Contactless Smart Cards, RFID, Payment, Transit and Security

New solution combines battery, energy-harvesting system

Monday, February 9, 2009

Planar Energy Devices, a maker of advanced technology batteries for a variety of uses, has introduced a new platform that incorporates a lithium ion battery and a wireless RF harvesting/charging system into one kit. The PowerPlane MX battery and MXE charging system are well-suited for active RFID tags, offering long battery life with a minimum of maintenance.

“Small primary batteries cannot provide the endurance necessary for many applications, and typical energy harvesters acting alone, do not meet the capacities nor the reliability of batteries,” says Andrea Wesser, a product line manager for Planar Energy Devices. “By interfacing an advanced rechargeable battery with a small wireless recharge board, Planar can greatly exceed the capabilities of both technologies.”


The PowerPlane MX battery has a capacity of 10 mAh and an operating voltage range of 3 to 4.2V. The battery’s dimensions are 29mm x 25mm x 0.5mm. The charging system’s circuitry makes the entire kit’s footprint only slightly larger than that of the battery alone.

The PowerPlane MX is also useful for smart card applications. Planar offers a charging pad system for the device which does not require the battery to be plugged in, but simply placed on top of the pad. A wallet full of smart banking cards, when the PowerPlane MXE system is deployed, can be directly recharged without a connection by simply placing it on the pad.

The PowerPlane MXE system is offered in a demo kit, including a charge station pad and one PowerPlane MX mounted on a charging circuit board combining a planar antenna coil and charge/discharge control circuitry.

The system’s control circuitry provides under/over voltage protection, charge control, and a charge indicator light. The battery can be trickled charged continuously or entirely charged in under 3 hours, and the charge station pad can accommodate more than five battery boards simultaneously. The demo kit is priced at $350. [end] 

Texas Instruments (TI) introduced a pair of encapsulated RFID mini-transponders designed for applications in animal tagging and asset tracking.

The 12mm TRPGR30TGC and TRPGP40TGC mini-transponders were developed to enable users a battery-free solution for embedding RFID tags into smaller objects across a broader range of applications. These transponders come ready-to-use and are 100 percent backwards compatible with all of TI’s RFID software and readers including power modules, control modules and micro readers.

read more »

The board of directors for Lumidigm announced the appointment of Mark Shermetaro, a member of the board, to chief executive officer of the company with current CEO and chairman Bob Harbour moving to the position of executive chairman of the board of directors.

read more »

DigitalPersona has announced the launch a solution designed for use in battery-powered mobile biometric identification devices. The new solution, part of DigitalPersona’s U.are.U line called U.are.U 5100 series of fingerprint modules and sensors.

read more »

Broadcom Corp. announced a new family of NFC chips designed to drive the mass deployment of NFC consumer devices.

The first ever NFC chips to be manufactured in the 40 nanometer CMOS process, Broadcom’s BCM2079x family consumes 90 percent less power than other chips, uses 40 percent fewer components and has a 40% smaller board area, making it the smallest and most power efficient NFC solution on the market, Broadcom said in a release.

read more »

Auraya Systems announced the commercial release of its voice authentication solution called ArmorVox Speaker Identity System.

The solution, which was developed for system developers and call centers as either an enterprise or cloud-based solution, fuses text-independent and text-dependent voice-verification that automatically detect languages.

read more »

Proclaiming its entrance into the RFID space, Honeywell introduced part of a new product portfolio designed to bring efficiency to the retail industry, the Optimus 5900 RFID mobile computer.

read more »

Subscribe to the Contactless News Library
Gain access to the largest collection of Auto-ID analysis on the Internet.