Method and devices for tracking laboratory resources
US-12119109-B2 · Oct 15, 2024 · US
US9740894B1 · US · B1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9740894-B1 |
| Application number | US-201615180869-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B1 |
| Filing date | Jun 13, 2016 |
| Priority date | Jun 13, 2016 |
| Publication date | Aug 22, 2017 |
| Grant date | Aug 22, 2017 |
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Silent radio frequency identifier (RFID) state and restore back is described herein. An RFID tag enters a silent state by receiving a sleep command from an RFID reader. While the RFID tag is in the silent state, only an awake command will restore back normal operation of the RFID tag. Other received commands or interrogations from the RFID reader are ignored and responses are not transmitted to the RFID reader.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method implemented in a radio frequency identification (RFID) tag, the method comprising: receiving, from an RFID reader, a sleep command; generating a silent key responsive to receipt of the sleep command; transmitting the silent key to the RFID reader subsequent to the generating of the silent key; changing the RFID tag from a standard state to a silent state responsive to receipt of the sleep command, the standard state configured to respond to commands from the RFID reader, the silent state configured to only respond to an awake command from the RFID reader; receiving, from the RFID reader, the awake command and the silent key while the RFID tag is in the silent state; and changing the RFID tag from the silent state to the standard state responsive to processing the awake command with the silent key, the processing the awake command comprising verifying the silent key received by the RFID reader against the silent key generated by the RFID tag prior to changing the silent state of the RFID tag to the standard state. 2. The method as recited in claim 1 , further comprising: receiving a command that causes the RFID tag to change to a secured state that utilizes an access password to determine whether processing of the commands is allowed for subsequent commands. 3. The method as recited in claim 2 , wherein the receiving the sleep command comprises receiving the sleep command that includes the access password while the RFID tag is in the secured state, and the method further comprising: determining whether the access password is valid; and the changing the RFID tag from the standard state to the silent state comprising changing to the silent state only if the access password is valid. 4. The method as recited in claim 1 , further comprising: ignoring commands received from the RFID reader except for the awake command while the RFID tag is in the silent state. 5. The method as recited in claim 1 , further comprising: receiving information from the RFID reader to store in memory of the RFID tag; and storing the information received from the RFID reader in the memory of the RFID tag. 6. The method as recited in claim 1 , further comprising: storing the silent key in memory of the RFID tag to be used for the processing the awake command. 7. The method as recited in claim 1 , further comprising: receiving from the RFID reader, after receipt of the awake command, an additional sleep command; and changing the RFID tag from the standard state to the silent state responsive to receipt of the additional sleep command. 8. A radio frequency identification (RFID) tag, comprising: a processing system; and a memory including executable instructions that, responsive to execution by the processing system, cause the processing system to: receive a sleep command from an RFID reader while the RFID tag is in a standard state, the standard state configured to respond to commands from the RFID reader; generate a silent key responsive to the receipt of the sleep command; transmit the silent key to the RFID reader subsequent to the generation of the silent key; change the RFID tag from the standard state to a silent state responsive to receipt of the sleep command, the silent state configured to only respond to an awake command; receive the awake command from the RFID reader while the RFID tag is in the silent state, the awake command including the silent key; and change the RFID tag from the silent state to the standard state responsive to the awake command being processed, the processing the awake command including verifying the silent key included with the awake command against the silent key generated by the RFID tag. 9. The RFID tag as recited in claim 8 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: receive a command that causes the RFID tag to change to a secured state that utilizes an access password to determine whether processing of the commands is allowed for subsequent commands. 10. The RFID tag as recited in claim 9 , wherein to receive the sleep command includes to receive the sleep command including the access password while the RFID tag is in the secured state, and the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: determine whether the access password is valid; and wherein to change the RFID tag from the standard state to the silent state is to change the RFID tag from the standard state to the silent state only if the access password is valid. 11. The RFID tag as recited in claim 8 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: ignore commands received from the RFID reader except for the awake command while the RFID tag is in the silent state. 12. The RFID tag as recited in claim 8 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: receive information from the RFID reader to store in the RFID tag; and store the received information in the memory. 13. The RFID tag as recited in claim 8 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: receive from the RFID reader, after receipt of the awake command, an additional sleep command; and change the RFID tag from the standard state to the silent state responsive to receipt of the additional sleep command. 14. The RFID tag as recited in claim 8 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: store the silent key in the memory of the RFID tag to be used for the processing the awake command. 15. The RFID tag as recited in claim 10 , wherein the determine whether the access password is valid being performed prior to processing the sleep command, and the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: ignore the processing of the sleep command if the access password is invalid. 16. A system comprising: a radio frequency identification (RFID) reader; an RFID tag comprising a processing system and a memory including executable instructions that, responsive to execution by the processing system, cause the processing system to: receive a sleep command from the RFID reader while the RFID tag is in a standard state, the standard state enabling the RFID tag to respond to commands from the RFID reader, the silent state enabling the RFID tag to only respond to an awake command; generate a silent key responsive to the receipt of the sleep command; transmit the silent key to the RFID reader subsequent to the generation of the silent key; change the RFID tag from the standard state to a silent state responsive to receipt of the sleep command; receive the awake command from the RFID reader while the RFID tag is in the silent state, the awake command including the silent key; and change the RFID tag from the silent state to the standard state responsive to verifying the silent key, the verifying the silent key comprising verifying the silent key included with the awake command against the silent key generated by the RFID tag. 17. The system as recited in claim 16 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: receive information from the RFID reader to store in the memory of the RFID tag; and store the received information in the memory of the RFID tag. 18. The system as recited in claim 16 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: store the silent key in the memory of the RFID tag. 19. The system as recited in claim 16 , the executable instructions further causing the processing system to: receive a comman
arrangements or provisions for transferring data to distant stations, e.g. from a sensing device ("transfer between computer elements G06F13/00 "; data-transmission H04L) · CPC title
the record carrier comprising an arrangement for non-contact communication, e.g. wireless communication circuits on transponder cards, non-contact smart cards or RFIDs · CPC title
the antenna being of the capacitive type · CPC title
the arrangement being an optical or sound-based communication interface · CPC title
by activating or deactivating at least a part of the circuit on the record carrier, e.g. ON/OFF switches · CPC title
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