SATO CL408E Guía Del Usuario

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Version 0.8 
 
 
 
21/10/2004 
 
 
    Page 8 of 44 
1990’s 
•  Emergence of standards. 
•  RFID, such as electronic toll collection, deployed throughout the 
U.S. 
•  RFID becomes part of everyday life with a single tag capable of 
handling multiple applications such as electronic toll collection, 
parking lot access and fare collection, gated community access, 
and campus access. 
 
 
Early 2000s 
•  Development and implementation of RFID for supply chain 
management, healthcare/pharmaceuticals, library information 
systems 
2003 - 
Present 
•  Major retailers mandates to suppliers to implement pallet and case 
level tagging by January 2005 spark rapid RFID research and 
development 
 
 
Since RFID uses electromagnetic radio waves for its operation, its effectiveness is subject 
to the same physical laws governing any other RF operating device. The distance between 
the RF interrogator antenna, the corresponding RFID tag, and the frequency, are all 
directly interrelated.  
 
Q: What is the difference between low-, high-, and ultra-high frequencies? 
Similar to your radio tuning into different frequency channels to listen to different stations, 
RFID tags and readers must both be tuned to the same frequency in order to communicate. 
The most regularly used frequencies among RFID systems are low- (around 125 KHz), 
high- (13.56 MHz) and ultra-high frequency (860-950 MHz). Radio waves behave in a 
different way at different frequencies, so you must choose the best frequency for the 
correct application. 
 
 
Low Frequency 
High Frequency 
Ultra High 
Frequency 
Operating Range 
125 KHz 
13.56 MHz 
860 – 950 MHz 
Read Range 
10 cm 
1 m 
Up to 3 m 
Power Consumption  Low Moderate 
High 
Data Transfer Rate 
Slow Moderate 
Fast