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A Novel RFID Tag Identification Protocol: Adaptive \(n\)-Resolution and \(k\)-Collision Arbitration

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Abstract

Since radio frequency identification (RFID) technology has become increasingly common in numerous applications, including large-scale supply chain management, improving the efficiency of RFID tag identification is an important task. In practical settings, the identification of RFID tags often occurs in a dynamic environment, in which tags move through a specific interrogation range. However, the literature contains few studies on the design of efficient identification protocols in dynamic environments. This study proposes a novel tag identification protocol that is particularly efficient in dynamic environments. the proposed protocol involves two anti-collision techniques: adaptive n-Resolution (AnR) and k-Collision Arbitration (kCA). These two techniques significantly improve the tag identification delay and communication overhead. This improvement is primarily due to the use of a newly designed challenge-response bit sequence mechanism and the information obtained from the previous tag identification procedure. As a result, AnR requires only a constant number of interrogation times regardless of the number of target tags, while kCA further improves the efficiency of tag identification with \(k\)-splitting collision arbitration. Rigorous analysis and simulation experiments show that this tag identification protocol significantly outperforms related methods (by at least 48.85 % identification delay and 23.87 % communication overhead can).

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Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the support from the Taiwan Information Security Center (TWISC) and the National Science Council, Taiwan, under the Grants nos. NSC 102-2218-E-259-004, NSC 102-2218-E-146-002, NSC 102-2218-E-011-012, and NSC 102-2218-E-011-013

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Correspondence to Kuo-Yu Tsai.

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Yeh, KH., Lo, NW., Tsai, KY. et al. A Novel RFID Tag Identification Protocol: Adaptive \(n\)-Resolution and \(k\)-Collision Arbitration. Wireless Pers Commun 77, 1775–1800 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11277-014-1608-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11277-014-1608-3

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