts could be identified). The effect of such an approach is to halve the multipath fading because the signal is in effect being measured in one direction only. Alternatively, to appreciate this each channel to the tag comprises an amplitude and a phase modulation due to multipath, but the sum of the two channels still comprises just one amplitude and one phase modulation. The skilled person will appreciate that when transmitting signals to the tag simultaneously at multiple-different frequencies, adjusting their relative phase to adjust the phase of the signal at the tag, only one of these need carry tag command data and signals at the one or more other frequencies may simply comprise/consist of a carrier unmodulated by data for the tag. In either case improved robustness to multipath can be achieved by employing a combination of narrow beam (for example 30Q - 45Q) and wide beam (for example greater than 50Q) antennas.
In either case, robustness of a range measurement based upon on change in phase with change in frequency to multipath fading is improved by, in broad terms, weighting the phase measurements based upon received signal strength. In some preferred embodiments one or both of two approaches are employed. To avoid data from deep fades in embodiments the method thresholds the phase measurement based upon received signal strength, more particularly disregarding measurements where the RSSI is less than a threshold. Then, in some preferred implementations, a prediction- correction filter such as a Kalman filter or particle filter is employed to predict variation of phase difference with frequency change, correcting this using the phase measurement data. In such an approach the RSSI of a signal or signals from which the phase measurements are derived (that is, of a return signal from the tag) is used as a measure of the variance of the phase measurements, in effect a phase variance weighting for the, for example, Kalman filter. In embodiments a frequency sweep is employed to provide a series of phase measurements for input to the prediction- correction filter, but in other approaches a selected or random scatter of frequency data points within a range may be employed to gather the data for the filter. Broadly speaking the prediction-correction filter is predicting the trajectory of change of phase with change of frequency.
Depending upon the implementation, the method may include a calibration step, for example to calibrate out a fixed phase shift to an antenna in a co-ax or RF-over-fibre system. Where a Kalman filter is employed it is preferable to tune the coefficients to provide optimum location information; this can be achieved through routine experimentation.
The skilled person will appreciate that the above-described techniques may be extended to more than two transmit/receive antennas. For example, in the case of a three transmit antenna distributed antenna system the phase of one transmitted signal may be used as a reference, the phase of the signals from the second and third transmit antennas both being varied with respect to this to achieve maximum RSSI. Since the back-end Kalman filter is similar for both the switched and distributed antenna approaches, in principle common hardware may be employed and the system may be configured to use either or both of these approaches to determining the location of a tag.
The invention also provides a tag location system comprising modules for implementing the various aspects and embodiments of the invention described above.
Thus in a related aspect the invention provides a system for locating an RFID tag, the system comprising: a transmitter to transmit tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a new field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal; a receiver to receive a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and a processor to process said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal
The system still further provides a data carrier carrying processor control code to, when running, process said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted in responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal
We will also describe techniques for more rapid access to tag-related data. This may be tag location data and/or it may be data read from an RFID tag. Thus in a second aspect the invention provides a method of determining tag-related data from a tag employing modulation of a reflected signal, the method comprising: transmitting data towards said tag from at least one transmit antenna, wherein said transmitted signal comprises a signal having at least two different discrete transmit frequencies simultaneously, and wherein either the same tag command data is transmitted on each of said discrete frequencies, or one or more of said discrete frequencies consists of a carrier and one or more others of said discrete frequencies transmit the or the same tag command data; modulating, at said tag, said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time to generate a modulated return signal having said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time; receiving said modulated return signal at at least one receive antenna; and determining said tag- related data from signals received from said tag at said different discrete frequencies.
The inventors have recognised that in general an RFID tag has a relatively broadband response, in particular where it employs backscatter modulation (amplitude or phase shift keying). Thus, for example, a UHF RFID tag is often designed to work in both Europe and the United States, and thus over a band of 860-930 MHz. This recognition in turn leads broadly to the above described aspect of the invention, in which multiple frequencies are transmitted simultaneously from the same, or different antennas to, in effect, parallelise the tag reading and/or location operation, which in embodiments is according to one of the improved techniques previously described. The different frequencies employed are discrete frequencies and, unlike say a multiple-carrier system, are all modulated with the same baseband data so that the tag receives the same command on each of the different frequencies and is therefore not confused. (Because the data rates involved in communicating with RFID tags are relatively slow there is no significant skew problem). It will be appreciated that the reader/receiver is frequency selective.
Although a single transmit antenna may be employed, in some preferred embodiments signals are transmitted from at least two transmit antennas in a distributed antenna system (DAS) approach. In either single or multiple transmit antenna embodiments the transmitted signal phase at each frequency may be independently adjustable to enable a DAS-based tag location technique as previously described to be employed. Preferably the phase measurement information is weighted by received signal strength as previously described. In a related aspect of the invention there is provided a method of determining tag- related data from a tag employing backscatter modulation of a reflected signal, the method comprising: transmitting data towards said tag from a plurality of transmit antennas using a plurality of transmitted signals, wherein the same tag command data is transmitted from each said antenna, and wherein each of said transmitted signals comprises a signal having at least two different discrete transmit frequencies simultaneously; modulating, at said tag using backscatter modulation, said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time to generate a plurality of modulated backscatter signals each having said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time; receiving said modulated backscatter signals at at least one receive antenna; and determining said tag-related data from a combination of said modulated backscatter signals at said different discrete frequencies.
The above described techniques can be employed to rapidly read data from a tag additionally or alternatively to locating the tag. Thus in some tag reading embodiments a simple selection of the strongest return signal at one of the multiple simultaneous frequencies is selected for use in retrieving data from the tag. In preferred embodiments the tag is a passive RFID tag.
In a further related aspect the invention provides an interrogation transceiver system for use in a method as described above. The interrogation transceiver system comprises a plurality of transceiver circuits for simultaneous operation, each configured to transmit at a different frequency, wherein each of the transceiver circuits is coupled to a common antenna interface.
The antenna interface may comprise, for example, an RF-over-fibre interface; the same antenna may be used for both transmitting and receiving, or separate may be employed.
In embodiments the transceiver includes a transceiver controller to apply one or both of frequency control and phase control to each of the transceiver circuits. In embodiments this may be coupled to a common tag data protocol handling module for communicating with a tag. When processing the received tag data, in some embodiments a separate RF front end is employed for each frequency, and then the signals are mixed down to base band and low pass filtered before being digitized. In other approaches the signals are together mixed down to approximately base band, digitized using a fast digitizer, and then frequency separation is performed in software. The skilled person will be aware of other approaches which may be employed. Once digitized signal data is available measurement of received signal strength at each frequency, and optionally if locating a tag, phase, is performed in software. Then preferred embodiments also include software and/or hardware for RSSI-dependent tag reading and/or tag location, in embodiments of the latter employing RSSI-weighted phase measurement data preferably in combination with a prediction-correction filter such as a Kalman filter.
Alternative approach
In an alternative approach, the invention further provides a method of locating an RF device using an RF device interrogation system having a plurality of antennas to communicate with said RF device, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said RF device simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the method comprising: calibrating a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RF device over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RF device interrogation system, wherein said calibrating further comprises: i) changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and ii) determining a combined received signal strength from said plurality of antennas, wherein said combined received signal strength comprises a signal strength of combined RF signals from said plurality of antennas; determining device-locating data defining an RF signal strength from each of said plurality of antennas and a combined received signal strength from combined RF signals received from said plurality of antennas for a said RF device to be located, wherein said determining comprises changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and determining, using said calibration data, a location for said RF device to be located from said device-locating data including said combined received signal strength.
These techniques are particularly applicable to locating RFID tags but may, in principle, be employed in other location systems, for example to locate an RF device in a WiFi (RTM) system. Thus in some preferred embodiments said RF device is an RFID tag, in particular a passive RFID tag. Embodiments of the technique can be employed in situations where multiple tags may be present in a common region of space.
In embodiments of the technique by sweeping phase and/or frequency and recording a combined RF received signal strength together with other individual or combined antenna received signal strengths much more accurate tag location is possible than hitherto. Further embodiments of the technique may be employed for reading and locating multiple passive RFID tags within the region of space defined by the antennas. The calibration data defines, in effect, a calibration of the tag interrogation system in terms of the frequencies/phases, position in two (optionally three) dimensions, and received signal strength(s). It will be appreciated that in embodiments the combined RF signals are received simultaneously from the plurality of antennas from a single tag at a time.
The calibration data may be used to locate the tag either by matching data from the tag to be located to a map defined by the calibration data, or by using the calibration data to define one or more environmental parameters in an analytical expression relating the tag locating data to a location for an RFID tag. Thus in one approach a tag location is determined by determining the closest match of the combined received signal strength at one or more specified relative phases and/or frequencies (used in the location procedure) to a known location of the calibration process. Optionally interpolation between known calibration points may be employed. The combined RF signal strength will not in general define an unambiguous location for a tag - for example it may define a set of locations comprising an approximate ring around location of each antenna. Thus in embodiments the RF signal from a nearest predicated individual antenna may be employed to disambiguate the location of the RFID tag. In such a case the signal strength from the nearest predicted individual antenna and the combined RF signal strength may be differently weighted, for example giving the signal strength from the nearest predicted individual antenna a greater weight than the combined RF signal strength.
In an alternative approach the calibration data defines one or more parameters of an analytical expression as previously mentioned, for example an ITU (International Telecommunication Union) path loss equation for the relevant radio propagation environment. For example where incremental path loss (in dB) is given by 10γ log 0 (d/do) where d0 is a reference distance and γ is a path loss exponent the calibration data may be employed to define a value for γ dependent on the frequency and/or phase(s). This will, in general, define a locus of permitted locations for the RFID tag to be located. The nearest predicted individual antenna to the tag may then be determined, for example by selecting the antenna with the maximum signal strength, thus defining, for example, a locus comprising a ring around this antenna. The relative signal strength from two other antennas may then be used to define a position on a line between these antennas; this position together with the location of the nearest predicted antenna defining a direction or vector which incepts the aforementioned ring to define an estimated location for the RFID tag to be located.
In embodiments of the procedure additionally or alternatively to employing individual received signal strengths from the antennas, combinations or subsets of the plurality of antennas may be employed, with the aim of avoiding severe nulls. As, for example, a combination of signals from two antennas a reduced risk of not seeing a tag located in null. Thus in embodiments as well as individual antenna received signal strengths, signal strengths from pairs, for example all possible pairs, of antennas are also generated by combining the RF signals from these pairs of antennas and these are then employed in finding a location for the tag, for example by finding the closest match to the tag locating data or map.
As previously mentioned, embodiments of the technique are particularly useful for locating a plurality of passive RFID tags within the region of space covered by the antennas, in particular where the tags employ a protocol such as the EPC Gen 2 protocol providing time slots during which individual tags may be accessed. In an extension of the system, in particular one comprising one or more sets of three antennas, the distributed antenna system may be employed both for communications and for RFID. This is because a three-antenna system facilitates the definition of both generally hexagonal cells for the communication system and triangles for the RFID tag location. Thus a single antenna, for example the middle antenna of a pattern of six may serve as a communications cell antenna for a communications system such as Wifi or the like, and may also serve as one antenna for each of six triangles within the set of six surrounding antennas to provide RFID tag location regions. In embodiments the communications system and RFID tags may employ different communications frequencies and/or polarisations - for example circular polarisation can be preferred for UHF RFID tag location.
In a related aspect the invention provides a system for locating an RF device using an RF device interrogation system having a plurality of antennas to communicate with said RF device, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said RF device simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the system comprising: means for calibrating a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RF device over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RF device interrogation system, wherein said means for calibrating further comprises: i) means for changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and ii) means for determining a combined received signal strength from said plurality of antennas, wherein said combined received signal strength comprises a signal strength of a combined RF signals from said plurality of antennas; means for determining device-locating data defining an RF signal strength from each of said plurality of antennas and a combined received signal strength from combined RF signals received from said plurality of antennas for a said RF device to be located, wherein said determining comprises changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and means for determining a location for said RF device to be located from said device-locating data including said combined received signal strength, using said calibration data.
The invention further provides an RFID tag interrogation system signal processor for locating an RFID tag using an RFID tag interrogation system having a plurality of antennas, to communicate with said tag, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said tag simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the signal processor comprising: a calibration module to calibrate a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RFID tag over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RFID tag interrogation system, said calibration module being configured to: change one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmittal from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmittal fro said plurality of antennas; determine combined a combined received signal strength from said plurality of antennas, wherein said combined received signal strength comprises a signal strength of combined RF signals from said plurality of antennas; determine tag- locating data defining an RF signal strength from each of said plurality of antennas and a combined received signal strength from combined RF signals received from said plurality of antennas for a said RFID tag to be located, wherein said determining comprises changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and determine, using said calibration data, a location for said RFID tag to be located from said tag-locating data including said combined received signal strength.
