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Syed A. Ahson and Mohammad Ilyas

"RFID Handbook: Applications, Technology, Security, and Privacy"

06752 1.1642
Collection 0.06308 1.0944
10 primitives 0.06495 1.1232
Source: Dontharaju, S., Tung, S., Jones, A.K., Mats, L., Panuski, J.,
Cain, J.T., and Mickle, M.H., IEEE Communications Magazine, 1,
4, 2007. With permission.
Note: ASIC area is in 100 mm2. Dynamic power is in milliWatts.
Quiescent power <0.4 mW.
60 RFID Handbook: Applications, Technology, Security, and Privacy
case of Get Seal Model command, the tag response includes the opcode code, the nested
seal status, and other data ?¬?elds.
Figure 3.32 shows an example RFID macros ?¬?le containing the Sleep All But, Get Seal
Version, Get Seal Model, and Collection primitives. The RFID compiler has been used to
implement the commands from ISO 18185 Part 1 standard for a custom hardware-based
tags target.
3.4.4.4.1 Custom Hardware-Based Tag
Using the RFID compiler, up to 10 commands of the ISO 18185 Part 1 standard were
implemented with 0.16 mm custom cell-based ASIC hardware. The tool used for synthesis
and area estimates is the Design Compiler. Power was estimated using PrimePower.
Table 3.7 shows the total area and the power consumption of ISO 18185 Part 1 seal
designs for a 0.16 mm ASIC. The area of this seal design is much smaller than the area of
ISO 18000 Part 6C tag design. The 18185 design is smaller than even the relatively
simple ISO 18000 Part 7 tag design. The power consumption is also correspondingly
lower.


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