RFID stands for "Radio Frequency Identification" and is about identifying something remotely with the help of wireless technology. A product is provided with a tag - or a label - which in turn has a unique identity number. When a tag passes a reader, the tag is read, and the number is registered.
Thanks to Björn Nilsson's research, there is now a solution that makes the technology even more effective and, what's more, more energy efficient. He has developed a protocol, that is, rules for communication between readers and tags, for so-called active RFID tags that entail that the use of energy is reduced and batteries last longer. This means that it is now possible to produce simpler and thereby cheaper tags.
"This is what it's all about. They can't 'interrupt' each other. The talk needs to be organized. You also want the tags to use as little energy as possible. This is what my research is about: how readers and multiple tags talk to each other at the same time, effectively and without causing confusion", explains Björn Nilsson.
The next step is to develop an active tag with a single circuit. Björn Nilsson is already working on this. Together with his colleague Emil Nilsson at Halmstad University, he is running a project where Björn's job is to see to it that readers and tags communicate with each other, while Emil is developing the electronics to make it all more efficient.
"We're very competitive in this field at Halmstad University", says Björn Nilsson.
Text: LENA LUNDÉN
Photo: IDA LÖVSTÅL
The dissertation is titled Energy Efficient Protocols for Active RFID and was submitted to Chalmers in June. The research work was carried out at Halmstad University, Sweden, and the company Free2Move.

The next step is to develop an active tag with a single circuit. Björn Nilsson is already working on this.

Björn Nilsson has developed a protocol, that is, rules for communication between readers and tags, for so-called active RFID tags that entail that the use of energy is reduced and batteries last longer.