The invention further provides processor control code to implement the above- described systems and methods, for example on a general purpose computer system or on a digital signal processor (DSP). The code may be provided on a carrier such as a disk, CD- or DVD-ROM, programmed memory such as read-only memory (Firmware). Code (and/or data) to implement embodiments of the invention may comprise source, object or executable code in a conventional programming language (interpreted or compiled) such as C, or assembly code, code for setting up or controlling an ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit) or FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), or code for a hardware description language such as Verilog (Trade Mark) or VHDL (Very high speed integrated circuit Hardware Description Language). As the skilled person will appreciate such code and/or data may be distributed between a plurality of coupled components in communication with one another.
It will be appreciated that features of the above described aspects and embodiments of the invention may be combined.
In some particularly preferred embodiments where long distance transmission is necessary (i.e. over 100m), the RF signals to and/or from the antennas or antenna units are carried by RF-over-fibre apparatus/methods. Likewise in short transmission distances co-ax, or twisted pair cables (i.e. CAT-5/6) are preferred.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other aspects of the invention will now further described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying Figures as follows:
Figure 1 . Triple antenna distributed antenna system (DAS) combined with Symbol reader.
Figure 2. Plot of power at tag as a function of distance away from an antenna for a triple antenna DAS.
Figure 3. Two ray model; red line represents the direct path and blue line represents the reflected path from the floor. Figure 4. Antenna arrangement in a 20mx20m area. Blue crosses represent the position of the antennas and red crosses indicates the grid points where the power is calculated.
Figure 5. Plot of power at tag as a function of distance for a triple antenna DAS. This shows how nulls move with frequency. Red and blue represent 860MHz and 920MHz respectively.
Figure 6. Plot of power at tag as a function of distance for a triple antenna DAS. This shows how nulls move with phase. Red and blue represent 0, 0, 0 and 8, 0, π phase angle of each antenna respectively.
Figure 7. A plot of spatial variation in the signal power using a 2-ray model. Green represents above - 15dBm power level and red represents below - 15dBm power level which represents nulls. The number of read locations is 55.7%.
Figure 8. A plot of spatial variation in the signal power with each antenna shifted by π (180°) in turn. Green represents above - 15dBm power level and red represents below - 15dBm power level which represents nulls. The number of read locations is now increased to 77% with the phase diversity.
Figure 9. Experimental Setup for frequency dithering.
Figure 10. Antenna arrangement. The positions of the antennas are indicated in metres in the form of (x, 7) coordinates. Red crosses represent the measurement location.
Figure 1 1 . Variation of returned signal strength with range for a triple antenna with adaptive frequency selection. The numbers in red represent the Tx frequencies in MHz at which nulls disappear.
Figure 12. Cumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured returned signal power for a triple antenna with adaptive frequency selection and a tripe antenna DAS system.
Figure 13. Experimental setup for phase dithering. Figure 14. Empirical cumulative probability distributions of the experimentally measured returned signal strength indicator (RSSI) for a triple antenna DAS, a triple antenna DAS with optimization (phase dithering) and a switched three antenna system.
Figure 15. Empirical cumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured returned signal strength indicator (RSSI) for a triple antenna DAS, a triple antenna DAS with power diversity in downlink and in uplink.
Figure 16. Experimental setup for passive RFID coverage improvement.
Figure 17. Antenna arrangement. The positions of the antennas are indicated in meters in the form of (x, y) coordinates. Red crosses represent the measurement location
Figure 18. Cumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured returned signal power for both triple antenna DAS and triple antenna DAS with optimization
Figure 19. Double antenna DAS combined with Alien 8800 RFID reader.
Figure 20. 140 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 25cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area.
Figure 21 . Cumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured returned signal power for both conventional switched antenna system and fully optimised DAS system.
Figure 22. A schematic of Gen 2 protocol; Inventory is mainly controlled by Count and Q factor. At the start of each cycle, the Tag Select command wakes all tags and count read attempts with Q slots are then made.
Figure 23. A plot number of read tags aginst time for a conventional swithced antenna and a optimised DAS RFID system. Conventional switched antenna system - 2 x 68.6 = 137.2ms with accuracy of 79% (1 1 1 tags out of 140 tags) = 809 tags/sec. Optimised DAS = 1 19.52ms with accuracy of 100% (140 tags out of 140). Note that DAS takes only 93.42ms for 1 1 1 tags = 1 , 188 tags/sec. Figure 24. This shows that the number of collisions is reduced in optimised DAS system over a conventional multi-antenna system
Figure 25. Incorporating the phase dithering in the RF front end using an Intel R1000 reader development kit.
Figure 26. This shows the random variation in control voltage i.e. random phase dithering. This is done by making use of a random number generator in C/C++.
Figure 27. DAS RFID system based on Intel R1000 has been developed as part of the principle demonstration.
Figure 28. 80 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 50cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area.
Figures 29a to 29g show, respectively, a plot number of read tags against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; : a plot number of RN16 timeouts against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of RN16 received against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of good EPC reads against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of read tags against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of RN16 timeouts against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; a plot number of RN16 received against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system; and a plot number of good EPC reads against time for a conventional RFID system and an optimised DAS RFID system.
Figure 30. Plan view of the antenna arrangement. The positions of the antennas are indicated in meters in the form of (x, y) coordinates. Red crosses represent the tag measurement locations. The measurements are taken on a 0.6 m grid interval over a 10 m x 7.6 m area. Figure 31 a. Flowchart of a fingerprint tag location algorithm according to an
embodiment of the invention.
Figure 31 b. Error distribution plot for a triple antenna DAS, a commercial RFID reader and a random algorithm over a 10 m x 7.6 m area.
Figure 32. Cumulative probability distribution (CDF) of error for a triple antenna DAS, a commercial RFID reader and a random algorithm location systems.
Figure 33. Plot of spatial variation in the location accuracy for a triple antenna DAS system over a 10 m x 7.6 m area.
Figure 34a. Flowchart of an analytical tag location algorithm according to an embodiment of the invention.
Figure 34b. Radiation pattern of a circular polarised antenna.
Figure 34c. Modelled Combined RSSI over the area based on a two ray model, signal propagation model (and a radiation pattern).
Figure 34d. In an experimental example, a measured combined RSSI of 128 from the three antennas gives a number of possible loci within 1 dB tolerance and the most appropriate locus is selected within the antenna range.
Figure 34e. In an experimental example, solving the locus and the line (based on the direction) gives the estimated location at (0.5, 1 .8).
Figure 35a. An analytical model for a passive UHF RFID system using a 3rd order polynomial.
Figure 35b. The dashed circles represent the three possible loci for a measured optimum RSSI of 640.7. Green circle locus is then chosen due to the highest number successful reads. The probability of successful reads and RSSI from AU1 & AU3 and AU1 & AU2 are then taken into account to estimate the angle and thus it gives a fix position which is represented by the blue circle. The black circle represents the measurement location at (1 .5, 2.8) in this case.
Figure 36. Plots spatial variation in the location accuracy for a triple antenna optimised DAS system using an analytical algorithm over a 10m x 7.6m area.
Figure 37. (a) Typical tag dipole radiation pattern, and (b) effective radiation pattern when three read antennas are used at the indicated angular separations. Note the different radial scales
Figure 38. An example tracking/location system graphical user interface (GUI).
Figure 39. A hexagonal structure with 20m antenna spacing. A plot of spatial variation in the signal power using a 2-ray model. Yellow represents above -15dBm power level and red represents below -15dBm power level which represents nulls. The positions of the antennas are indicated by blue crosses. The number of read locations is 70%.
Figure 40. Shows reader to tag and tag to reader communications.
Figure 41 . Shows the effect of multipath fading on phase difference.
Figure 42. Shows an example experimental arrangement of an embodiment of the invention using a 4 antenna DAS combined with an R2000 tag reader; the demodulated tag backscatter signals are fed into an oscilloscope to sample and acquire I and Q signals which are processed in Matlab™ (a preamble-found signal is used as a trigger signal for the oscilloscope).
Figure 43. Shows an example response of a digital Butterworth and Kass filter for removing unwanted signals.
Figure 44. Shows I and Q components of the tag backscatter signals (the Q component is the larger/red signal).
Figure 45. Shows a constellation diagram illustrating tag backscatter signals; RSSI and phase angle of the tag signals can be calculated from this diagram. Figure 46. Shows constellation diagrams for RSSI = 12 (right) and for RSSI = 67 (left) illustrating that the low RSSI constellation diagram exhibits more multipath fading.
Figure 47. Shows a number of phase samples (triangles), actual phase (solid line), and corrected phase (dashed line) for these samples using a Kalman filter technique.
Figure 48. Shows estimated range values (crosses) and expected values (dashed line).
Figure 49. Shows an accumulative probability distribution of the experimentally measured range error for a 3 antenna (averaging), 4 antenna (averaging), and 4 antenna (Kalman filtering) system; the upper line is for Kalman filtering, the middle line is for 4 antenna averaging, and the lower line for 3 antenna averaging.
Figures 50a and 50b. Show, respectively, functional and structural block diagrams of a first embodiment of an RFID tag location system according to a first aspect of the invention.
Figure 51 . Shows a vector illustration of a received signal at a tag due to direct and indirect paths; frequency dithering varies both amplitude and the phase of the direct and indirect path signals while phased dithering only varies the phase of both signals.
Figure 52. Shows a vector representation of a signal at a tag resulting from signals transmitted from antennas AU1 and AU2; the AU2 signal needs to be rotated by θι and 62 with respect to the AU1 to obtain maximum RSSI at respective frequencies fi and f2, and the phase angles of the received signals at AU1 or AU2 are measured at both frequencies (θ3 and θ4) for range estimation.
Figures 53a and 53b. Show, respectively, functional and structural blocked diagrams of a second embodiment of an RFDI tag location system according to a first aspect of the invention.
Figures 54a and 54b. Show first and second examples of interrogation transceiver systems in an embodiment of a second aspect of the invention, showing systems configured for concurrent frequency dithering over multiple antennas (as opposed to sequential frequency dithering) to parallelise operations in a DAS RFID system, using multiple transceiver circuits transmitting multiple frequencies simultaneously over each antenna unit (in Figure 54a the numbers in brackets show the frequency channels).
Figures 55a and 55b. Show, respectively, a blocked diagram of an embodiment of an RFID tag read/location system according to a second aspect of the invention, and an example transceiver for the system.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Multiple fiber-fed antennas can improve the coverage of an RFID system [S. Sabesan, M. Crisp, R. Penty, I. White, "Demonstration of Improved Passive UHF RFID Coverage using Optically-Fed Distributed Multi- Antenna System," IEEE International Conference on RFID, April 2009]. We now show how enhanced coverage can be achieved by manipulating the phase differences and carrier frequency of the read/write signals to the RFID tag from the multiple antennas which are placed outside each other's near field.
Thus we describe read/writer system which operates over a distributed antenna system (DAS). Although coax-based systems, or those using other transmission media could be used, our work has focussed primarily in using radio over fibre (RoF) systems to transmit and receive signals from antenna units (AUs) to RFID tags. The use of several antennas reduces system errors due to nulls compared to passive RFID system using single omni- and directional antennas because of spatial diversity as shown in Figure 1 . However, multi-path effects (due to reflections from floors, ceilings, and walls, etc) and destructive interference occurring between signals from different antennas in the DAS results in deep fading as shown in Figure 2 for a modelled simple environment. We make use of the fact that the RFID tags operate over a range of carrier frequencies which, although small, is sufficient so that frequency dithering can allow the movement of nulls from specific positions, and along with control of the amplitude transmitted at each antenna, the depth of remaining nulls can be reduced. By using this combined approach substantially error-free reading and writing as well as enhanced returned signal strength (RSSI) can be achieved for distances, in embodiments of up to 20 m. By way of example, three antennas are placed in 20m apart and a simple 2-ray model (Figure 3) is used to calculate the power along the red crosses as shown in Figure 4. It is clearly shown that the nulls move with the frequency and phase dithering as shown in Figures 5 and 6 respectively. Therefore, if a tag interrogation procedure is carried out in several frequency and phase configurations, a tag at any given location will not experience a null in one of the combinations
Since the tag is generally at an unknown location in an unknown environment, the "correct" combination of amplitudes and frequencies which result in constructive interference at the tag may be found by an exhaustive search.
Figure 7 shows the received signal power from the three antennas each transmitting +33dBm is shown on a 5cm grid interval. It is then used to determine whether a successful read will be possible by considering a tag threshold power of -15dBm and assuming that the tag threshold power will be the limiting factor. The number of read locations is shown to have increased from 55.7% to 77% with a phase dithering technique as shown in Figure 8. The phase dithering technique here carries out the modelling with all the DAS antennas being phase matched and then each shifted by 180 degrees with respect to the others; the maximum returned power from the 4 cases is then plotted.
Frequency dithering
We have demonstrated an improvement in received signal strength and reduction in the number of nulls with the use of multiple transmitting antennas and use of multiple receiving antennas. However, the number of nulls should be preferably further reduced to render the RFID more reliable. Here, a novel frequency dithering technique is applied to substantially eliminate the nulls.
The number of nulls can be moved and thus can be reduced by altering the RFID carrier frequency. As shown in Figure 9, two signal generators are used in this experiment for the purpose of transmitting two different frequencies simultaneously, one to transmit RFID carrier signals within the global tag frequency band (from 860MHz to 960MHz) which feeds to AU1 and AU2 and the other one to transmit the same frequency band signals which feeds to AU3. UK regulations allow a 2MHz band between 865.5MHz and 867.5MHz for passive RFID split into 10, 200 kHz channels; the US regulations allow a 25MHz band between 902MHz and 928MHz.
Figure 10 shows the antenna locations within a 10mx4m laboratory. The positions of the antennas are chosen to achieve overlapping areas of coverage within the constraints of a cluttered room. The backscattered signal power is measured at 10cm intervals along a line away from AU1 in this and the following experiments.
When a null is encountered, the carrier frequency is varied with the aim of eliminating it. The variation of returned signal strength with range for a triple antenna with adaptive frequency selection is shown in Figure 1 1 . The numbers in red represent the Tx frequencies in MHz at which nulls disappear. The optimum frequency selection improves the number of read locations to 95%, as shown in Figure 12. The reason for the enhancement is that at different frequency, the RFID signal has a different multi path effect and gain. Consequently, at an optimum frequency, the path losses are reduced; resulting in reducing the chance of a fade. Thus in a variation of frequency provides potential improvement in system performance. The skilled person will appreciate that the frequency dithering technique we describe improves passive RFID coverage and is different to the FHSS (Frequency hopping spread spectrum) technique of the EPC Class 1 Gen 2 RFID protocol previously mentioned.
Phase dithering
Phase and power control are shown to provide improved performance in the multi- antenna system (Figure 13). By applying phase shifts between the signals at each antenna while varying the phase in 24° steps between 0° and 360° with respect to a reference signal, it is possible to improve the passive RFID coverage. The coverage can be improved further by combining the received signals from each antenna and applying a different gain to the signal from each antenna to optimise the combined received signal SNR; for example, by altering the gain of uplink of each antenna unit (AU) in 10dB steps or less between OdB and 30dB.
