Patents by Inventor Theron Stanford

Theron Stanford has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 10002266
    Abstract: An RFID IC may operate at a relatively low clock frequency while impedance matching to an antenna is being tuned to increase the amount of power that the IC can extract from an incident RF wave. A tuning circuit tunes the impedance matching by adjusting a variable impedance coupling the IC and the antenna. The IC may power-up with a low clock frequency or reduce its current clock frequency to a lower clock frequency prior to tuning or during the tuning process, and may increase its clock frequency upon completion of tuning or during the tuning process.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 6, 2015
    Date of Patent: June 19, 2018
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: John D. Hyde, Shailendra Srinivas, Jay Kuhn, Ronald A Oliver, Harley Heinrich, Theron Stanford, Christopher J. Diorio
  • Patent number: 9940490
    Abstract: An authentication method includes RFID tags authenticating RFID readers. A tag sends a tag identifier and a reader challenge to a reader in response to one or more commands from the reader. The reader then either derives a response to the reader challenge itself or has a verification authority derive the response. The response may be derived from parameter(s) in the reader challenge, and may be derived using a cryptographic key. The reader then sends the response to the tag along with another command. The tag verifies the response before executing instruction(s) included in the command.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 13, 2013
    Date of Patent: April 10, 2018
    Assignee: IMPINJ, INC.
    Inventors: Matthew Robshaw, Harley Heinrich, Yael Maguire, Theron Stanford, Christopher J. Diorio, Scott A. Cooper
  • Patent number: 9886658
    Abstract: Embodiments are directed to mitigating power-based impedance changes in Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags. The intrinsic impedance of components in an RFID tag front-end may change as incident RF power on the tag changes, causing the input impedance of the front-end to change and altering the RF properties of the RFID tag. A number of approaches can be used to mitigate input impedance variations due to power variations. One approach involves adjusting the operating point of one or more components in the RFID tag front-end to change their intrinsic impedances so as to counteract or mitigate the RF-power-based input impedance variation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 24, 2016
    Date of Patent: February 6, 2018
    Assignee: IMPINJ, INC
    Inventors: Theron Stanford, Charles J. T. Peach, Jay A. Kuhn, Harley K. Heinrich, John D. Hyde, Christopher J. Diorio, Alberto Pesavento
  • Patent number: 9875438
    Abstract: Embodiments are directed to a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) integrated circuit (IC) having a first circuit block electrically coupled to first and second antenna contacts. The first antenna contact is disposed on a first surface of the IC and the second antenna contact is disposed on a second surface of the IC different from the first surface. The first and second antenna contacts are electrically disconnected from each other.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 4, 2016
    Date of Patent: January 23, 2018
    Assignee: IMPINJ, INC.
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Ronald L. Koepp, Harley K. Heinrich, Theron Stanford, Ronald A. Oliver, Shailendra Srinivas
  • Patent number: 9646186
    Abstract: Impedance matching between an RFID IC and an antenna may be tuned to increase the amount of power that the IC can extract from an RF wave incident on the antenna. A tuning circuit tunes the impedance matching by adjusting a variable impedance coupling the IC and the antenna and/or adjusting a bias of a rectifier in the IC. The tuning circuit may adjust the variable impedance and/or the rectifier bias based on predetermined or stored tuning settings. For example, the tuning circuit may retrieve stored tuning settings from a nonvolatile memory (NVM) configured to operate with limited functionality at low power.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 12, 2016
    Date of Patent: May 9, 2017
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: John D. Hyde, Harley K. Heinrich, Charles Peach, Christopher J. Diorio, Theron Stanford
  • Patent number: 9607191
    Abstract: Data stored in nonvolatile memory on a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tag integrated circuit may have a “margin” associated with how strongly the data is written to the memory. Upon receiving a wireless margin read command, the RFID IC determines whether the margin for one of more data values stored in memory exceeds a margin threshold. The IC may determine the margin by applying bias voltages or currents to the memory cells storing the data values. If the determined margin does not exceed the margin threshold, the IC may respond with an error code.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 11, 2015
    Date of Patent: March 28, 2017
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Charles Peach, Alberto Pesavento, Theron Stanford, Jay Kuhn, Christopher Diorio
  • Patent number: 9489611
    Abstract: Embodiments are directed to a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) integrated circuit (IC) having a first circuit block electrically coupled to first and second antenna contacts. The first antenna contact is disposed on a first surface of the IC and the second antenna contact is disposed on a second surface of the IC different from the first surface. The first and second antenna contacts are electrically disconnected from each other.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 4, 2016
    Date of Patent: November 8, 2016
    Assignee: IMPINJ INC.
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Ronald L. Koepp, Harley K. Heinrich, Theron Stanford, Ronald A. Oliver, Shailendra Srinivas
  • Patent number: 9471816
    Abstract: An RFID tag tuning circuit is capable of tuning the impedance matching between an RFID integrated circuit (IC) and an antenna on an RFID tag to increase the amount of power that the IC can extract from an incident RF wave. The tuning circuit tunes the impedance matching by adjusting a variable impedance coupling the antenna and the IC. Prior to tuning, the variable impedance is set using a voltage output from a tuning switch stage of an IC rectifier.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 13, 2015
    Date of Patent: October 18, 2016
    Assignee: IMPINJ, INC.
