NFC Chip (IC)
The integrated circuit at the heart of an NFC tag that contains memory (EEPROM), logic circuits, RF front-end, and optionally a cryptographic co-processor. Connected to an antenna to form a complete NFC tag.
What Is an NFC Chip?
An NFC chip (also called NFC IC) is the silicon die at the heart of every NFC tagNFC tagPassive unpowered device storing data, powered by reader's RF fieldView full →. It contains EEPROM memory for data storage, an RF analog front-end for wireless communication, digital logic for protocol handling, and optionally a cryptographic co-processor for AES encryption. The chip is bonded to an NFC antenna to form a complete NFC tag.
Internal Architecture
A modern NFC chip integrates several functional blocks:
- RF front-end: Rectifier, voltage regulator, clock recovery, and modulator/demodulator. Harvests energy from the reader's RF field.
- Digital controller: Implements the NFC protocol state machine for anti-collision, command parsing, and memory access.
- EEPROMEEPROMNon-volatile memory technology retaining data without powerView full → memory: Non-volatile storage organized into pages or blocks. Stores NDEF data, lock bits, and the UID.
- Cryptographic engine (secure chips): Hardware accelerator for AES-128 or 3DES operations.
Major Chip Families
| Family | Manufacturer | Memory | Security | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NTAG 21x | NXP | 144-888 B | 32-bit password | Consumer NFC |
| NTAG 424 DNA | NXP | 416 B | AES-128, SUN | Brand protection |
| MIFARE Ultralight | NXP | 64-192 B | None or 3DES | Transit, ticketing |
| MIFARE DESFire EV3 | NXP | 2-8 KB | AES-128 | Access control |
| ST25T series | STMicroelectronics | 256 B-64 KB | Varies | Industrial, IoT |
| ICODE SLIX2 | NXP | 2.5 KB | 32-bit password | Logistics (ISO 15693ISO 15693Standard for vicinity-range smart cards, 1+ meter read rangeView full →) |
Physical Characteristics
NFC chip dies measure 0.5 to 2 mm per side with 50-75 micrometer thickness. This enables embedding in stickers, cards, wristbands, and even fabric threads. The chip connects to the antenna via two bond pads using conductive adhesive, ultrasonic welding, or flip-chip techniques.
Choosing an NFC Chip
Selection depends on: user memory requirements, security needs (password protection vs AES vs anti-cloning), RF protocol (NFC-A vs NFC-V), cost (NTAG 213 under $0.10; DESFire EV3 $0.50-$1.50), and special features like counters, UID mirroring, or tamper detection.
Related Terms
Related Guides
Perguntas frequentes
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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