As a result of these innovations, we have demonstrated a reduction in the number of nulls of a conventional DAS RFID system from 29% to 2% using 3 transmitting antennas and overlapping cells with phase control as shown in Figure 14. The detected signal strength from the tag is also observed to increase by an average of approximately "l Oc!B compared with a conventional switched multi-antenna RFID system. However, when the triple antenna DAS system is compared with the more conventional multi-antenna RFID system which switches between antennas and selects the highest SNR, a performance reduction is seen. This is shown by the CDF plots in Figure 14. It can be seen that the conventional switched triple antenna system has 14% nulls whereas a triple antenna DAS system has 29% nulls. The increase in the number of nulls in the DAS system can be accounted for by distractive interference occurring between signals from different antennas in the DAS resulting in fading. However, optimising the DAS using phase dithering technique can substantially eliminate the fading and thus can provide a significant advantage over a conventional switched multi-antenna system, as shown in Figure 14.
This improvement has been demonstrated using an R&S (Rohde & Schwarz) SMIQ signal generator and an R&S FSQ spectrum analyser as a RFID reader as shown in Figure 13. The three antenna DAS system is formed by splitting the signals in the downlink and combining the signals from the antennas in the uplink. We then demonstrate the DAS optimisation by employing the phase dithering technique. The conventional switched three antenna system is tested by transmitting and receiving the signals from one antenna at a time and then obtaining the best received signal strength from all three antennas.
Figure 15 shows that the power control in uplink suppressing interference from other receiving antennas) enhances the received signal strength indication (RSSI) as the number of nulls is reduced from 24% to 20% in a triple antenna with power dithering over a triple antenna DAS system. The gain of the uplink and downlink is varied from OdB to 30dB in 10dB steps in the proposed optical UHF RFID system.
Proof of Principle (Antenna diversity combined with frequency dithering)
A proof of principle demonstration for the improved passive RFID coverage has been carried out with a single tag in the field; the system is shown in Figure 16. A signal generator and an analyser have been chosen to illustrate the improvement. A Labview program is designed to automatically vary the phase difference between two of the antennas in 24° steps between 0 ° to 360° while the frequency is varied from 860MHz to 960MHz in 1 MHz steps. This demonstration is carried out over a 20mx6m area as shown in Figure 17. The antenna diversity combined with frequency dithering technique is shown to increase the probability of a successful read to 100% from 67% as shown in Figure 18. This result is achieved with +30dBm EIRP at each antenna.
Coverage improvement of multiple passive RFID tags
Coverage improvement of single tag has been shown in the previous section. Here, it is shown that a similar improvement can be achieved with multiple tags. As shown in Figure 19, a double antenna combined with Alien 8800 RFID reader is used in this experiment. 140 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 25cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area as shown in Figure 20. A +32dBm equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) is transmitted from each AU and the combined optimised tag returned signals RSSI is measured. The phase difference between the antenna is randomly dithered quantised in 24° intervals between 0° to 360 ° while the frequency is varied from 865.7MHz to 867.5MHz in 200 kHz steps using a Labview programme.
The antenna diversity combined with frequency dithering technique is shown to increased the tag read accuracy from 79% (1 1 1 tags) to 100 % (140 tags) in a fully optimized DAS over a conventional switched multi-antenna system as shown in Figure 21 .
Antenna and Polarisation Switching in Multi-Antenna distributed antenna (DAS) System
It is shown that RFID coverage can be enhanced by dithering phase and frequency. However, this approach could be used alongside other techniques such as polarisation switching (i.e. switching the polarisation (vertical or circular) of Tx and Rx antennas at a particular location), or switching which antennas are employed for Tx and Rx, to enhance the coverage further. This is due to the fact that the locations of constructive interference occurring due to phase and frequency dithering vary with antenna polarisation and radiation pattern. Read rate/speed enhancement of multiple passive tags
Lack of access to the low level reader functions in off the shelf RFID readers prevent integration of the DAS optimisation algorithms and the tag query cycle. Read rate is investigated using a probabilistic model for the number of occupied successful slots (with useful tag reads), empty slots and collisions (which cause backoffs - if there are too many collisions the number of available timeslots is increased, the reader detecting collisions). Data from the earlier measurements of the ability of the optimised DAS to read multiple tags is used in the simulation to determine how many unique, un- inventorised tags exist in the field of view for the optimised DAS in each state and a conventional system. The DAS is compared to a conventional RFID which switches between antennas performing inventory cycles.
The Alien RFID 8800 reader uses two main parameters to tune the reading of multiple tags. The Q-factor determines how many slots (2 e ) are allocated in the Aloha algorithm. In an inventory the Q-factor can be varied for each count. The DAS RFID system is configured to perform a tag inventory cycle comprising a plurality of tag read rounds to read tags, a tag read round having a set of time slots, determined by the Q- bit random number in the tag slot counter, during which a tag decrements its slot counter and is able to transmit tag data including a tag ID for reception by antenna when the tag slot counter is 0. During the inventory cycle read tags have the inventorised bit set so that they do not compete in subsequent cycles speeding up the inventory.
At the start of each cycle, the Tag Select command wakes all tags and sets their inventorised bit to zero. Count read attempts are then made. Each read attempt assigns 22 slots for the tags to compete for. The number (Q) is transmitted to the tags and enables a tag to load a Q bit random number into their slot counter. Tags are then requested to decrement the value of their slot counter and are allowed to transmit if and only if their slot counter is zero. Once they are successfully read, they are instructed to keep silent for a period set by the session flag persistence time (eventually re-awakening). Successfully read tags have the inventorised bit set so they do not compete for slots in future counts until a new cycle is started. The DAS optimization settings are changed for each count (Figure 22). Simulation is performed with 80 tags in view of each antenna in the switched system as well as 140 tags for a DAS system. Figure 23 shows that a 47% improvement (from 809 tags/sec to 1 188 tags/sec) tag read rate can be achieved in optimised DAS system compared to a conventional switched antenna RFID system through modelling. This is achieved by reducing the number of collisions (Figure 24) within each read as the DAS optimisation technique allows us to move the nulls around the field. Hence, only a certain number of tags are active at any time. (The peaks in Figure 24 are where the number 2N of available timeslots is decreased). The number of active tags for every DAS setting is obtained from experimental results. It is then used to simulate the optimised DAS in our analytical model. DAS optimisation technique operates on a loop just above the count (such that the Q factor is adjusted for each DAS setting combination). This enables the inventorised bit of the tags to be exploited to prevent the re-reading of tags.
A proof of principle demonstration for the improved read speed/rate has been carried out. A prototype based on an Intel R1000 development board is developed as shown in Figure 25. The R1000 supports host side applications (Intel Transceiver interface). The transceiver interface includes a C/C++ functional interface to communicate with the firmware module using USB communication. When an inventory is performed using the transceiver interface, the R1000 returns data from the Intel firmware over the USB interface in a sequential of packets to the host PC. Phase is randomly varied using voltage controlled phase shifters (as shown in Figure 26) controlled by the PC when the R1000 returns the inventory-round-begin packet which indicates the beginning of an inventory round (as shown in Figure 25).
The developed triple antenna DAS RFID system is configured to transmit signals in the UK RFID band and a +30dBm EIRP is transmitted from each antenna as shown in Figure 27. 80 Alien Higgs2 tags are placed at a height of 2m in a 50cm grid interval over a 10m x 4m area as shown in Figure 28. We used an R1000 development board to implement fixed and dynamic Q algorithms to read multiple tags. Here, we show a tag read enhancement over both algorithms. Read Rate/Speed Enhancement using Phase and Frequency Dithering over R1000 Fixed Q Algorithm
An inventory using the fixed Q algorithm is performed with the system operating as a conventional (where a triple antenna system is used to transmit signals simultaneously) and an optimised triple antenna DAS RFID system (where frequency and phase dithering is applied over a triple antenna system). As shown in Figure 29a, the conventional antenna system reads tags at a rate of 38 tags/sec while the optimised DAS RFID is at a rate of 68 tags/sec. As a result, an 81 % improvement in read rate is demonstrated in the DAS RFID system over a conventional system. In addition, an initial read rate of >1 10 tags/sec is sustained for a greater proportion of the total tag population using the DAS RFID system as shown in Figure 29a. The improvement in the tag read rate is due to the fact that the number of collisions within each inventory round is reduced and read success rate is enhanced using the DAS optimisation technique as it moves the nulls around the field. Hence, only a certain number of tags are active at any time. The DAS optimisation technique operates on a loop just above the count (such that the Q factor is adjusted for each DAS setting combination). This enables the inventorized bit of the tags to be exploited to prevent the re-reading of tags.
Figure 29b shows a plot of number of RN16 timeouts against time for the conventional RFID system and the optimised DAS RFID system. The RN16 timeouts occur due to both collided and empty slots. It is clearly shown that DAS RFID encounters fewer collided and empty slots compared with a conventioal RFID system. For a complete comparison, the number of RN16 received and good EPC reads (successful tag reads) are shown in Figures 29c and 29d respectively for both DAS RFID and conventional systems. The results clearly illustrate that a high sustained tag throughput with large tag populations can be obtained in a DAS RFID that can outperform conventional RFID readers.
Read Rate/Speed Enhancement using Phase and Frequency Dithering over R1000 Dynamic Q Algorithm
An inventory using dynamic Q algorithm is also performed for both conventional and optimised RFID systems. As shown in Figure 29e, the conventional RFID system presents a tag read at a rate of 71 tags/sec and the optimised DAS RFID provides a read rate of 84 tags/sec. Thus, a 19% improvement in tag read speed is achieved. Moreover, an initial read rate of >140 tags/sec is sustained for a greater proportion of the total tag population using the DAS RFID system.
Figure 29f shows a plot of number of RN16 timeouts against time for the conventional RFID system and the optimised DAS RFID system. It is again shown that DAS RFID encounters fewer collided and empty slots compared with a conventioal RFID system. The number of RN16 received and good EPC reads are shown in Figures 29g and 29h respectively for both DAS RFID and conventional systems. The results again indicate that a high sustained tag throughput is possible in a DAS RFID system.
The demonstrator shows that while an enhanced tag read rate is achieved in the DAS RFID system, the initial tag read rate is sustained for a greater proportion of the total tag population. This improvement is due to both a reduction in the number of collisions (result of dynamic grouping) and an improvement in the read success rate (result of enhanced radio coverage). It is anticipated that the projected tag read rate of >1000 tags per second is possible with next iteration of reader development with closer integration and also by configuring the tag to reader protocol to achieve the maximum data rate. The closer integration will be achieved by editing the R1000 reader firmware to provide an indication of each read attempt resulting in perfect synchronisation with phase dithering at each read attempt within an inventory round.
Location accuracy improvement of multiple passive tags
By expanding the range of view of a single RFID reader, as well as improving the likelihood of successful tag detection, one can envisage RFID systems with wide coverage areas as opposed to the portal systems currently in use today, where sensitivity constraints require the objects to pass close to the reader antennas for detection. In a portal system however, the location of a tagged object can be inferred from the fact that it has passed close enough to the reader to be read. In a wide area RFID system, the simple reading of a tag will not provide sufficient location resolution for many applications. As a result interest has arisen in being able to estimate the location of the tag in such systems. The most common techniques are based on received signal strength indicator (RSSI) location algorithms. Due to the complex multipath environment commonly encountered in RFID implementations, fading and nulls result in the RSSI being only a weak function of range. Here we show that by measuring combined RSSI from multiple antennas using the optimised DAS, one can determine position more accurately. Any algorithm which makes use of combined RSSI from multiple antennas in the optimised DAS will lead to a better location accuracy since the fading will be minimised. Consequently, two location approaches based on the combined RSSI from multiple antennas are studied. The fingerprinting algorithm makes use of an initially recorded map of the combined RSSI from multiple antennas over the area, while the analytical location technique is based on a propagation model which makes use of the combined RSSI from multiple antennas.
Experimental Setup
Figure 30 shows a plan view of the physical arrangement of the three AUs used in this work and of the measurement locations over a 10 m x 7.6 m area in an open atrium. The atrium area is bounded by solid walls at the left and right extremes of the figure and encompasses a concrete pillar. It is a realistic in-building environment. The tag is orientated such that its antenna is vertically polarized to match the AU antennas and is held fixed throughout the experiments. This matching of the tag and reader antenna polarization gives a 3 dB benefit in both the uplink and downlink performance over orientation-insensitive circularly polarized antennas which are often used for RFID readers. The AU locations are chosen to provide overlapping coverage.
The RFID reader (Figure 19) is configured to transmit signals in the UK frequency band (865.7 MHz to 867.5 MHz). A +30 dBm equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) is transmitted from each AU and the combined optimized tag RSSI is measured on a 0.6 m grid over the triangular area. The RSSI value from each AU is also measured individually by applying 30 dB attenuation in the uplink of the other two AUs so that their contribution to the total signal strength is negligible. This enables the likelihood that the tag is closest to a particular AU to be estimated. Real time location system (RTLS) Fingerprint Algorithm
A fingerprint algorithm based on combined received signal strength indicator (RSSI) from multiple antennas is implemented as shown in Figure 31 a.
The area of interest is first mapped by recording the combined RSSI from all the AUs and the individual RSSI from each AU in turn. The mapping/calibration is done by placing tags at each of the measurement locations and then performing the RSSI measurements simultaneously. Depending upon the operating environment, it is, however, anticipated that the calibration may need to be repeated a number of times (for example if furniture is moved). In this work, the measurements are repeated five times at each grid point with the optimum phase (which gives the maximum RSSI) and different frequency combinations. The AU with the highest combined signal strength is identified for each tag location.
The tag location is then estimated for an unknown point by finding the closest match between the pre-recorded values and the measured maximum combined three antenna RSSI, the RSSI from the closest predicted antenna and the probability that each antenna is closest to the tag amongst the other grid points. A maximum likelihood weighting is applied to the data, with coefficients chosen empirically, to give the greatest location accuracy on a test dataset.
For example, if we consider attempting to locate a tag at an unknown location, the recorded optimized three antenna RSSI and RSSI from the nearest predicted antenna for this tag are first searched within the mapped data set as shown in Table 1 below. A table is then calculated for the root mean square difference between each of the data set elements of known location and the observed data of the tag to be located as shown in Table 2. In this case, the data from position (0.6, 1 .8) m is found to be the closest match, so the best estimate of the location of the tag is (0.6, 1 .8) m. Since the actual location of the tag was (0, 1 .8) m this represents an error of 0.6 m.
TABLE 1 X, Y COORDINATES AND EACH OF THE DATA SET ELEMENTS OF KNOWN LOCATION AND THE OBSERVED DATA OF THE TAG
TO BE LOCATED.
X, Y coordinates Combined RSSI AUl RSSI AU2 RSSI AU3 RSSI
UNKNOWN(0, 1.8) 415.5 498.1 0 0
(0.6, 1.8) 484 484 0 0 (0, 7.8) 569.9 0 0 225.9
(1.8, 3) 703.1 493.4 493.4 0
( 6.6, 6) 1091 0 646.5 0
TABLE 2 THE ROOT MEAN SQUARE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN EACH OF THE DATA SET ELEMENTS OF KNOWN LOCATION AND THE
OBSERVED DATA OF THE TAG TO BE LOCATED.
Combined RSSI AU1 RSSI AU2 RSSI AU3 RSSI RSM
69.3 -13.3 0 0 35.2824
154.4 -498.1 0 225.9 284.1539
287.6 -4.7 493.4 0 285.5606
675.5 -498.1 646.5 0 529.7089
Referring again now to experimental measurements made (Figure 30), a 10 m x 7.6 m area was first mapped by recording the combined RSSI from all the AUs and the individual RSSI from each AU in turn. This was carried out for a tag suspended at a height of 1 .4 m at each of the locations shown by the red crosses in Figure 30. In this experiment, the measurements were repeated five times at each grid point with different DAS optimization parameters. The AU with the highest number of successful reads was identified as the most likely to be the closest antenna to the tag.
