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- From: whit@carson.u.washington.edu (John Whitmore)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: miniature transponders
- Date: 7 Jan 1993 20:45:09 GMT
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- Lines: 34
- Distribution: na
- Message-ID: <1ii4olINNd3o@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- References: <1iaq83INNs2a@overload.lbl.gov>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carson.u.washington.edu
- Keywords: Smithsonian, pooches
-
- In article <1iaq83INNs2a@overload.lbl.gov> mikec@ux1.lbl.gov (Mike Chin) writes:
- >A recent Smithsonian had an article about the usage of "rice-sized"
- >transponders embedded into retail products for customer marketing info.
- >Are these similiar to the devices that were being subcutaneously
- >implanted into dogs/cats for ID purposes? Who sells these things & how
- >do they work?
-
- A maker of such devices gave a talk here at U. of Wa. some
- years back: he was labeling salmon fry. The transponder was a
- piece of stamped stainless steel wire, injected into the nose
- cartilage of the about-to-be-released fish.
-
- It was detected by some 3-d magnetic field sensors, that could
- detect the presence of a magnetic dipole in a restricted region
- (into which the snout of the caught fish was thrust). The stamping
- on the wire was read like a binary code, and served a second
- purpose as well: it strained the stainless steel so that the
- tag could be magnetized (this was a nominally non-magnetic alloy).
-
- If one made the tag of the correct length, it would
- resonate/reradiate at a sharply defined frequency, and this could
- allow a simple piece of wire to be used as a transponder.
- The embedding of such an antenna in a medium (like a book...)
- would necessarily change its resonant frequency, though, in
- a manner that would be difficult to characterize (changes with
- humidity and paper age). Not useful for tracking merchandise.
-
- Dallas Semiconductor makes some two-wire inventory tag devices,
- but I don't know any transponder-type integrated circuit tags.
-
- John Whitmore
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