Abstract

Battery-less ultrahigh frequency (UHF) radio frequency identification (RFID) tags coated by proper sensitive layers have been recently demonstrated capable to play as low-cost sensors of some volatile compounds. The issue of cross-sensitivity and the possibility to develop an array of differently coated sensors are, however, still completely open. This paper investigates, through an experimental campaign involving a general-purpose sensor-antenna transducer, the potentiality of functionalized tags in the UHF RFID band to sense a multiplicity of volatile compounds, as well as the cross-sensitivity effects of different coatings in array configuration. Four effective materials, such as Pedot:PSS, doped PSS, SWCNT, and PDAC, revealed a remarkable sensitivity to ammonia, ethanol, octane, and water. Wireless sensing may be hence performed by narrowband processing of the power response of the RFID tags as well as by the broadband extraction of features related to the resonance shift. It was finally observed how the inter-antenna coupling may affect the sensor capability of an array of UHF tags in term of increased cross-sensitivity.

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