Hardware

NFC Antenna

A flat coil antenna (typically copper or aluminum) etched or wound on a substrate that creates the electromagnetic field for NFC communication. Antenna size directly affects read range — larger antennas generally provide longer range.

इसे भी जाना जाता है: NFC antenna tag antenna coil antenna

What Is an NFC Antenna?

An NFC antenna is a flat coil of conductive material — typically copper, aluminum, or silver ink — patterned onto a substrate that generates or receives the electromagnetic field used for NFC communication. The antenna is one of two essential components of every NFC tag (the other being the NFC chip), and its design directly determines the tag's read range, orientation sensitivity, and compatibility with different surfaces.

Antenna Construction

Method Material Typical Use
Chemical etching Copper on PET/PEN High-volume inlays, cards
Wire winding Enameled copper wire Custom form factors
Screen printing Silver/copper ink Flexible labels, low-cost tags
Laser ablation Aluminum on PET Ultra-thin inlays

The antenna consists of multiple turns forming a loop. The inductance, combined with an on-chip capacitor, creates an LC resonant circuit tuned to the NFC operating frequency of 13.56 MHz.

Antenna Size and Read Range

Antenna size is the most important factor in determining read range. Larger antennas capture more magnetic flux from the reader's RF field:

  • 30 mm diameter sticker: 1-4 cm range
  • Credit card size (85 x 54 mm): 3-7 cm range
  • Large coil (laundry tag): Up to 10 cm range
  • Micro tag (8-10 mm): 0.5-2 cm range

However, the antenna must be impedance-matched to its specific NFC chip. A mismatched combination results in poor power transfer, even with a physically large antenna.

Environmental Factors

NFC antennas are significantly affected by their mounting environment:

  • Metal surfaces: Metals create eddy currents that absorb the RF field. On-metal tags include a ferrite absorber layer.
  • Water and liquids: Water absorbs 13.56 MHz energy, reducing range.
  • Stacking: Multiple tags in close proximity detune each other. Maintain at least 2 cm separation.
  • Human body: Tags on wristbands perform differently than free-standing tags due to body water content.

Antenna in Reader Devices

Smartphones and dedicated readers also contain NFC antennas connected to an NFC controller chip. The reader antenna's position varies by manufacturer, which is why the "sweet spot" for tapping differs between phone models. Most modern smartphones place the NFC antenna in the upper-rear portion of the device.

When selecting antennas, balance read range requirements against physical size, mounting surface compatibility, and cost. Pre-assembled NFC inlays are the most cost-effective starting point for most applications.

Related Terms

Related Guides

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न

The NFC glossary is a comprehensive reference of technical terms, acronyms, and concepts used in Near Field Communication technology. It is designed for developers, product managers, and engineers who work with NFC and need clear definitions of terms like NDEF, APDU, anti-collision, and ISO 14443.

Each glossary term is cross-referenced with related NFC chips, standards, and other terms. For example, the term 'AES-128' links to chips that support AES encryption (NTAG 424 DNA, DESFire EV2/EV3), and the term 'ISO 14443' links to all chips compliant with that standard.

Yes. NFCFYI provides glossary definitions in 15 languages including English, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, Hindi, Arabic, French, Russian, German, Turkish, Vietnamese, Indonesian, and Thai. Use the language selector in the header to switch languages.