The tag location was then estimated for an unknown point by finding the closest match between the pre-recorded values and the measured maximum combined three antenna RSSI, the RSSI from the closest predicted antenna and the probability that each antenna is closest to the tag. A maximum likelihood weighting was applied to the data, with coefficients chosen empirically, to give the greatest location accuracy.
In order to test this location algorithm, the area is mapped at each of the locations shown by the red crosses in Figure 30. Each location is then removed from the dataset in turn and the closest match amongst the other points is found from the remaining data with weighting coefficients of 1 for the combined optimized RSSI and 3.5 for the RSSI from the nearest predicted antenna respectively. This results in a minimum possible error of 0.6 m and should represent a worst case location accuracy. For example, if we consider attempting to locate the tag at the position (0, 1 .8) m, the recorded optimized three antenna RSSI and RSSI from the nearest predicted antenna for this data point are first removed from the mapped data set and recorded as the observed data for the tag which is to be located. A table is then calculated for the root mean square difference between each of the data set elements of known location and the observed data of the tag to be located. In this case, the data from position (0.6, 1 .8) m is found to be the closest match, so the best estimate of the location of the tag is (0.6, 1 .8) m. Since the actual location of the tag was (0, 1 .8) m this represents an error of 0.6 m.
The performance of the DAS location technique is compared with that of a commercial RFID reader which can estimate range using RSSI. In this case, location is found by estimating the distance between the tag and each AU in turn using the range estimation feature. The position is then calculated using triangulation. This approach is expected to give a fixed position. However, due to fading and nulls in the commercial RFID system, the RSSI is a weak function of distance and hence the three antennas do not always result in an exact fix. In such cases a least mean squared error approach is used. It should be noted that there are a number of cases where only one or two antennas are used to find the location as the other antenna(s) cannot provide a range estimate if the tag cannot be identified. In this case the location is estimated by random guess on the locus of possible positions calculated from the available data.
Figure 31 b shows the location accuracy error distributions for the fingerprint algorithm for a triple antenna DAS, for a random algorithm and for a commercial RFID reader using RSSI. An average accuracy of 1 .9 m (standard deviation of 1 .0 m) is achieved for the DAS RFID system, this comparing with an average 4.6 m accuracy (standard deviation of 3.6 m) if the location is picked at random from the set of measurement locations. The average location accuracy using the commercial reader is found to be 4.1 m (standard deviation of 2.1 m). Thus a 2.2 m improvement in location accuracy is achieved by the optical DAS RFID system over the commercial multi-antenna RFID system.
Figure 32 shows a plot of the error cumulative probability density function (CDF) versus error for the various measurements. The CDF values indicate the fraction of locations where the error is less than or equal to the x-axis value. 100% of the location estimations using the DAS have less than 4.2 m error compared with only 55% and 40% from the commercial RFID reader and the random algorithm respectively. Figure 33 shows the spatial variations in the location accuracy for a triple antenna DAS RFID system over the 10 m x 7.6 m area. As can be seen, the peak errors in the DAS location measurement arise around the (4.8, 5.4) m location. This is due to an obstacle (a reinforced concrete pillar) at this location. If the measurements within a 1 m radius from the concrete pillar are excluded, the mean location accuracy is improved to be 1 .7 m (standard deviation of 0.9 m), and 80% of measurements have an accuracy of better than 2.2 m as opposed to the 3.0 m otherwise.
RTLS Analytical Location Algorithm
An analytical algorithm based on a signal propagation model is also investigated to determine whether an enhancement in location accuracy is possible. An analytical algorithm based on a two ray model, signal propagation model (and a radiation pattern) was implemented as shown in Figure 34a.
As shown in Figure 34a, the combined RSSI distribution from three antennas is modelled over the area of interest based on the antenna radiation pattern, a two ray model, frequency dithering ( / ), phase dithering ( Θ) as well as the ITU indoor path loss model which can be written as L = 20x log10 + wx log10r - 28 ; where L = total path loss, / = the frequency of transmission, r = distance and n = loss exponent which takes a value depending on the environment.
The radiation pattern gives the gain, G(x, y, z) in the direction of interest ( ) as shown in Figure 34b. The two 2-ray model is used to predict the RFID fading occurring due to the interaction between a direct path and a single reflection from the floor as previously shown in Fi ure 3. The direct path, rl and indirect path, r2 are given
Figure imgf000040_0001
respectively; where and h2 are highest of the antenna and tag respectively and r is the distance of the tag away from the antenna location. By combing the ITU and 2-ray models, which assumes the floor is a perfect reflector, as well as the antenna radiation pattern (to give the antenna gain in the particular direction), the amplitudes of the direct and indirect path of the transmitted signal from each antenna at the tag location are calculated at the random signal frequency ( ) between 865-868 MHz and are written as Ml and M 2 respectively; where P is the transmitted power. In other words, the path loss (in dB) on each of the direct and indirect paths are first estimated using the ITU model, the antenna gain is added to the total transmitted power ( G(x, y, z) ) in the direction of the direct and reflected ray making use of the antenna pattern to estimate the power at the tag location. This gives the magnitude of the direct and indirect signals.
Ml = 10 x log10P + G(jc, , z) - 20 x log10 / - /i X log^+28 M 2= 10 x log10P + G(x, y, z) - 20 x log10 / - n x log10 r2+28
The phase of the direct and indirect path signals at the tag location are given by θι and θ2 respectively; where λ is the wavelength of the transmitted signal and Θ is the random phase angle between 0-360°.
Θ - rem((rem(ri , ;i) x 2π) + θ,2π)
X e2= rem{{ — x 2π) + θ,2π) ; where remQ are the functions that return the λ
remainders after divisions.
The linear sum of the complex representation of the signals gives a vector representation, V of the signal strength at the location.
V = 10^ x exp(j^1) + 101^ x exp(j^2)
The maximum power received by the tag is then calculated by combing the vector representations of the signal power from all three antennas in the direct and the reflected signal path at the optimum frequency and phase combination. The power received by the receiving antenna (RSSI) is calculated in the similar manner and the tag loss is assumed to be x%.
A map is then built up over a matrix of X, Y values.
The value of the loss exponent (n) in the ITU model and the tag loss, x dB are determined from experimentally record RSSI values which are fitted to the calculated model through an empirical process, n is varied from 1 to 40 while x is dithered from 0.1 to 0.9 and the values of n and x which gives the best fit are then selected. Once the values of n and x are determined, the calculated model (Figure 34c) is then used to estimate the location. The combined RSSI from a tag of unknown location with 1 dB tolerance (if no solution find then the tolerance is incremented by 1 dB until a solution is found) is compared with the pre-calculated map of RSSI's from the three antennas to give a contour of possible positions. Single antenna RSSI is used to select the appropriate locus within the contour of 1 dB variation (if no solution find then the tolerance is incremented by 1 dB until a solution is found). RSSI from individual antennas (including a rolling average of three previous recordings of the tag RSSI) are then used to find the direction (angle) of the tag location from the nearest antenna location. The angle is estimated using the ratio between the RSSI from the two furthest antennas. The intersection between the locus and the direction (a line) gives a fix position.
For instance, a measured combined RSSI of 128 from the three antennas gives a number of possible loci within 1 dB tolerance as shown in Figure 34d. The AU with the highest RSSI is selected as the most likely closest antenna to the tag location. In this case AU1 gives the highest RSSI as shown in Table 3 and hence the most appropriate locus is selected within the antenna range as shown in Figure 6. The RSSI values from AU3 and AU2 are then used to estimate the angle (direction) by taking the ratio between them (i.e RSSI of AU3 : RSSI of AU2). Solving the locus and the line (based on the direction) gives the estimated location at (0.5, 1 .8) - see Figure 34e.
TABLE 3 INDIVIDUAL ANTENNA RSSI OVER THE LAST THREE HISTORIES
Figure imgf000042_0001
Example implementation of the analytical algorithm:
In an example implementation of the analytical algorithm, measured combined RSSI values from multiple antennas are fitted with a 3rd order polynomial function in order to achieve a minimum error as shown in Figure 35a. The analytical model is then used to estimate distance which gives an average range accuracy of 1 .1 m. The combined optimum RSSI from the three antennas gives three loci of possible positions (circles with the radius of the range). Single antenna RSSI is used to select the appropriate locus among the three loci. Combined RSSI from two antennas are then used to give a fix position.
For instance, a measured optimum RSSI of 640.7 from the three antennas gives three possible loci (dashed circles with a radius of 3.2m) as shown in Figure 35b. The AU (antenna unit) with the highest number successful reads is selected as the most likely closest antenna to the tag location. In this case AU1 gives the highest probability. Therefore, green dashed circle locus is selected to be the appropriate one. The probability of successful reads as well as RSSI values from AU1 & AU3 and AU1 & AU2 are then used to estimate the angle and hence gives the estimated location at (1 .5, 2.8) as illustrated in Figure 35b.
The location accuracy using the analytical algorithm is measured to be 1 .6m with a standard deviation of 0.7m. The enhanced location accuracy for optimised DAS using the analytical algorithm over a 10m x 7.6m area is shown in Figure 36. One advantage of this analytical algorithm is that detailed mapping is not required and hence it can speed up the location process as it only requires calibration within the area of interest to acquire the model parameters.
Effect of Tag Orientation on Location Accuracy
The results discussed so far have used tag antennas matched in orientation to the reader antennas. However, in practice, tag orientation can have a strong effect on the RSSI at a particular reader antenna. The effect of tag orientation on RSSI is reduced for the DAS approach due to antenna diversity. For example, consider a tag with a radiation pattern shown in Figure 37(a). If the RSSI is summed from 3 antennas, in the best case directions (0°, 120°, 240°) and worst case (0°, 90°, 180°), the orientation dependence of the RSSI is reduced from 50dB to 3 dB (best case) and 10 dB (worst case) using the DAS, as shown in Figure 37(b). This orientation insensitivity also gives a much higher probably of tag detection. We thus expect tag orientation to have a relatively small impact on location accuracy in our triple antenna DAS RFID system compared with a conventional RFID system.
A Proof of Principle Demonstration
A prototype real time location system based is demonstrated based on low cost passive UHF RFID (Figure 27). We have shown that by distributing the RFID signals over a radio over fibre DAS the area of coverage can be enlarged at the same time as improving the likelihood of tag detection. As a result of the enlarged coverage, it is necessary to be able to locate tags within the covered area. By using the DAS to reduce fading the returned signal strength from the RFID tag is a strong indicator of position allowing tags to be located by triangulation. The analytical algorithm is implemented using a piece of Matlab (RTM) programme and the screen shot of a GUI is shown in Figure 38. The green circles represent the real time location of an array of passive tags. The location accuracy is shown to be 1 .8m over a 10m x 4m area.
Multi-Antenna distributed antenna (DAS) System
We have shown that passive RFID coverage of a triple antenna DAS system can be improved using antenna diversity combined with frequency dithering technique. As a result there is a potential for forming a multi-antenna DAS system which employs six three-antenna DAS to form a hexagonal structure. A hexagonal structure is formed to achieve tessellating cells as shown in Figure 39. The antennas are shown by the blue crosses. A simple 2-ray model is used to model the RFID fading. As shown in Figure 39, the received signal power from the antennas each transmitting +30dBm is calculated on a 5cm grid interval. It is then used to determine whether a successful read is possible at that location by assuming a tag threshold power of -15dBm and that the tag threshold power will be the limiting factor. The fading can be reduced by using the antenna diversity and frequency dithering technique. Hence, it is possible to form a number of hexagonal cells and thus we believe that the read range can be extended similar to a value comparable with a wireless local area network (WLAN) and ubiquitous coverage can then be achieved with common infrastructure.
It is anticipated that a large number of tags need to be read in a multi-antenna DAS system. It is therefore possible to split a hexagonal structure into six cells of 3 antennas and searching, ensuring other cells are on different frequency dithers. This can be managed by using a single antenna to transmit simultaneously two ore more frequencies. Moreover, it is possible to sweep all 6 triangles in a hexagon concurrently if tag density is low. Consequently, channel management will be the key in order to handle high volume tags. Therefore, frequency reuse, time diversity technique can be applied for handling large number of tags in a multi-antenna DAS system.
It should be noted that the invention not only provides enhanced coverage for passive UHF RFID, but it can also deliver improved performance for any RF powered system.
We have thus described methods and systems for providing enhanced coverage of RF powered systems such as passive UHF RFID by multicasting the signals over two or more antennas and manipulating the phase differences and carrier frequency between the transmitted signals. Preferably the antennas are placed outside each other's near field.
Embodiments substantially eliminate nulls using RFID signal sources to transmit two or more frequencies from each antenna and vary (dither) the carrier frequency between them in steps. Embodiments also substantially eliminate nulls using phase shifts between two or more antennas and varying (dithering) the phase between them in steps. Further embodiments substantially eliminating the nulls by manipulating the phase differences and carrier frequency where the phase is varied between two of the antennas in 24° steps between 0 ° to 360° while the frequency is varied from 860MHz to 960MHz in 1 MHz steps. In each case, where more than two antennas are used an exhaustive search may be employed. The methods/systems combine the received signals from two or more antennas and then process them at the base station. Preferably the methods/systems apply a different gain to the signal from each antenna to optimise the combined received signal SNR; this may be by altering the gain of uplink of each antenna unit (AU) in 10dB steps or less between OdB and 30dB. Embodiments provide enhanced passive UHF RFID and sensor coverage using the phase and power diversity. Embodiments also improve read range of a RFID and sensor system with the phase and power diversity, and/or improve the read speed/rate of a RFID and sensor system with the phase and power diversity, and/or improve the location accuracy of a RFID and sensor system with the combined RSSI from multiple antennas, phase diversity and power diversity. In some preferred embodiments of the methods the antennas are fed either by co-ax or by radio over fibre techniques. In embodiments one or more of the transmit/receive antennas may comprise a leaky feeder.
Tag location using RSSI-weighted phase-frequency gradient measurements
One of the problems which these techniques address is the difficulty in determining the location of a tag if it is in or near a null. Broadly speaking to address this we use a combination of phase information from the received tag back-scatter signal or from the transmitted carrier signal at the tag location, and RSSI, to increase accuracy. By selective use of information from the system, in particular neglecting low RSSI signals and using weighting techniques/Kalman filtering one can minimize the causes of errors. In embodiments we also use several antennas so that the likelihood of nulls is reduced, dynamically shift any nulls by phase dithering, frequency dithering and antenna switching (i.e. switching the Tx and Rx antennas at a particular location or change the polarisation of each) so that successful location is enhanced, and reduce the likelihood of indirect paths causing interference which leads to nulls by employing beamed antennas, that is narrow beam-width antennas (for example less than 45Q or 35Q). These features, especially when combined, provide greatly improved tag location sensing over increased distances.
Thus, broadly speaking, preferred embodiments of the system first aim to minimize the effect of multipath fading on location accuracy, and second use joint phase information and RSSI to increase location accuracy, in particular by Kalman filtering techniques. Some preferred embodiments operate over a distributed antenna system (DAS), and although coax-based systems or other transmission media may be employed, some preferred embodiments use radio over fibre (ROF) systems to transmit and receive signals from antenna units (AUs) to RFID tags.
We will describe an accurate passive RFID location sensing system which operates over a distributed antenna system (DAS). Although coax-based systems, or those using other transmission media could be used, a preferred approach uses radio over fibre (RoF) systems to transmit and receive signals from antenna units (AUs) to RFID tags. The distance between the reader and tag can be estimated by measuring the phase shifts between the transmitted carrier and received tag signals at two different carrier frequencies. For instance, for a bi-static reader system as shown in Figure 40, the phase shift (θι) of the coherent tag backscatter signals at fi frequency (wavelength λι) can be given by equation (1 ). Similarly, the phase shift (θ2) of the coherent tag backscatter signals at f2 frequency (i.e λ2 corresponding wavelength) can be given by equation (2).
Θ1 = (((_ι+(_2) - ΙΛι)/ λι χ 2 π (1 )
θ2 = (^^2) - 2)/ λ2 χ 2 π (2)
Where di and d2 are the forward and return distances and k is an integer number.
