ICODE SLIX2 vs ST25DV
ICODE SLIX2 offers 2560 bits memory with 64-bit password security, making it ideal for library management, industrial tracking, pharmaceutical. ST25DV provides 4-64 Kbit with 64-bit password + configurable areas security, suited for IoT sensors, smart labels, energy harvesting, BLE pairing.
ICODE SLIX2
ST25DV
ICODE SLIX2 vs ST25DV
ICODE SLIX2 and ST25DV both implement ISO 15693 (NFC-V) and offer longer read ranges than ISO 14443-A chips. But their design philosophies diverge sharply: SLIX2 is a pure item-tracking tag; ST25DV is a dual-interface IoT component.
Overview
ICODE SLIX2 (NXP): ISO 15693, 2,560 bits (320 bytes), 80 blocks, 64-bit password, EAS (Electronic Article Surveillance), DSFID / AFI fields, privacy mode. Designed for item-level tracking: library books, pharmaceutical packs, garments, and archival assets.
ST25DV (STMicroelectronics): ISO 15693 RF interface + I2C host interface, 4 Kbit / 16 Kbit / 64 Kbit (512 B / 2 KB / 8 KB) memory, up to 4 configurable access areas with independent 64-bit passwords, energy harvesting output (V_EH), fast transfer mode, and an interrupt pin (GPO) that signals the MCU when the NFC reader accesses memory. Designed for IoT sensor nodes, smart labels, and NFC-to-MCU data bridges.
Key Differences
- I2C interface: ST25DV has a dual-port shared memory with I2C access for a host MCU. SLIX2 has no host interface — it is RF-only.
- Energy harvesting: ST25DV exposes a V_EH pin that can supply current to external circuits when RF energy is sufficient. SLIX2 has no analog output.
- EAS: SLIX2 includes a hardware Electronic Article Surveillance function enabling anti-theft gate detection without full RF decoding. ST25DV has no EAS.
- Privacy mode: SLIX2 includes a password-protected privacy mode that hides the UID from inventory scans. ST25DV has configurable area passwords but no dedicated privacy mode.
- Memory: ST25DV offers up to 8 KB vs SLIX2's 320 bytes — a 25× difference.
- Fast transfer mode: ST25DV supports a fast NFC data transfer mode (52.97 kbps downlink, 26.48 kbps uplink) for larger data payloads. SLIX2 is standard 26.48 kbps.
- GPO interrupt: ST25DV's General Purpose Output pin alerts the host MCU when an NFC reader accesses the RF interface — enabling event-driven MCU wake-up without polling.
- DSFID / AFI: Both chips support DSFID and AFI fields for content-type identification in multi-reader environments.
Technical Comparison
| Parameter | ICODE SLIX2 | ST25DV |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | ISO 15693 (NFC-V) | ISO 15693 (NFC-V) |
| Host interface | None (RF only) | I2C (400 kHz / 1 MHz) |
| Memory | 320 bytes | 512 B – 8 KB |
| Read range | 0–100 cm | 0–100 cm |
| Energy harvesting | No | Yes (V_EH) |
| EAS | Yes | No |
| Privacy mode | Yes | No (area passwords) |
| GPO interrupt | No | Yes |
| Fast transfer mode | No | Yes |
| DSFID / AFI | Yes | Yes |
| NDEF support | Yes | Yes |
| UID | 8 bytes | 8 bytes |
| Data rate | 26.48 kbps | 26.48 / 52.97 kbps |
| Typical cost (volume) | $0.15–$0.35 | $0.50–$1.50 |
Use Cases
ICODE SLIX2 Strengths
SLIX2 was designed for high-volume item-level tracking deployments where cost matters and features like EAS and privacy mode are needed without host MCU integration:
- Library management: ISO 15693 is the global library RFID standard. SLIX2 is one of the most deployed library tag chips, with EAS enabling anti-theft detection at exits.
- Pharmaceutical serialization: EAS enables anti-diversion detection at pharmacy exits. Privacy mode prevents unauthorized inventory scanning.
- Garment and retail item tracking: Bulk inventory scanning at 1 m range with EAS gates for shrink reduction.
- Archival document tracking: Long-range scan at filing cabinet distance without removing folders.
- Industrial asset tagging: Components in bins or crates scannable without unpacking.
ST25DV Strengths
ST25DV was designed for applications where a host MCU needs to communicate data to an NFC reader wirelessly, or where RF energy harvesting can power a sensor node:
- IoT sensor data logging: MCU writes temperature, humidity, or vibration data to ST25DV memory; an NFC phone reads the latest readings without a network connection.
- BLE pairing via NFC: MCU writes BLE pairing credentials to ST25DV NDEF; phone reads and auto-pairs — eliminating manual Bluetooth pairing UI.
- Battery-less sensor displays: RF energy harvesting powers an e-ink display or LED indicator, updated by the MCU based on sensor readings.
- Configuration and diagnostics interfaces: Embedded systems write fault codes or calibration data to ST25DV; field technicians read with a phone without opening the enclosure.
- Smart medical device labels: Medical equipment writes usage logs to ST25DV; nurses tap to read without waking the device.
Verdict
Both chips use the same ISO 15693 RF standard and offer similar read ranges, but they serve fundamentally different roles.
Choose ICODE SLIX2 when: - Your application requires EAS anti-theft detection - Privacy mode is needed to prevent unauthorized inventory scanning - You need a low-cost, high-volume item tracking tag without MCU integration - Library RFID compatibility is required (SLIX2 is the global library tag standard)
Choose ST25DV when: - A host MCU needs to share data with NFC readers via shared I2C/RF memory - Energy harvesting is needed to power auxiliary circuits - You need GPO interrupt-driven MCU wake-up on NFC reader access - Larger memory (2–8 KB) is required for sensor logs or configuration data - Fast transfer mode is needed for larger NFC payloads
Recommendation
Choose ICODE SLIX2 when you need ISO 15693 with long read range (up to 1 m); choose ST25DV when you need dual-interface (NFC + I2C) with energy harvesting.