Designing a Small Location Detection System with RFID Tags

AI Thread Summary
Designing a small location detection system using RFID tags presents challenges, particularly due to the limited reading range of typical RFID tags, which is usually a few centimeters. To enhance detection, directional antennas and advanced techniques like phased array receivers may be necessary. Multipath effects complicate accurate positioning, prompting suggestions to explore alternative methods such as video triangulation. The project constraints, including whether passive tags are required and the frequency bands to be used, are critical considerations. Effective solutions may exist, but they often involve complexity and cost.
benzun_1999
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hi,

i need help... i am planing to design a small location detection system within a room using RFID tags or some resonace technique. Each object must have a unique identification code. I intend to place 4 detectors like Satellites to determine the exact position of the object... I need suggestions and ideas... please help me.

-benzun
 
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RFID tags have a very short reading range ( typically a few cm)
You can read them at longer distances with more power and a more directional antenae.
You would also need more than just a simple RFID detector to give a good direction of the signal you would have to either scan the detectors to locate the maximum signal direction or have some sort of phased array receiver.
The timing of the rfid reply isn't repeatable enough to do a time-of-flight position fix.
 
I'm doing a little research into RFID tags myself and many of them have ranges greater than 10 feet. If you make any progress on determining accurate location, please post it. Here are some here are some RFID tags that I found.
 
benzun_1999 said:
hi,

i need help... i am planing to design a small location detection system within a room using RFID tags or some resonace technique. Each object must have a unique identification code. I intend to place 4 detectors like Satellites to determine the exact position of the object... I need suggestions and ideas... please help me.

-benzun

That is a very non-trivial problem, especially when you factor in multipath effects. Are there any other options like video location and triangulation, etc.? What other constraints are there in this project? Do the tags have to be passive (or at least not self-powered)? What frequency bands were you considering using? What interfering sources are you going to have to contend with?
 
cnichols785 said:
I'm doing a little research into RFID tags myself and many of them have ranges greater than 10 feet. If you make any progress on determining accurate location, please post it. Here are some here are some RFID tags that I found.

Hey benzun, check out the end of my post #5 in this thread that cnichols is referring to:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=187360

At first I didn't think there was a way to do this effectively, but the end of my post has an interesting possibility that pretty much gets around multipath issues, at least to a first order. It's not simple or cheap, though.
 
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