By combing equations (1 ) and (2), eliminating k and substituting for λ in terms of f (i.e λ = c/f, where c is speed of light), the total distance, di+d2 can be calculated as di +d2=(c/27t) x (θι - 02)/(f 1 -f 2) (3)
Location can then be estimated by using distance estimation from three or more readers and triangulating. However, two key factors reduce the accuracy of this location technique in passive RFID systems. The multi-path effects (due to reflections from floors, ceilings, and walls, etc) results in poor location accuracy due to inaccurate phase shift measurements due to the observed signals being the complex sum of the direct and reflected paths (Figure 41 ) which lead to poor range estimations. The second is due to poor read success rate as this technique uses range estimations from multiple readers, which may not be possible.
RTLS based on a combination of RSSI and phase of backscatter signals with frequency dithering and antenna diversity
This approach for locating RFID tags uses information from (a) frequency dithering and (b) a combination of RSSI and phase of the tag signals. Hence, we determine them as follows.
An example experimental setup using a four antenna DAS combined with an Intel R1000™ reader is shown in Figure 42. The demodulated tag backscatter signals are fed into an oscilloscope to sample and acquire I and Q signals which are then processed in Matlab™. The preamble-found signal is used as a trigger signal in the oscilloscope.
A +30 dBm equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) is transmitted from each antenna unit (AU) at a time. In addition, Tx and Rx antennas are switched to each perform both transmit and receive operations in each AU. This provides extra measurements which are used later with signal processing techniques to accurately estimate the phase difference. The received tag backscatter signals are demodulated in the R1000 reader module which provides baseband I and Q components of the backscatter signals. The signals are then sampled using an oscilloscope and processed in Matlab to estimate the amplitude (i.e RSSI) and phase angle. A digital Butterworth band pass filter is implemented in Matlab™ to remove unwanted signals. The filter frequency response is shown in Figure 43.
Matlab™ processing, as described above gives the desired I and Q of the tag backscatter signals as shown in Figure 44. Figure 45 shows a constellation diagram of the tag backscatter signals. The RSSI and phase of the signals are determined from this. It should be noted that the phase shift due to fibre length is calibrated out to give the actual phase shift over the wireless transmission range between the AU and tag. The RSSI and phase of the backscatter signals are measured over six frequencies in this example, from 902.75 to 912.75 MHz with a 2MHz step.
Having found RSSI and phase angle, one can investigate how they relate. From Figure 46, one can see that heavily multi-path affected backscatter signals tend to have a low RSSI value. Hence, phase angle can be corrected using RSSI information.
The measured RSSI and phase values are used to provide the best estimate of the range by employing a Kalman filtering algorithm. The most weight is given to the value with the least uncertainty (i.e. phase angle at maximum RSSI). The weights are calculated from the covariance. The Kalman filter produces an estimate of the actual phase based on the recorded phase values by computing a weighted average of the measured phase values. The estimated phase values are much closer to the known ideal values than the original measurements as the weighted average has a better estimated uncertainty. The Kalman filtering algorithm predicts the actual value based on the measurements using equations 4 and 5, using the RSSI as an indicator of confidence. It then corrects the values (equations 6, 7, 8 and 9).
Time update (predict)
X1(k) = X(k-1 ) (4)
Figure imgf000049_0001
Measurement update (correct)
K(k) = P1(k)/(P1(k)+R(k)) (6)
X(k) = X1(k)+K(k) x (z(k) - X1(k)) (7)
P(k) = (1 -K(k)) x P1(k) (8)
In the equations k labels the measurement in a frequency sweep, Q is the process variance and assumed to be a predetermined, preferable small value, for example 1 x 10~5, z is the phase measurement, X is corrected phase value, P is an initial guess of error estimate and R = (1 / normalised RSSI") is an estimate of measured phase variance based on the measured RSSI. In embodiments only phase values from signals with a normalised RSSI of > 0.2 are taken into account; otherwise the data is discarded. The normalised RSSI is calculated by taking the ratio between the RSSI and maximum RSSI. The filter is optimised by tuning the filter parameters R (and Q) and the empirical coefficient, n, which in one implementation was chosen to be 0.23 for minimum range error. The weighting by K (the blending factor) is such that as the measurement error covariance approaches zero, the actual measurement is "trusted" more and more, while the predicted measurement is trusted less and less.
Figure 47 shows the corrected phase measurement over 7 samples for an example location. The samples were obtained by dithering the carrier frequency as well as switching the Tx and Rx antennas at the particular location (phase shifts are calculated between the adjacent frequencies with a 2MHz frequency offset/bandwidth (fi - f2). The antenna switching and frequency dithering provide measurements to accurately estimate the phase difference as this technique minimises the multipath fading that causes inaccurate measurements. This leads to enhanced location accuracy. It can be seen that Kalman filtering algorithm tends to estimate phase values very close to the ideal calculated phase. The corrected phase angles are then used to estimate the range using the range equation (9) below. The estimates are plotted against the actual range in Figure 48. An average range accuracy of 0.54 m was achieved using this approach.
R = (c/47t) x (0i - 02)/(fi-f2) (9)
Figure 49 shows cumulative probability distributions of the experimentally measured range error for three different algorithms namely a three antenna DAS with phase averaging over the frequency channels, a four antenna DAS with phase averaging over frequency channels, and a four antenna DAS with a Kalman filtering algorithm. It is shown that adding an extra antenna improves the range error due to an improvement in multi-path robustness. However, by applying Kalman filtering algorithms to the four antenna DAS, it is possible to achieve a much enhanced accuracy in a passive RFID system.
For wider area coverage, a large number of antennas may be used. The additional antennas may be used to enhance the location resolution further by providing additional degrees of freedom, i.e. a better chance that all the antennas in the array do not suffer substantial multipath for a particular tag location, and a better chance of a favourable geometric arrangement of the antennas and tag. Signal processing may be employed to exploit and improve the accuracy of detection of low SNR signals, for example by (cross) correlation with high SNR signals.
Figures 50a and 50b show, respectively, functional and structural blocked diagrams of an embodiment of an RFID tag location system 500 according to a first aspect of the invention. Thus in module 502 the system sets a frequency fi to use, which in turn determines f2, since in this embodiment a substantially constant frequency offset is employed. Then in module 502, optionally one antenna is selected for transmitting, and a second for receiving, the functions of these antennas being exchanged on a second measurement. The system then measures phase of the tag return signal at the two frequencies (with respect to the transmitted signal), and also determines the received signal strength for the return at each frequency, using module 506. This loop is repeated a number of times for a set of different frequencies, for example to perform a frequency sweep over a range of frequencies. The resulting phase and RSSI information is provided to module 508 which discards data resulting from received signals with a RSSI below a threshold, and then the remaining data is Kalman filtered 510 as previously described to provide coaxed change of phase with frequency data, which is in turn used for a range calculation 512.
The skilled person will appreciate that the modules of Figure 50a may conveniently be implemented in software controlling a interrogation transceiver system. Thus Figure 50b shows the same system implemented as an interrogation transceiver system 524 having multiple transmit/receive antennas 522 in communication with a passive RFID tag 520, and under control of a data processing system 526. The data processing system 526 provides frequency controlled data to the transceiver system 524 to control the frequencies employed and receives digital phase and RSSI data from system 524 which it processes to output tag range data.
RTLS based on a combination of RSSI and phase of backscatter signals with frequency dithering, phase dithering and antenna diversity
An alternative embodiment of the technique uses the RSSI of the returned signal to estimate the phase relationship between the signals from various antennas at the tag. Figure 51 shows a vector illustration of signal at tag due to direct and indirect paths. Phase dithering alters the phase of both the direct and the indirect signals together, but does not vary the amplitude. Hence, the resultant signal at tag can be rotated to any desired direction on the IQ plane.
If we now consider a double antenna system and assuming the resultant signals at tag from AU1 and AU2 antennas are in the directions for a frequency f1 as shown in Figure 52. While the phase angles of each AU signal cannot easily be directly measured at the tag, by observing the RSSI, it is possible to determine the phase shift required to give the maximum RSSI, which occurs when both signals are in phase at the tag. If the AU2 signal then needs to be rotated by angles θι and θ2 with respect to AU1 signal to get a maximum RSSI at frequencies fi and f2 respectively. It is then possible to determine the ranges Ri and R2 in terms of the known parameters as given in equation (1 0) :
R1-R2=c x (61 - θ2) / 2pi x (f2-fi) (10) Where Ri and R2 are the distances to tag from AU1 and AU2 antennas respectively. It should be noted that this equation only represents one way fading instead of two way fading as this was the case previously.
As there are two unknowns Ri and R2, it is therefore necessary to use another equation to solve for ranges. As a result, the phase angles (θ3 and θ4) of maximum RSSI at receiver AU1 or AU2 are measured for both frequencies. Hence, R1 or R2 can be given by
2R, or 2R2 = c x (θ4 - θ3) / 2pi x (f2-fi) (1 1 )
Ranges Ri and R2 can then be estimated from equations (10) and (1 1 ) and this will improve the location accuracy further as the DAS will reduce the fading. One potential drawback is that phase step to find the maximum RSSI may need to be small, which can slow down the location update speed.
Referring now to Figures 53a and 53b, these show functional and structural block diagrams of a second embodiment of an RFID tag location system 600 according to a first aspect of the invention. Thus in module 602 a frequency is set and, optionally in module 604, a set of wide and/or narrow beamwidth antennas is selected for use. The system then enters a loop 606, 607 in which the relative phase of signals transmitted from two transmit antennas is adjusted and the received RSSI is observed, the relative phase being adjusted to maximise the return signal. At this point the phases of the two transmitted signals are substantially equal at the tag. The phase and RSSI data from this measurement is then passed to the backend processing, which may be substantially the same as that described with reference to Figure 50a. Thus in embodiments this comprises discarding low RSSI signals 608, Kalman filtering 601 the result and using the filtered data to calculate an estimated range at 612 as previously described. Thus in embodiments a data processing system 626 controls a (tag) interrogation transceiver system 624 having a plurality of antennas 622 to communicate with tag 620. The implementation of Figure 53b is broadly similar to that shown in Figure 50b; the skilled person will appreciate that the functional modules of Figure 53a may be implemented in hardware, software, or a combination of the two. Concurrent frequency dithering over multiple antennas using multiple interrogation transceivers
Frequency dithering, in particular randomly selecting a frequency out of many, applied over multiple antennas, which transmit radio frequency (RF) signals simultaneously, can improve RFID coverage. This is due to the fact that varying the frequency over multiple antennas (which transmit simultaneously) results in both constructive and destructive interference signals from multiple antennas, and in areas of constructive interference the signal level is enhanced. Therefore applying frequency dithering (particularly when combined with phase dithering) over a multi-casting antenna system tends to show a further improvement in radio frequency identification (RFID) coverage compared to a switched antenna system.
We now describe how concurrent frequency dithering over multiple antennas as opposed to a sequential frequency dithering can provide increased speed in terms of one or both of (a) tag read rate and (b) location update rate in a DAS RFID system. This is due to two reasons. Firstly, the low-error tag reading system we have described above is based on varying frequency and phase over multiple antennas. This uses multiple frequencies to be transmitted to dither the location of nulls. If the frequency of RFID signals are dithered sequentially there is a need for multiple tag inventory rounds/cycles (comprising a set of time slots to read multiple tags). However, if the multiple frequencies are transmitted in parallel (i.e. concurrent frequency dithering), all the tags can then be read in reduced number of inventory rounds/cycles. In order to read RFID tags faster, we parallelise the dithering operations as much as possible in a DAS RFID system as previously described.
Secondly, the tag locating system we have described is partly based on measuring RSSI and phase shift of the coherent received tag backscatter signals and the measurements are taken over a number of frequencies from each antenna unit (AU). This can be done through a sequential frequency dithering over each AU. However, if we measure them simultaneously through parallelising the operations (i.e. multiple frequency transmission from each AU) then it is possible to improve the location update rate. This parallelised operation can be implemented with multiple reader/transceiver chips 700 (leading to multiple RF front ends), which can enable transmission of multiple frequencies simultaneously over each AU as shown in Figure 54a. For example, an integrator, which comprises 12 reader/transceivers, as shown in Figure 54a, is capable of transmitting 4 frequencies to each of 3 antennas simultaneously. Figure 54b shows a block diagram of an alternative RFID interrogation transceiver system 702 for providing a set of multiple frequency, phase controlled outputs to a corresponding set of antenna units. Thus the system of Figure 54b comprises a set of controllable frequency sources 702 each having a respective phase control unit 704 providing multiple outputs each with a controllable phase, preferably providing independent phase control for each of the outputs. Outputs from each of the phase control blocks 704 are combined to provide a signal for one of the antenna units. In the example shown 4 frequencies and 4 antenna unit outputs are provided, but the skilled person will recognise that different number of frequencies and/or antenna unit outputs may be provided.
An arrangement of the type shown in Figure 54 allows us to transmit multiple frequencies over each AU. This has a great impact on tag read speed/rate, as well as location update rate, resulting in a high speed sensing system.
This concurrent frequency dithering is possible in RFID system because the RFID tags are not tuned to a particular frequency in the RFID band, hence modulation of the backscatter will have substantially the same effect at multiple frequencies simultaneously. Due to the lack of frequency selectivity care should be taken to ensure that the same reader to tag commands are transmitted across all frequencies and AUs simultaneously otherwise RFID performance can be degraded due to multiple protocol commands.
To improve the tag read rate, multiple frequencies are multi-cast across all the antennas simultaneously such that frequency dithering can occur simultaneously rather than sequentially. To improve the location update rate, each AU may use several unique frequencies to allow the frequency dependent phase shift of the wireless channel from that particular AU to the tag to be recorded. Referring now to Figure 55a, this shows a block diagram of an RFID tag reading/location system 800 according to an embodiment of a second aspect of the invention. The system comprises a plurality of transceivers 802 each for example as shown in Figure 55b, configured to provide frequency and phase control via a bus. The outputs from the transceivers are combined in a power combiner or summer 804 which in turn is coupled to an antenna unit 806. A master controller 808 controls the frequency and phase of the transceivers 802 via a control bus 810 in order to provide frequency and phase dither. A logic controller 812 handles the tag protocol and provides an interface for reading and/or writing data from/to a tag using transceivers 802. The controller 812 cooperates with the master controller 808 to implement a multiple concurrent frequency communication/location protocol as described above.
The skilled person will appreciate that embodiments of the above described techniques may be employed for tag location and/or improved coverage/reduced error reading. The skilled person will also appreciate that the tag location systems and the tag reading/location system described above may be employed when multiple tags are present simultaneously.
Thus in broad terms, in embodiments we have described a location approach based on three main principles:
1 . It is very difficult to determine the location of a tag if it is in or near a null. As a result
a. Use several antennas so that the likelihood of nulls is reduced b. Dynamically spatially shift any nulls by frequency dithering, phase dithering and antenna switching so that location accuracy is enhanced. c. Reduce the likelihood of indirect paths causing interference which leads to nulls by using beamed antennas (i.e. narrow beam-width antennas)
2. Use combination of phase information from the received tag backscatter signal or from the transmitted carrier signal at tag location and RSSI to increase accuracy
3. Be selective of use of information from system - i.e. neglect low RSSI signals (or use weighting techniques/Kalman filtering) to minimise causes of errors. No doubt many other effective alternatives will occur to the skilled person. It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the described embodiments and encompasses modifications apparent to those skilled in the art lying within the spirit and scope of the claims appended hereto.

