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Home > RFID News > RFID Technical

ALl NFC Chip Types are avaliable, Recommended Using NTAG NXP Series

2016-11-11 View:
NFC Chip Types
All NFC chip types are available here. Each NFC chip has its own features, characteristics and cost. If you are not sure which NFC chip to use our recommendation is to get a couple of each to test with. In general the NXP NTAG series is typically what customers use as they offer the best combination of memory, speed, availability and cost.

How to Choose an NFC Chip?
Make sure the NFC chip has enough memory capacity to store what you are going to encode; encode as little data as possible
Choose an NFC Forum compliant chip to ensure it will work on all NFC enabled devices
Use a modern NFC chip and inlay they are better tuned for the antennas in NFC enabled devices
Some NFC chips have extra 'features'; these are not used by the vast majority of deployments so don't worry about them too much
Not all NFC products (stickers, wristbands, cards…) are available with all NFC chips; another reason to use a common NFC chip type

NFC chip Can be changed?
Most NFC chips can be locked so after the data is encoded onto the NFC chip it can't be changed. However, encoding and locking are two separate actions, meaning that an NFC chip can be encoded multiple times until they are locked.

Features of NFC Chip Type 
Thsi NFC chip feature matrix allows you to compare the characteristics of each chip to each other. If you need additional technical information, see the technical specs below.

NFC CHIP MEMORY SPEED LOCKABLE PRE-NDEF
FORMATTED
NFC FORUM
COMPLIANT
NXP NTAG203 142 bytes High Yes Yes Yes
NXP NTAG210 46 bytes Very High Yes Yes Yes
NXP NTAG212 126 bytes Very High Yes Yes Yes
NXP NTAG213 142 bytes Very High Yes Yes Yes
NXP NTAG216 884 bytes High Yes Yes Yes
NXP Ultralight 46 bytes Medium Yes No Yes
NXP Ultralight C 142 bytes Medium Yes No Yes
Kovio 2Kb 230 bytes High OTP Sometimes Yes
Innovision Topaz
(120b)
90 bytes Medium Yes No Yes
Innovision Topaz
(512b)
454 bytes Medium Yes No Yes
NXP DESFire EV1
(2K)
2046 bytes Medium Yes No Yes
NXP DESFire EV1
(4K)
4094 bytes Medium Yes No Yes
NXP DESFire EV1
(8K)
7678 bytes Slow Yes No Yes
NXP Mifare
(1K)
716 bytes Slow Simulated No No
NXP Mifare
(4K)
3356 bytes Very Slow Simulated No No
NXP Mifare Mini 190 bytes Medium Simulated No No
NXP ICODE
SLI
106 bytes High Yes No Yes
NXP ICODE
SLI-X
106 bytes High Yes No Yes

 
     
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        A smart card is a small plastic card containing a computer chip. People use smart cards along with personal identification numbers (PINs) to log on to a network, a computer, or a device. Using a smart card is more secure than using a password because it's more difficult for someone to steal a smart card and learn your PIN than to learn your password.Smart cards are generally issued by information technology (IT) departments in large organizations. To use a smart card, you also need a smart card reader—a device that's installed in or connected to your computer and that can read the information stored on a smart card.