[Microstrip antenna design and system research of radio frequency identification temperature sensor].
Abstract
Radio frequency identification sensor network, which is a product of integrating radio frequency identification (RFID) with wireless sensor network (WSN), is introduced in this paper. The principle of radio frequency identification sensor is analyzed, and the importance of the antenna is emphasized. Then three kinds of common antennae, namely coil antenna, dipole antenna and microstrip antenna, are discussed. Subsequently, according to requirement, we have designed a microstrip antenna in a wireless temperature-monitoring and controlling system. The measurement of factual effect showed the requirement was fulfilled.
AI evidence extraction
Main findings
The paper describes designing a microstrip antenna for an RFID-based wireless temperature monitoring and control system. Measured practical performance indicated the design met the stated requirements.
Outcomes measured
- Microstrip antenna design for RFID temperature sensor network
- Performance/functional testing of wireless temperature monitoring and control system
Limitations
- No specific operating frequency, power, or exposure metrics reported in the abstract
- No health-related outcomes described
- No details on test methods, quantitative results, or sample size provided in the abstract
View raw extracted JSON
{
"study_type": "engineering",
"exposure": {
"band": "RF",
"source": "RFID",
"frequency_mhz": null,
"sar_wkg": null,
"duration": null
},
"population": null,
"sample_size": null,
"outcomes": [
"Microstrip antenna design for RFID temperature sensor network",
"Performance/functional testing of wireless temperature monitoring and control system"
],
"main_findings": "The paper describes designing a microstrip antenna for an RFID-based wireless temperature monitoring and control system. Measured practical performance indicated the design met the stated requirements.",
"effect_direction": "unclear",
"limitations": [
"No specific operating frequency, power, or exposure metrics reported in the abstract",
"No health-related outcomes described",
"No details on test methods, quantitative results, or sample size provided in the abstract"
],
"evidence_strength": "insufficient",
"confidence": 0.66000000000000003108624468950438313186168670654296875,
"peer_reviewed_likely": "yes",
"keywords": [
"RFID",
"wireless sensor network",
"microstrip antenna",
"temperature sensor",
"wireless monitoring"
],
"suggested_hubs": []
}
AI can be wrong. Always verify against the paper.
Comments
Log in to comment.
No comments yet.