Diplomarbeit, 2013
120 Seiten, Note: 1,3
Medien / Kommunikation - Multimedia, Internet, neue Technologien
1 Introduction
1.1 Motivation
1.2 Thesis Organization
2 Related Work
2.1 Mode of Operation
2.1.1 Basic Technology of RFID
2.1.1.1 RFID Tags
2.1.1.2 RFID Readers
2.1.1.3 Reader-Tag Coupling
2.1.2 The 2013 RFID Taxonomy
2.1.2.1 A Brief Overview
2.1.2.2 Protocol Overview
2.2 RFID Interaction
2.2.1 Conventional RFID Interaction and derived Security Concerns
2.2.2 New Forms of RFID Interaction
2.2.2.1 The Work of Nicolai Marquardt et al.
2.2.2.2 The Work of Joseph Paradiso et al.
2.2.3 Sensor Enriched RFID
3 Interactive RFID Prototypes
3.1 Paper RFID Tags
3.1.1 Components
3.1.1.1 Basic Paper RFID Components
3.1.1.2 The SM130 RFID Reader
3.1.2 Paper RFID Tag Types
3.1.2.1 Simple Tag
3.1.2.2 Poti Tag
3.1.2.3 Slider Tag
3.1.2.4 Tilt Tag
3.1.3 Summary of the Paper RFID Tags
3.2 AVRFIDs
3.2.1 AVRFID Components
3.2.1.1 125 kHz Reader
3.2.1.2 The ATtiny85 Microcontroller
3.2.2 Programming AVRs
3.2.2.1 Implementation of the EM4102 Protocol
3.2.2.2 Programming the ATtiny85
3.2.3 AVRFID Rating
3.3 Antennas
3.3.1 General Antenna Knowledge
3.3.1.1 Independent Variables for Antennas in Near-Field Coupling
3.3.1.2 Independent Variables for Antennas in Far-Field Coupling
3.3.1.3 Antenna Tunning
3.3.2 Practicing Antenna Design
3.4 Comparative Summary of the Prototyping Approaches
4 Tesla User Interface
4.1 Hardware
4.1.1 Elaborated SM130 Reader Setup
4.1.2 Liberated Control Widgets
4.1.2.1 Button Control Widget
4.1.2.2 Rotary Control Widget
4.1.2.3 Slider Control Widget
4.2 Software
4.2.1 Arduino Firmware
4.2.2 Processing Software
4.3 Toolkit for Designers
5 Implications for User Interaction
5.1 Design Space Definition
5.2 Fields of Application
5.3 Ways of Interacting
6 Discussion
6.1 Limitations
6.1.1 Technological Barriers
6.1.2 Within Interaction
6.2 Future Directions
6.2.1 Future Work
6.2.2 Future Trends
7 Conclusion
This thesis explores the potential of passive RFID technology for creating wireless, batteryless physical user interfaces, termed "Tesla User Interfaces." The primary research objective is to bridge the gap between complex RFID technical specifications and intuitive user interaction design through a top-down evaluation and bottom-up prototyping approach.
3.1.2.1 Simple Tag
The Simple Tag in figure 3.2 has no additional components than in section 3.1.1.1 described. The two connection pins of the Mifare ICs are each connected with one of the ends of the antenna coil. Thereby it is not important, which coil end is soldered to what IC pin, because alternating current prevails. The same is valid for the connection of the LED at the end of the leads. The more the tag enters the magnetic field of the RFID reader, the more current is induced and the more the LED fades to being lit. The antenna shape is in the style of Marquardt’s tags (cf. section 2.2.2.1) and has four loop turns in this basic setup. The tag reaches a maximum pessimistic average read distance of 2 cm. At each corner of the rectangular loop the electrical conductivity is ensured by tiny soldering connections. This is just in case that the adhesive of the copper tape would act as a isolator. It’s possible to gain enough induced current with even less turns of the antenna loop, but this always comes at the expense of shorter read ranges. Also the size of the copper tape can differ in width and even a small copper wire of 0.3 mm works as long as loop turns and diameter do not change too much (more details in section 3.3).
1 Introduction: Provides the motivation for exploring RFID in the context of ubiquitous computing and defines the scope of the thesis.
2 Related Work: Offers a comprehensive overview of RFID technology, coupling mechanisms, and existing research on RFID-based user interaction.
3 Interactive RFID Prototypes: Documents the development and evaluation of various RFID-based prototypes, including paper tags and AVR-based enhanced tags.
4 Tesla User Interface: Introduces the "Tesla User Interface" concept, detailing the hardware setup, control widgets, and supporting software.
5 Implications for User Interaction: Discusses the design space, application fields, and potential interaction paradigms for RFID-enabled interfaces.
6 Discussion: Analyzes the technical and usability limitations encountered during the project and outlines future research directions.
7 Conclusion: Summarizes the key findings and contributions of the thesis regarding the integration of RFID into future interactive systems.
RFID, Tesla User Interface, Ubiquitous Computing, Tangible Interaction, Batteryless Devices, Prototyping, Antenna Tuning, RFID Taxonomy, HCI, Control Widgets, Near-Field Communication, EM4100, Microcontroller, ID Modulation, Physical Computing
The thesis focuses on leveraging passive RFID technology to build wireless and batteryless physical user interfaces, which the author calls "Tesla User Interfaces."
Key themes include RFID technical standards, the development of physical "control widgets," antenna design for near-field communication, and the application of ubiquitous computing principles in interaction design.
The goal is to provide interface designers with a flexible, transparent, and robust system for creating physical, cable-free controls by abstracting the underlying RFID complexities.
The author uses a combined top-down evaluation of existing RFID technology and a bottom-up prototyping approach to design, build, and test custom interactive prototypes.
The main body details the technical construction of various RFID tags (Simple, Poti, Slider, Tilt, and AVRFIDs), the design of reader hardware, antenna theory, and a software framework for handling tag inputs.
Core keywords include RFID, Tesla User Interface, Ubiquitous Computing, Tangible Interaction, Prototyping, and Antenna Tuning.
It is a classification system created by the author to organize the diverse landscape of RFID technologies, standards, and application fields to provide an holistic overview for researchers.
The author faced technical challenges regarding the restricted flexibility of existing RFID protocols and the difficulty of reprogramming microcontroller fuse bits for external clock sources, which limited the planned software-level functionalities.
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