Claims

CLAIMS:
1 . A method of locating an RFID tag, the method comprising:
transmitting tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a near field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal;
receiving a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and processing said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag;
wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies;
wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein said determining of said phase difference comprises determining a phase difference between a said transmit signal and its corresponding return signal at a first frequency and at a second frequency, and repeating said determining of said phase difference at a plurality of said first and second frequencies, maintaining a substantially constant frequency offset between said first and second frequencies.
3. A method as claimed in claim 2 further comprising exchanging between antennas used to transmit said transmit signal and receive said return signal to use a transmit antenna for a receiver antenna and vice-versa when determining a said phase difference.
4. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein said determining of said phase difference comprises determining a phase difference between two transmit signals simultaneously transmitted towards said RFID tag which substantially maximises a return signal from said RFID tag.
5. A method as claimed in claim 4 comprising adjusting a relative phase of said signals simultaneously transmitted towards said RFID tag to substantially maximise said return signal.
6. A method as claimed in any preceding claim further comprising determining a said phase difference using antennas of a plurality of different beamwidths.
7. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein weighting of said return signals comprises thresholding said return signals to discard return signals below a threshold received signal strength when determining said range to said tag.
8. A method as claimed in any preceding claim further comprising applying a prediction-correction filter to a plurality of said phase differences at said plurality of different frequencies to determine a plurality of corrected estimates of said phase differences, wherein a said corrected estimate of a said phase difference is dependent on a phase variance value responsive to said received signal strength for the return signal from which the said phase difference was derived.
9. A method as claimed in claim 8 wherein said prediction-correction filter comprises a Kalman filter.
10. A method as derives in any preceding claims herein said RFID tag is a passive, backscatter modulation tag.
1 1 . A system for locating an RFID tag, the system comprising:
a transmitter to transmit tag location signals from a plurality of different transmit antennas, wherein said antennas are spaced apart by more than a new field limit distance at a frequency of a said signal;
a receiver to receive a corresponding plurality of receiving return signals from said tag; and
a processor to process said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies;
wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal.
12. A data carrier carrying processor control code for the system of claim 1 1 to, when running, process said tag return signals to determine a range to said tag; wherein said transmitting comprises transmitting at a plurality of different frequencies; wherein said processing comprises determining a phase difference at said plurality of different frequencies to determine said range, and wherein said determining of said phase difference determines a phase difference between either i) two of said transmit signals or ii) a first transmit signal and its corresponding return signal; and wherein said determining of said range to said tag uses said return signals weighted responsive to a respective received signal strength of the return signal.
13. A method of determining tag-related data from a tag employing modulation of a reflected signal, the method comprising:
transmitting data towards said tag from at least one transmit antenna, wherein said transmitted signal comprises a signal having at least two different discrete transmit frequencies simultaneously, and wherein either i) the same tag command data is transmitted on each of said discrete frequencies, or ii) one or more of said discrete frequencies consists of a carrier and one or more others of said discrete frequencies transmit the or the same tag command data;
modulating, at said tag, said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time to generate a modulated return signal having said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time;
receiving said modulated return signal at at least one receive antenna; and determining said tag-related data from signals received from said tag at said different discrete frequencies.
14. A method as claimed in claim 13 comprising transmitting a said transmitted signal simultaneously from at least two said transmit antennas.
15. A method as claimed in claims 13 or 14 wherein said modulating comprises backscatter modulating a said transmitted signal to provide said modulated return signal.
16. A method of determining tag-related data from a tag employing backscatter modulation of a reflected signal, the method comprising:
transmitting data towards said tag from a plurality of transmit antennas using a plurality of transmitted signals, wherein the same tag command data is transmitted from each said antenna, and wherein each of said transmitted signals comprises a signal having at least two different discrete transmit frequencies simultaneously;
modulating, at said tag using backscatter modulation, said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time to generate a plurality of modulated backscatter signals each having said at least two different discrete frequencies at the same time; receiving said modulated backscatter signals at at least one receive antenna; and
determining said tag-related data from a combination of said modulated backscatter signals at said different discrete frequencies.
17. A method as claimed in claim 16 further comprising transmitting said transmitted signals simultaneously from said plurality of transmit antennas.
18. A method as claimed in any one of claims 13 to 17 wherein said tag-related claim comprises data read from said tag, wherein said determining comprises determining said data responsive to a received signal strength at each of said different frequencies.
19. A method as claimed in any one of claims 13 to 17 wherein said tag-related claim comprises location data, wherein said determining comprises determining said data responsive to one or more of a received signal strength at each of said different frequencies and relative phase of each of said discrete frequencies.
20. A method as claimed in claim 19 further comprising filtering said relative phase using a Kalman filter having phase variance data dependent on a received signal strength of a signal from which said relative phase is derived to determine said location data.
21 . A method as claimed in any of claims 13 to 20 wherein said determining of said tag related data further comprises demodulating each of said discrete frequencies to determine one or more of a received signal strength at each of said different frequencies and at at least one receive antenna and a relative phase at each of said discrete frequencies.
22. A method as claimed in any of claims 13 to 21 wherein said tag is a passive RFID tag.
23. An interrogation transceiver for use in the method of any one of claims 13 to 22, the interrogation transceiver comprising a plurality of transceiver circuits for simultaneous operation, each configured to transmit at a different frequency, wherein each of said transceiver circuits is coupled to a common antenna interface.
24. A method as claimed in claim 23 further comprising a transceiver controller to apply one or both of frequency control and phase control to each of said transceiver circuits.
25. A method of locating an RF device using an RF device interrogation system having a plurality of antennas to communicate with said RF device, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said RF device simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the method comprising:
calibrating a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RF device over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RF device interrogation system, wherein said calibrating further comprises:
i) changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and ii) determining a combined received signal strength from said plurality of antennas, wherein said combined received signal strength comprises a signal strength of combined RF signals from said plurality of antennas;
determining device-locating data defining an RF signal strength from each of said plurality of antennas and a combined received signal strength from combined RF signals received from said plurality of antennas for a said RF device to be located, wherein said determining comprises changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and
determining, using said calibration data, a location for said RF device to be located from said device-locating data including said combined received signal strength.
26. A method as claimed in claim 25 wherein said calibrating comprises changing said relative phase or frequency whilst said RF device is at a said known location.
27. A method as claimed in claim 25 or 26 wherein one or both of said calibrating and said determining of said device-locating data further comprises determining said calibration data and/or said device-locating data for one or more sets of partially combined received signal strengths, a said set of partially combined received signal strengths comprising a signal strength for a combination of RF signals from a subset of said plurality of antennas comprising at least two of said antennas together with a signal strength of at least one RF signal from a third of said antenna not forming part of said subset.
28. A method as claimed in claim 25, 26 or 27 wherein said determining of said location of said RF device further comprises disambiguating said location of said RF device using a said RF signal from a nearest predicted individual antenna and/or, when dependent on claim 3, a said combination of RF signals from a subset of said plurality of antennas.
29. A method as claimed in claim 25, 26, 27 or 28 wherein said determining of a location of said RF device comprises determining a closest match of a said combined received signal strength at a said relative phase or frequency to a said known location of said calibration.
30. A method as claimed in claim 25, 26, 27 or 28 wherein said calibration data defines one of more parameters of an analytical expression relating said device- locating data to said location for said RF device.
31 . A method as claimed in claim 30 wherein said determining of a location of said RF device further comprises selecting a locus of permitted said locations for said RF device using RF signal strength from one of said antennas, and determining a position on said locus of permitted locations using RF signal strengths from two others of said antennas.
32. A method as claimed in any one of claims 25 to 31 wherein said antennas are re-used for data communications system covering said region of space, wherein said plurality of antennas comprises at least three antennas defining a triangle, and wherein said antennas are configured to define a plurality of data communications cells, each said antenna serving a said data communications cell, such that said region of space is covered by at least three said data communications cells.
33. A method as claimed in any one of claims 25 to 32 wherein said RF device comprises a passive RFID tag having a protocol for reading multiple said tags, and wherein the method uses said protocol to sequentially locate a plurality of said tags within said region of space.
34. A carrier carrying computer program code to, when running implement the method of any one of claims 25 to 33.
35. A system for locating an RF device using an RF device interrogation system having a plurality of antennas to communicate with said RF device, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said RF device simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the system comprising:
means for calibrating a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RF device over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RF device interrogation system, wherein said means for calibrating further comprises:
i) means for changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and
ii) means for determining a combined received signal strength from said plurality of antennas, wherein said combined received signal strength comprises a signal strength of a combined RF signals from said plurality of antennas;
means for determining device-locating data defining an RF signal strength from each of said plurality of antennas and a combined received signal strength from combined RF signals received from said plurality of antennas for a said RF device to be located, wherein said determining comprises changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and
means for determining a location for said RF device to be located from said device-locating data including said combined received signal strength, using said calibration data.
36. A system as claimed in claim 35 wherein said RF device is an RFID tag.
37. An RFID tag interrogation system signal processor for locating an RFID tag using an RFID tag interrogation system having a plurality of antennas, to communicate with said tag, said interrogation system comprising a transmitter to transmit an interrogation signal to a said tag simultaneously from said plurality of antennas and a receiver to receive a combined signal simultaneously from said plurality of antennas, wherein said antennas are distributed over a region of space and spaced apart from one another sufficiently for one said antenna not to be within the near field of another said antenna, the signal processor comprising: a calibration module to calibrate a response of said interrogation system over said region of space by moving a said RFID tag over a plurality of known locations to determine calibration data for said RFID tag interrogation system, said calibration module being configured to:
change one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmittal from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmittal fro said plurality of antennas;
determine combined a combined received signal strength from said plurality of antennas, wherein said combined received signal strength comprises a signal strength of combined RF signals from said plurality of antennas;
determine tag-locating data defining an RF signal strength from each of said plurality of antennas and a combined received signal strength from combined RF signals received from said plurality of antennas for a said RFID tag to be located, wherein said determining comprises changing one or both of: a relative phase of said interrogation signal transmitted from one of said antennas with respect to said interrogation signal transmitted from another of said antennas, and a frequency of said interrogation signal transmitted from said plurality of antennas; and
determine, using said calibration data, a location for said RFID tag to be located from said tag-locating data including said combined received signal strength.
38. A method as claimed in any one of claims 25 to 33 wherein said RF device is an RFID tag and wherein said RF device interrogation system is an RFID tag reading system.
PCT/GB2011/050762 2010-04-26 2011-04-18 Rfid tag location systems WO2011135328A2 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13/643,267 US9367785B2 (en) 2010-04-26 2011-04-18 RFID tag location systems
EP11719049.6A EP2564229B2 (en) 2010-04-26 2011-04-18 Rfid tag location systems

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1006904.5 2010-04-26
GBGB1006904.5A GB201006904D0 (en) 2010-04-26 2010-04-26 RFID TAG location systems
GB1021455.9 2010-12-17
GBGB1021455.9A GB201021455D0 (en) 2010-04-26 2010-12-17 RFID tag location systems

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2011135328A2 true WO2011135328A2 (en) 2011-11-03
WO2011135328A3 WO2011135328A3 (en) 2013-03-07

Family

ID=42270803

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/GB2011/050762 WO2011135328A2 (en) 2010-04-26 2011-04-18 Rfid tag location systems

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US9367785B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2564229B2 (en)
GB (2) GB201006904D0 (en)
WO (1) WO2011135328A2 (en)

Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN102692618A (en) * 2012-05-23 2012-09-26 浙江工业大学 RFID (radio frequency identification) positioning method based on RSSI (received signal strength indicator) weight fusion
FR2983587A1 (en) * 2011-12-02 2013-06-07 Commissariat Energie Atomique Method for validation of measurement of distance to radioelectric reflector with respect to measurement antenna, involves comparing reflected signal level with maximum level, and sending alarm signal if signal level exceeds maximum level
WO2014210022A1 (en) * 2013-06-26 2014-12-31 University Of Virginia Patent Foundation Real-time rfid localization using uniform, high-performance tags and related method thereof
US9213873B2 (en) 2013-03-22 2015-12-15 Symbol Technologies, Llc Determining movement of a radio frequency identification tag using a phase difference/frequency model
US9361494B2 (en) 2013-12-13 2016-06-07 Symbol Technologies, Llc System and method of estimating true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items located directly underneath an overhead antenna array in a controlled area
US9747480B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2017-08-29 Adasa Inc. RFID and robots for multichannel shopping
US9755294B2 (en) 2014-07-07 2017-09-05 Symbol Technologies, Llc Accurately estimating true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items located in a controlled area
US9773136B2 (en) 2015-10-19 2017-09-26 Symbol Technologies, Llc System for, and method of, accurately and rapidly determining, in real-time, true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items in a controlled area
US9780435B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2017-10-03 Adasa Inc. Aerial inventory antenna
US10050330B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2018-08-14 Adasa Inc. Aerial inventory antenna
WO2019053475A1 (en) 2017-09-18 2019-03-21 Cambridge Enterprise Limited Rfid systems
CN109765547A (en) * 2019-02-01 2019-05-17 重庆谷庚科技有限责任公司 A kind of passive RFID precision ranging method and system
WO2019152480A1 (en) * 2018-01-31 2019-08-08 Sensormatic Electronics, LLC Systems and methods for improved tag position tracking
US10476130B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2019-11-12 Adasa Inc. Aerial inventory antenna
US10510042B2 (en) 2017-09-29 2019-12-17 Sensormatic Electronics, LLC Systems and methods for determining inventory using time-slotted tag communications
WO2020109819A1 (en) 2018-11-30 2020-06-04 Pervasid Limited Systems and methods for reading rfid tags
US10726218B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2020-07-28 Symbol Technologies, Llc Method and apparatus for radio frequency identification (RFID) tag bearing estimation
US10846497B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2020-11-24 Adasa Inc. Holonomic RFID reader
US11093722B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2021-08-17 Adasa Inc. Holonomic RFID reader
WO2022089753A1 (en) * 2020-10-29 2022-05-05 Fundació Per A La Universitat Oberta De Catalunya Systems for detecting moisture and methods
US11543512B2 (en) * 2014-10-23 2023-01-03 Automaton, Inc. Systems and methods for RFID tag locating using constructive interference
WO2024023394A1 (en) * 2022-07-25 2024-02-01 Ekahau Oy Network measurement device with combined receivers

Families Citing this family (86)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN103190084B (en) * 2011-10-28 2016-04-13 华为技术有限公司 A kind of full-duplex communication device and method
TWI487402B (en) * 2012-08-10 2015-06-01 Mstar Semiconductor Inc Searching method for radio frequency communication system
US9602172B2 (en) * 2012-09-05 2017-03-21 Crestron Electronics, Inc. User identification and location determination in control applications
US11843260B2 (en) 2012-11-09 2023-12-12 California Institute Of Technology Generator unit for wireless power transfer
US11616520B2 (en) 2012-11-09 2023-03-28 California Institute Of Technology RF receiver
CN108390160B (en) 2012-11-09 2021-04-27 加州理工学院 Smart RF lens effect: efficient, dynamic and mobile wireless power transfer
US20140292488A1 (en) * 2013-03-29 2014-10-02 Jerome Joseph Trohak InSight
US9881250B2 (en) 2013-06-07 2018-01-30 Fisher Controls International Llc Methods and apparatus for RFID communications in a process control system
US9709672B2 (en) * 2013-08-16 2017-07-18 Drnc Holdings, Inc. Method and system for identifying and finding a range of an object
US9958533B2 (en) 2013-09-06 2018-05-01 Drnc Holdings, Inc. Method and system for locating wireless devices within a local region
EP3072214B1 (en) * 2013-11-22 2018-10-10 California Institute of Technology Generator unit for wireless power transfer
WO2015077829A1 (en) * 2013-11-29 2015-06-04 Ranasinghe Damith Chinthana System for monitoring subject movement
US10013860B2 (en) 2014-01-16 2018-07-03 Automaton, Inc. Systems and methods for RFID-based retail management
CN103996097B (en) * 2014-05-09 2017-02-15 东北大学 Laboratory equipment dynamic management system based on passive RFID
CN103973806B (en) * 2014-05-20 2017-07-21 华侨大学 A kind of indoor positioning device and indoor orientation method
EP2955538A1 (en) * 2014-06-13 2015-12-16 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and apparatus for narrow-band distance measurement
US9460323B2 (en) * 2014-06-23 2016-10-04 Sony Corporation Tag powersave
WO2016010653A1 (en) * 2014-07-16 2016-01-21 Clairvoyant Technology Llc Rfid tag tracking using phase likelihood
EP3183797B1 (en) 2014-08-19 2020-10-07 California Institute of Technology Wireless power transfer
EP2990989B1 (en) * 2014-08-27 2017-01-25 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and read/write apparatus for selecting a wireless tag
US10079704B2 (en) 2014-09-22 2018-09-18 Drnc Holdings, Inc. Transmission apparatus for a wireless device using delta-sigma modulation
US9797979B2 (en) * 2014-10-08 2017-10-24 Symbol Technologies, Llc System for and method of estimating bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags that return RFID receive signals whose power is below a predetermined threshold
US10869175B2 (en) * 2014-11-04 2020-12-15 Nathan Schumacher System and method for generating a three-dimensional model using flowable probes
US10404409B2 (en) * 2014-12-11 2019-09-03 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Reconfigurable encoding arrays for reduced outage probability sensor networks
WO2016112911A1 (en) * 2015-01-14 2016-07-21 Lyngsoe Systems A/S A system for and a method of identification of a tag on a moving item
WO2016112910A1 (en) * 2015-01-14 2016-07-21 Lyngsoe Systems A/S A system for and a method of identification of an item using phase data for movement detection
US10127486B2 (en) * 2015-01-17 2018-11-13 Lawrence F Glaser Multi-frequency and single side band RFID methods of communication
US10303134B2 (en) 2015-04-10 2019-05-28 Fisher Controls International Llc Methods and apparatus for multimode RFST communications in process control systems
TWI586119B (en) * 2015-08-17 2017-06-01 智邦科技股份有限公司 Autonomous radio controlling method and system thereof
FR3040498B1 (en) * 2015-08-31 2018-02-09 Valeo Comfort And Driving Assistance METHOD FOR DETERMINING A DISTANCE BETWEEN A VEHICLE AND A VEHICLE ACCESS AND STARTING IDENTIFIER
KR102452504B1 (en) * 2015-09-14 2022-10-11 삼성전자 주식회사 A terminal for measuring a position and method thereof
US10145934B2 (en) 2015-09-14 2018-12-04 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Terminal and method for measuring location thereof
DE102016213229A1 (en) * 2016-02-12 2017-08-17 Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e.V. Device and method for determining a position of a transmitter
JP6834169B2 (en) * 2016-04-28 2021-02-24 オムロン株式会社 Communication equipment, systems, methods and programs with communication equipment
US10251020B1 (en) 2016-05-31 2019-04-02 Infinite Leap, Inc. Bluetooth low energy (BLE) real-time location system (RTLS) having tags, beacons and bridges, that use a combination of motion detection and RSSI measurements to determine room-location of the tags
US10412700B2 (en) 2016-05-31 2019-09-10 Infinite Leap Holdings, Llc Portable-device-locating system that uses room-level motion sensors and RSSI measurements to determine precise room-location
US10028105B1 (en) * 2016-05-31 2018-07-17 Infinite Leap, Inc. Bluetooth low energy (BLE) real-time location system (RTLS) having tags that harvest energy, bridges that instruct tags to toggle beacon modes on and off, beacons and bridges that self-report location changes, and optional use of a single beacon channel
US10231078B1 (en) 2016-05-31 2019-03-12 Infinite Leap, Inc. Bluetooth low energy (BLE) real-time location system (RTLS) having simple transmitting tags, beacons and bridges, that use a combination of motion detection and RSSI measurements to determine room-location of the tags
US10390182B2 (en) 2016-05-31 2019-08-20 Infinite Leap Holdings, Llc Real-time location system (RTLS) having tags, beacons and bridges, that uses a combination of motion detection and RSSI measurements to determine room-location of the tags
US10354104B2 (en) 2016-05-31 2019-07-16 Infinate Leap Holdings, LLC Real-time location system (RTLS) tag with battery and energy harvesting, which transmits a location signal when the battery is inoperative
CN109313252B (en) * 2016-06-22 2023-07-18 苹果公司 Communication device and method for positioning
US10706242B2 (en) 2016-06-30 2020-07-07 Intel Corporation RFID antenna re-location and/or RFID location
CA3043645A1 (en) 2016-11-17 2018-05-24 Lion Group, Inc. Radio frequency identification (rfid) system for determining location
WO2018183571A1 (en) 2017-03-28 2018-10-04 Automaton, Inc. Methods and apparatus for locating rfid tags
US10917228B2 (en) * 2017-03-31 2021-02-09 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Phase adjustment control device, array antenna device, antenna measuring device, and method for adjusting phase of phased array antenna
US10720797B2 (en) 2017-05-26 2020-07-21 California Institute Of Technology Method and apparatus for dynamic RF lens focusing and tracking of wireless power recovery unit
CN110998352B (en) * 2017-05-31 2024-04-05 赫克斯冈技术中心 Method and device for determining the position of a stationary object
WO2019032767A1 (en) 2017-08-11 2019-02-14 Walmart Apollo, Llc System and method for reconciling rfid read locations
US10656263B2 (en) * 2017-09-14 2020-05-19 Qualcomm Incorporated Extended localization range and assets tracking
US10821608B2 (en) * 2017-10-23 2020-11-03 International Business Machines Corporation Method of robot arm fleet position control with wireless charging time
CN109839613B (en) * 2017-11-30 2023-05-02 中国科学院计算技术研究所 Radio frequency positioning method and device using path information calibration
DE102018113120A1 (en) * 2018-01-26 2019-08-01 Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e.V. Method and device for locating an RFID transponder and RFID system
WO2019166429A1 (en) * 2018-02-27 2019-09-06 Iee International Electronics & Engineering S.A. Method for joint radar-communication
CN112075008A (en) * 2018-03-27 2020-12-11 谷鲁无线股份有限公司 Condition-aware wireless power transfer
CN108595994A (en) * 2018-04-25 2018-09-28 昆明联诚科技股份有限公司 Super high frequency radio frequency identification label signal demodulating equipment
JP7107762B2 (en) * 2018-06-20 2022-07-27 東芝テック株式会社 Communication device, communication method and program
CN109375167B (en) * 2018-07-12 2023-09-01 中国矿业大学 Underground passive moving target positioning method
US11540146B2 (en) 2018-07-20 2022-12-27 Nokia Technologies Oy Active antenna array dithering to improve scanning efficiency and reduce beam indices
US11105883B2 (en) * 2018-07-25 2021-08-31 Denso International America, Inc. Circular polarized angle of arrival measurement system
US10810387B2 (en) * 2018-07-30 2020-10-20 Hand Held Products, Inc. Method, system and apparatus for locating RFID tags
CN110858271B (en) * 2018-08-26 2024-05-14 吴成彬 Electronic passive tag identification system and method based on frequency selection characteristics
CN112654890A (en) * 2018-09-20 2021-04-13 京瓷株式会社 Electronic device, control method for electronic device, and control program for electronic device
US10976408B2 (en) * 2018-12-28 2021-04-13 Zebra Technologies Corporation Methods and system for enhanced RFID direction finding
EP3899583A4 (en) * 2019-01-05 2022-09-07 Xco Tech Inc. Method to correct phase ambiguity in range and phase measurements transitions
US11226406B1 (en) * 2019-02-07 2022-01-18 Facebook Technologies, Llc Devices, systems, and methods for radar-based artificial reality tracking
US10949730B2 (en) 2019-02-15 2021-03-16 International Business Machines Corporation Leveraging channel diversity in wireless power and communication
US10965166B2 (en) * 2019-02-15 2021-03-30 International Business Machines Corporaton Simultaneous wireless power transmission, communication, and localization
US10762411B1 (en) 2019-03-01 2020-09-01 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Smart shelf with self calibration
US11182742B2 (en) 2019-04-05 2021-11-23 Nike, Inc. Radio frequency identification scanning using the internet of things
CN112673654A (en) * 2019-08-08 2021-04-16 开利公司 System and method for automated tracking of items
CN111062225B (en) * 2019-12-17 2023-07-07 中铁信安(北京)信息安全技术有限公司 Article identification method for storage cabinet and intelligent storage cabinet
CN113109800A (en) * 2019-12-24 2021-07-13 财团法人金属工业研究发展中心 Radio frequency positioning method for measuring position of transceiver
CN115398438A (en) 2020-03-09 2022-11-25 贝克顿·迪金森公司 System, device, product, device and method for reading injector information
CN113452473B (en) * 2020-03-26 2022-06-28 太原理工大学 Method, apparatus and storage medium for predicting optimal channel in backscatter
CN111948600B (en) * 2020-07-29 2023-06-27 福州物联网开放实验室有限公司 Method for measuring and calibrating position of positioning tag
CN112055409B (en) * 2020-08-04 2022-02-18 暨南大学 RFID indoor positioning method based on power control
CN113423097A (en) * 2020-08-20 2021-09-21 阿里巴巴集团控股有限公司 Positioning method and device based on RFID and electronic equipment
AU2021337567A1 (en) * 2020-09-01 2023-03-30 Surgical Safety Scanner, Inc. Automated continuous instrument tracking system
WO2022052056A1 (en) * 2020-09-11 2022-03-17 Oppo广东移动通信有限公司 Symbol detection method and apparatus, and system
CN114204699A (en) * 2020-09-18 2022-03-18 意法半导体有限公司 NFC charging
CN113382473B (en) * 2021-06-10 2023-03-24 杭州海康威视数字技术股份有限公司 Positioning method, device, system, equipment and storage medium
FR3132083A1 (en) * 2022-01-27 2023-07-28 Safran Aircraft Engines Method for managing turbomachine equipment by on-board reader of the radio-identification type
WO2023248540A1 (en) * 2022-06-21 2023-12-28 アルプスアルパイン株式会社 Ranging device
US11880735B1 (en) * 2022-08-23 2024-01-23 Zebra Technologies Corporation Systems and methods for determining RF cabling configuration
CN115204204B (en) * 2022-09-19 2022-12-02 江苏省质量和标准化研究院 UHF multi-tag self-adaptive reading method and system based on MT-BP electromagnetic sensing
CN116600383B (en) * 2023-07-13 2023-09-26 杭州晟珈智能科技有限公司 Multi-antenna RFID tag positioning method and system based on phase difference

