Near Field Communication (NFC)
A set of short-range wireless communication protocols operating at 13.56 MHz that enable two electronic devices to exchange data when brought within approximately 4 cm of each other. NFC is a subset of RFID technology standardized by the NFC Forum.
Near Field Communication (NFC)
Near Field Communication is a set of short-range wireless communication protocols that enable data exchange between two electronic devices within approximately 4 cm. Operating at 13.56 MHz in the globally reserved ISM band, NFC is a specialized subset of RFID technology that adds peer-to-peer communication, standardized data formats, and a deliberate proximity constraint designed to enforce user intent.
How NFC Works
NFC communication is built on inductive coupling. An NFC reader or NFC-enabled device drives an alternating current through its coil antenna, generating a 13.56 MHz RF field. When a passive NFC tag enters this field, the magnetic flux induces a voltage across the tag's antenna coil, powering the tag's integrated circuit and enabling bidirectional data transfer. The entire exchange — field generation, power harvesting, command-response — completes in under 100 milliseconds.
NFC supports three operating modes. In reader/writer modereader/writer modePrimary NFC mode: active deviceactive devicePowered NFC device that generates its own RF fieldView full → reads from or writes to passive tagpassive tagBatteryless tag powered by reader's electromagnetic fieldView full →View full →, an active device reads or writes data to a passive tag. In peer-to-peer modepeer-to-peer modeBidirectional data exchange between two active NFC devicesView full →, two active devices exchange data symmetrically (defined by NFCIP-1). In card emulation modecard emulation modeDevice acts as contactless smart card for payments and accessView full →, a powered device such as a smartphone behaves like a passive tag to an external reader — the mechanism behind contactless payments.
Standards and Governance
The NFC Forum, founded in 2004, maintains the technical specifications including tag type definitions (Types 1 through 5), the NDEF data format, and certification programs. At the ISO level, ISO 14443 covers proximity cards (Types A and B), ISO 15693 covers vicinity cards, and ISO 18092 (NFCIP-1) defines the peer-to-peer interface.
Why 4 cm Matters
The short read rangeread rangeMaximum communication distance between reader and tagView full → is a deliberate design decision, not a limitation. By requiring physical proximity, NFC enforces an intentional tap-to gesture that provides a natural layer of access control. This proximity constraint is why NFC powers contactless payments (EMV), transit cards, and secure access systems where accidental or remote activation would be a security risk.
Related Terms
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Pertanyaan yang Sering Diajukan
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.
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