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Pseudo-orthogonal frequency coded wireless SAW RFID temperature sensor tags.

Nancy Saldanha1, Donald C Malocha

  • 1Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA. nsaldanha@knights.ucf.edu

IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control
|August 18, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study introduces pseudo-orthogonal frequency coded (POFC) SAW sensors, enhancing wireless sensing by reducing insertion loss and improving range. These advanced sensors offer robust performance for diverse applications.

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Area of Science:

  • Materials Science
  • Electrical Engineering
  • Sensor Technology

Background:

  • Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) sensors are valuable for wireless, passive multi-sensor systems due to their small size, ruggedness, and radiation tolerance.
  • Traditional single-frequency code division multiple access (CDMA) SAW tags require high reflector loss (>30 dB) for sufficient code diversity, limiting performance.
  • Orthogonal frequency coding (OFC) offers improved tag properties by utilizing frequency and time diversity, reducing insertion loss and increasing system processing gain.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop and characterize a novel SAW tag-sensor platform utilizing pseudo-orthogonal frequency coding (POFC) to minimize device loss.
  • To compare the performance of POFC SAW tags against existing OFC SAW tags, focusing on insertion loss and coding properties.
  • To demonstrate the efficacy of POFC SAW sensors in a practical wireless sensing application.

Main Methods:

  • Implementation of long reflector banks with optimized spectral coding to create POFC SAW tags.
  • Analysis of auto- and cross-correlation properties in relation to reflector design and coding.
  • Experimental comparison of 8-chip OFC and POFC SAW tags at 250 MHz, evaluating insertion loss, cross-correlation, and autocorrelation.

Main Results:

  • The developed POFC coding scheme enables coded reflector banks with near-zero insertion loss while maintaining desirable coding properties.
  • POFC SAW tags demonstrate reduced insertion loss and improved correlation characteristics compared to OFC tags.
  • A prototype 915-MHz POFC sensor tag successfully operated as a wireless temperature sensor, validating the platform's practical utility.

Conclusions:

  • The POFC coding strategy significantly enhances SAW sensor performance by minimizing insertion loss and improving signal processing.
  • This approach offers a pathway to more efficient and longer-range wireless passive multi-sensor networks.
  • POFC SAW sensors represent a promising advancement for various demanding applications requiring robust and sensitive wireless sensing.