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2006099148A1 (en) 2005-03-14 2006-09-21 Alien Technology Corporation Distance/ranging determination using relative phase data
WO2007094868A2 (en) 2005-10-28 2007-08-23 Mojix, Inc. Rfid receiver
US20080024273A1 (en) 2006-06-21 2008-01-31 Neology, Inc. Systems and methods for stirring electromagnetic fields and interrogating stationary rfid tags
WO2008027650A2 (en) 2006-07-11 2008-03-06 Mojix Inc. Rfid system
WO2008118875A1 (en) 2007-03-23 2008-10-02 Mojix, Inc. Rfid systems using distributed exciter network
WO2009151778A2 (en) 2008-04-14 2009-12-17 Mojix, Inc. Radio frequency identification tag location estimation and tracking system and method
EP2146304A1 (en) 2008-06-25 2010-01-20 Shearwell Data Limited A method for detecting RFID transponders and an antenna system for the same
US20100052857A1 (en) 2008-09-04 2010-03-04 Ncr Corporation Methods and Apparatus for Distance Determination for Radiofrequency Identification Devices
AU2010200808A1 (en) 2004-03-01 2010-03-25 Symbol Technologies, Llc. Object Location Method and System Using RFID

Family Cites Families (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5148178A (en) * 1988-10-11 1992-09-15 Santa Barbara Research Center Precision ranging system
US7911324B2 (en) 2001-02-16 2011-03-22 Automotive Technologies International, Inc. Method and system for obtaining information about RFID-equipped objects
US7009515B2 (en) 2001-04-11 2006-03-07 Battelle Memorial Institute K1-53 Frequency-hopping RFID system
US6795035B2 (en) * 2002-03-28 2004-09-21 Lucent Technologies Inc. System for antenna sidelobe modification
US20040092257A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-05-13 Chung Kirby J. Scalable satellite area coverage
US7019651B2 (en) 2003-06-16 2006-03-28 Sensormatic Electronics Corporation EAS and RFID systems incorporating field canceling core antennas
GB0319673D0 (en) * 2003-08-21 2003-09-24 Scient Generics Ltd Tag tracking
US7260408B2 (en) * 2004-02-20 2007-08-21 Airespace, Inc. Wireless node location mechanism using antenna pattern diversity to enhance accuracy of location estimates
US7030761B2 (en) 2004-03-16 2006-04-18 Symbol Technologies Multi-resolution object location system and method
US7839289B2 (en) 2004-08-26 2010-11-23 Avante International Technology, Inc. Object monitoring, locating, and tracking system and method employing RFID devices
US7574732B2 (en) 2004-09-29 2009-08-11 Symbol Technologies Inc Object location based security using RFID
US20070073513A1 (en) * 2005-09-29 2007-03-29 Joshua Posamentier Determining RFID tag location
US7873326B2 (en) 2006-07-11 2011-01-18 Mojix, Inc. RFID beam forming system
US20080143584A1 (en) * 2006-12-18 2008-06-19 Radiofy Llc, A California Limited Liability Company Method and system for determining the distance between an RFID reader and an RFID tag using phase
US8294554B2 (en) 2006-12-18 2012-10-23 Radiofy Llc RFID location systems and methods
US7873367B2 (en) 2007-06-28 2011-01-18 Symbol Technologies, Inc. Methods and apparatus for locationing in a wireless network using statistical weighting
JP4470978B2 (en) * 2007-08-30 2010-06-02 トヨタ自動車株式会社 Receiving apparatus and wireless communication system
CN101828307A (en) * 2007-09-11 2010-09-08 Rf控制有限责任公司 Radiofrequency signal is obtained and source location system
US8887218B2 (en) 2007-11-29 2014-11-11 Jan Maurits Nicolaas Fielibert Systems and methods of adjusting bandwidth among multiple media streams
US7800541B2 (en) 2008-03-31 2010-09-21 Golba Llc Methods and systems for determining the location of an electronic device
US9442192B2 (en) 2008-07-28 2016-09-13 Thingamagigwerks, Llc Method and apparatus for location determination using reflected interferometry
US8537014B2 (en) 2008-12-19 2013-09-17 Symbol Technologies, Inc. RFID tag movement determination
US8723648B2 (en) * 2009-12-30 2014-05-13 Psion Inc. Method and system for locating a hand-held terminal

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
AU2010200808A1 (en) 2004-03-01 2010-03-25 Symbol Technologies, Llc. Object Location Method and System Using RFID
WO2006099148A1 (en) 2005-03-14 2006-09-21 Alien Technology Corporation Distance/ranging determination using relative phase data
WO2007094868A2 (en) 2005-10-28 2007-08-23 Mojix, Inc. Rfid receiver
US20080024273A1 (en) 2006-06-21 2008-01-31 Neology, Inc. Systems and methods for stirring electromagnetic fields and interrogating stationary rfid tags
WO2008027650A2 (en) 2006-07-11 2008-03-06 Mojix Inc. Rfid system
WO2008118875A1 (en) 2007-03-23 2008-10-02 Mojix, Inc. Rfid systems using distributed exciter network
WO2009151778A2 (en) 2008-04-14 2009-12-17 Mojix, Inc. Radio frequency identification tag location estimation and tracking system and method
EP2146304A1 (en) 2008-06-25 2010-01-20 Shearwell Data Limited A method for detecting RFID transponders and an antenna system for the same
US20100052857A1 (en) 2008-09-04 2010-03-04 Ncr Corporation Methods and Apparatus for Distance Determination for Radiofrequency Identification Devices

Non-Patent Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
A. CHATTOPADHYAY, A. HARISH: "Analysis of UHF passive RFID tag behaviour and study of their applications in Low Range Indoor Location Tracking", IEEE ANTENNAS AND PROPAGATION SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM, 2007, pages 1217 - 1220
A. HATAMI, K. PAHLAVAN: "A Comparative Performance Evaluation of RSSI-Based Positioning Algorithms Used in WLAN Networks", PROC IEEE WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKING CONFERENCE, 2005, pages 2331 - 2337
A. HATAMI, K. PAHLAVAN: "Comparative Statistical Analysis of Indoor Positioning Using Empirical Data and Indoor Radio Channel Models", PROC IEEE CCNC 2006, 2006, pages 1018 - 1022
B. XU, W. GANG: "Random Sampling Algorithm in RFID Indoor Location System", PROC THIRD IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON ELECTRONIC DESIGN, TEST AND APPLICATIONS, 2006, pages 168 - 176
F. GUO, C. ZHANG, M. WANG, X. XU: "Research of Indoor Location Method Based on the RFID Technology", PROC 11TH JOINT CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION SCIENCES 2008, 2008
J. ZHAO, Y. ZHANG, M. YE: "Research on the Received Signal Strength Indications Algorithm for RFID System", PROC ISCIT 2006, 2006, pages 881 - 885
PAVEL V. NIKITIN: "Phase Based Spatial Identification of UHF RFID Tags", IEEE RFID, 2010
S. SABESAN, M. CRISP, R. PENTY, WHITE: "Demonstration of Improved Passive UHF RFID Coverage using Optically-Fed Distributed Multi-Antenna System", IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON RFID, April 2009 (2009-04-01)
VILLE VIIKARI ET AL.: "Ranging of UHF RFID Tag Using Stepped Frequency Read-Out", IEEE RFID, 2010
XIN LI ET AL.: "Multifrequency-Based Range Estimation of RFID Tags", IEEE RFID, 2009

Cited By (29)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2983587A1 (en) * 2011-12-02 2013-06-07 Commissariat Energie Atomique Method for validation of measurement of distance to radioelectric reflector with respect to measurement antenna, involves comparing reflected signal level with maximum level, and sending alarm signal if signal level exceeds maximum level
US9780435B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2017-10-03 Adasa Inc. Aerial inventory antenna
US10846497B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2020-11-24 Adasa Inc. Holonomic RFID reader
US10476130B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2019-11-12 Adasa Inc. Aerial inventory antenna
US11093722B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2021-08-17 Adasa Inc. Holonomic RFID reader
US9747480B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2017-08-29 Adasa Inc. RFID and robots for multichannel shopping
US10050330B2 (en) 2011-12-05 2018-08-14 Adasa Inc. Aerial inventory antenna
CN102692618B (en) * 2012-05-23 2014-01-29 浙江工业大学 RFID (radio frequency identification) positioning method based on RSSI (received signal strength indicator) weight fusion
CN102692618A (en) * 2012-05-23 2012-09-26 浙江工业大学 RFID (radio frequency identification) positioning method based on RSSI (received signal strength indicator) weight fusion
US9213873B2 (en) 2013-03-22 2015-12-15 Symbol Technologies, Llc Determining movement of a radio frequency identification tag using a phase difference/frequency model
US10401488B2 (en) 2013-06-26 2019-09-03 University Of Virginia Patent Foundation Real-time RFID localization using uniform, high-performance tags and related method thereof
WO2014210022A1 (en) * 2013-06-26 2014-12-31 University Of Virginia Patent Foundation Real-time rfid localization using uniform, high-performance tags and related method thereof
US9836630B2 (en) 2013-12-13 2017-12-05 Symbol Technologies, Llc System for and method of rapidly determining true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items in a controlled area
US9477865B2 (en) 2013-12-13 2016-10-25 Symbol Technologies, Llc System for and method of accurately determining true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items in a controlled area
US9361494B2 (en) 2013-12-13 2016-06-07 Symbol Technologies, Llc System and method of estimating true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items located directly underneath an overhead antenna array in a controlled area
US9755294B2 (en) 2014-07-07 2017-09-05 Symbol Technologies, Llc Accurately estimating true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items located in a controlled area
US11933877B2 (en) 2014-10-23 2024-03-19 Automaton, Inc. Systems and methods for RFID tag locating using constructive interference
US11543512B2 (en) * 2014-10-23 2023-01-03 Automaton, Inc. Systems and methods for RFID tag locating using constructive interference
US9773136B2 (en) 2015-10-19 2017-09-26 Symbol Technologies, Llc System for, and method of, accurately and rapidly determining, in real-time, true bearings of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags associated with items in a controlled area
US10726218B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2020-07-28 Symbol Technologies, Llc Method and apparatus for radio frequency identification (RFID) tag bearing estimation
WO2019053475A1 (en) 2017-09-18 2019-03-21 Cambridge Enterprise Limited Rfid systems
US10510042B2 (en) 2017-09-29 2019-12-17 Sensormatic Electronics, LLC Systems and methods for determining inventory using time-slotted tag communications
US10657340B2 (en) 2018-01-31 2020-05-19 Sensormatic Electronics, LLC Systems and methods for improved tag position tracking
WO2019152480A1 (en) * 2018-01-31 2019-08-08 Sensormatic Electronics, LLC Systems and methods for improved tag position tracking
WO2020109819A1 (en) 2018-11-30 2020-06-04 Pervasid Limited Systems and methods for reading rfid tags
EP4236124A2 (en) 2018-11-30 2023-08-30 Pervasid Limited Systems and methods for reading rfid tags
CN109765547A (en) * 2019-02-01 2019-05-17 重庆谷庚科技有限责任公司 A kind of passive RFID precision ranging method and system
WO2022089753A1 (en) * 2020-10-29 2022-05-05 Fundació Per A La Universitat Oberta De Catalunya Systems for detecting moisture and methods
WO2024023394A1 (en) * 2022-07-25 2024-02-01 Ekahau Oy Network measurement device with combined receivers

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP2564229B2 (en) 2020-07-29
GB201021455D0 (en) 2011-02-02
EP2564229A2 (en) 2013-03-06
GB201006904D0 (en) 2010-06-09
WO2011135328A3 (en) 2013-03-07
US20130201003A1 (en) 2013-08-08
EP2564229B1 (en) 2016-11-23
US9367785B2 (en) 2016-06-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP2564229B1 (en) Rfid tag location systems
EP2564467B1 (en) Rfid tag interrogation systems
Bekkali et al. RFID indoor positioning based on probabilistic RFID map and Kalman filtering
US10585159B2 (en) Radio frequency identification tag location estimation and tracking system and method
Nikitin et al. Phase based spatial identification of UHF RFID tags
Brchan et al. A real-time RFID localization experiment using propagation models
Ciftler et al. IoT localization for bistatic passive UHF RFID systems with 3-D radiation pattern
Gong et al. Mobirate: Mobility-aware rate adaptation using phy information for backscatter networks
Hui et al. Code division multiple access in centimeter accuracy harmonic RFID locating system
Reza et al. Tracking via square grid of RFID reader positioning and diffusion algorithm
Görtschacher et al. SDR based RFID reader for passive tag localization using phase difference of arrival techniques
Chen et al. Ultra-wideband cognitive interrogator network: Adaptive illumination with active sensors for target localisation
WO2020139448A1 (en) Methods and system for enhanced rfid direction finding
Çiftler et al. Fundamental bounds on RSS-based wireless localization in passive UHF RFID systems
Garg et al. Sirius: A self-localization system for resource-constrained iot sensors
Bryan et al. Geolocation of multiple noncooperative emitters using received signal strength: Sparsity, resolution, and detectability
Cremer et al. An improved channel model for passive UHF RFID systems
Baha Aldin et al. Advanced boundary virtual reference algorithm for an indoor system using an active RFID interrogator and transponder
Sabesan et al. An error free passive UHF RFID system using a new form of wireless signal distribution
Fawky et al. Frequency coded chipless RFID tag localization using multiple antennas
Bagirathi et al. Tag detection in RFID system based on RSSI technique for LF and HF passive tags
Xie et al. Polo: Localizing rfid-tagged objects for mobile robots
Kim et al. Localization of handheld UHF RFID reader using reference tags in 3D environment
Povalač Spatial identification methods and systems for RFID tags
Görtschacher et al. Fast two dimensional position update system for UHF RFID tag tracking

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 11719049

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

REEP Request for entry into the european phase

Ref document number: 2011719049

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2011719049

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 13643267

Country of ref document: US