Load Modulation
The technique used by passive NFC tags to transmit data back to the reader. The tag switches its internal load impedance to modulate the reader's RF field, creating detectable signal variations.
What Is Load Modulation?
Load modulationLoad modulationPassive tagPassive tagBatteryless tag powered by reader's electromagnetic fieldView full → response technique varying load impedanceView full → is the technique passive NFC tags use to transmit data back to the NFC reader. Since a passive tag has no battery and cannot generate its own RF field, it communicates by varying its antenna impedance to create detectable fluctuations in the reader's electromagnetic field. This backscatter method is fundamental to all passive NFC communication.
How Load Modulation Works
When an NFC readerNFC readerActive device generating RF field to initiate communication with tagsView full → generates a 13.56 MHz field, the tag's antenna absorbs energy through inductive coupling. To send data back, the tag's chip switches a load resistor on and off in sync with the data it wants to transmit. When the load is switched on, the tag draws more current from the field, causing a measurable dip in the voltage across the reader's antenna. When the load is switched off, the voltage recovers.
These tiny voltage variations, typically only a few millivolts against a carrier of several volts, encode the tag's response. The reader detects these variations using sensitive analog circuitry and demodulates them to recover the binary data.
Subcarrier Load Modulation
Rather than directly switching the load at the data rate, most NFC protocols use subcarrier load modulation. The tag modulates its load at a subcarrier frequency (typically 848 kHz for NFC-A, or 423.75 kHz for NFC-V), and the data is encoded on top of this subcarrier using ASK modulation or phase-shift keying.
| Protocol | Subcarrier Frequency | Modulation Type |
|---|---|---|
| NFC-A (ISO 14443A) | 847.5 kHz | OOK (On-Off Keying) |
| NFC-B (ISO 14443B) | 847.5 kHz | BPSK |
| NFC-V (ISO 15693ISO 15693Standard for vicinity-range smart cards, 1+ meter read rangeView full →) | 423.75 kHz (single) | ASK or FSK |
| NFC-V (ISO 15693) | 423.75 + 484.28 kHz (dual) | Dual-subcarrier ASK |
The subcarrier approach improves signal-to-noise ratio because the reader can use narrowband filtering centered on the subcarrier frequency, rejecting noise at other frequencies.
Factors Affecting Load Modulation
Several physical factors influence load modulation quality and, by extension, read range:
Antenna designAntenna designEngineering NFC antennaNFC antennaCoil antenna creating electromagnetic field for NFC communicationView full → geometry for performance requirementsView full →. Larger tag antennas couple more strongly to the reader's field, producing stronger load modulation signals. Antenna design optimization is critical for maximizing communication distance.
Distance. As the tag moves away from the reader, coupling weakens and the load modulation signal becomes harder to detect. This is why NFC has a practical range limit of about 4 cm for ISO 14443ISO 14443Standard for contactless smart cards at 13.56 MHz (Types A and B)View full →.
Metal proximity. Nearby metal surfaces create eddy currents that absorb RF energy and reduce effective coupling. On-metal tags include ferrite layers to mitigate this interference.
IC sensitivity. Modern NFC chips achieve reliable load modulation at lower field strengths, effectively extending read rangeread rangeMaximum communication distance between reader and tagView full →. The chip's RF front-end design determines the minimum field strength needed for proper operation.
Load Modulation in Practice
Understanding load modulation helps explain common NFC troubleshooting scenarios. If a tag reads inconsistently, the cause is often weak load modulation due to a damaged antenna, poor coupling angle, or metal interference. The analog test procedures in the NFC ForumNFC ForumIndustry body developing NFC standards, specifications, and certifications since 2004View full → test suiteNFC Forum test suiteComprehensive NFC Forum test specifications for complianceView full → specifically measure load modulation amplitude to verify compliance with minimum signal requirements.
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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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