    Inventors: John Hyde, Theron Stanford, Harley Heinrich, Omer Onen, Charles Peach
  • Patent number: 9305195
    Abstract: RFID readers transmit a Quiet Technology (QT) command to RFID tags causing at least one of the tags to transition between a private profile and a public profile. When a tag is inventoried in the private profile, it replies to the reader with contents from its private memory. When a tag is inventoried in the public profile, it replies to the reader with contents from its public memory, where the contents of the public memory may be a subset and/or modified version of the private memory contents, or entirely different altogether. The tag's profile can be switched again by another QT command from the reader, or following a loss of power at the tag. An access password and/or a short-range mechanism may be employed to allow only authorized readers to transition tag profiles or interrogate the private memory contents of tags in the public profile.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 27, 2015
    Date of Patent: April 5, 2016
    Assignee: IMPINJ, INC.
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Theron Stanford, Scott A. Cooper, Harley K. Heinrich, Chad A. Lindhorst, Kambiz Rahimi
  • Patent number: 9165170
    Abstract: An RFID tag is configured to adjust its current clock frequency to conserve tag power while receiving a reader signal and/or backscattering a signal. The tag may determine whether to adjust its current clock frequency based on one or more timing parameters, which may be determined from a reader command and/or from a signal to be backscattered. The counting rate and/or limit of a tag counter and/or the power supplied to a tag component may also be adjusted. The current tag clock frequency may be adjusted during the signal reception/backscattering process and optionally restored once the process is completed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 11, 2015
    Date of Patent: October 20, 2015
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Vadim Gutnik, Scott A. Cooper, John D. Hyde, Theron Stanford
  • Publication number: 20150248604
    Abstract: Embodiments are directed to a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) integrated circuit (IC) having a first circuit block electrically coupled to first and second antenna contacts. The first antenna contact is disposed on a first surface of the IC and the second antenna contact is disposed on a second surface of the IC different from the first surface. The first and second antenna contacts are electrically disconnected from each other.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 16, 2015
    Publication date: September 3, 2015
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Ronald L. Koepp, Harley K. Heinrich, Theron Stanford, Ronald A. Oliver, Shailendra Srinivas
  • Publication number: 20150227832
    Abstract: Embodiments are directed to a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) integrated circuit (IC) having a first circuit block electrically coupled to first and second antenna contacts. The first antenna contact is disposed on a first surface of the IC and the second antenna contact is disposed on a second surface of the IC different from the first surface. The first and second antenna contacts are electrically disconnected from each other.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 23, 2013
    Publication date: August 13, 2015
    Applicant: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Ronald L. Koepp, Harley K. Heinrich, Theron Stanford, Ronald A. Oliver, Shailendra Srinivas
  • Patent number: 9104923
    Abstract: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags may receive one or more encapsulated commands within the payload of an encapsulating command from an RFID reader. An encapsulated command includes at least a command code and an instruction. A tag may store the encapsulated command(s) or the instruction portion of the encapsulated command(s) for later execution. A sequence of encapsulated commands may be contained within one encapsulating command or spread across multiple encapsulating commands. The sequence of encapsulated commands, or the sequence of instructions associated with the encapsulated commands, may form a program. The tag may execute the instructions or program upon receipt, upon a trigger event, serially or in parallel, and/or may modify the instructions or program by adjusting parameters. The tag may later be told by a reader to execute the instructions or program via another command which, in some cases, may be sent prior to tag singulation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 18, 2013
    Date of Patent: August 11, 2015
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Theron Stanford, Christopher J. Diorio, Harley Heinrich
  • Patent number: 9087282
    Abstract: An RFID tag tuning circuit may be capable of adjusting the impedance matching between an RFID integrated circuit (IC) and an antenna on an RFID tag to increase the amount of power that the IC can extract from an incident RF wave. The tuning circuit switches a variable impedance coupling the antenna and the IC between several different impedance settings, where each impedance setting differs from an adjacent impedance setting by a respective impedance step size and at least one impedance step size has a different value than another impedance step size. The tuning circuit may switch the variable impedance by incrementing through a counter, decrementing through the counter, or performing some search algorithm. The tuning circuit may also initialize the variable impedance based on a default impedance setting or a random impedance setting derived from a random counter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 14, 2014
    Date of Patent: July 21, 2015
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: John Hyde, Jay Kuhn, Theron Stanford, Harley Heinrich, Christopher Diorio, Ronald Oliver
  • Patent number: 9064196
    Abstract: An RFID tag is configured to adjust its current clock frequency to conserve tag power while receiving a reader signal and/or backscattering a signal. The tag may determine whether to adjust its current clock frequency based on one or more timing parameters, which may be determined from a reader command and/or from a signal to be backscattered. The counting rate and/or limit of a tag counter and/or the power supplied to a tag component may also be adjusted. The current tag clock frequency may be adjusted during the signal reception/backscattering process and optionally restored once the process is completed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 2, 2012
    Date of Patent: June 23, 2015
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Vadim Gutnik, Scott A. Cooper, John D. Hyde, Theron Stanford
  • Patent number: 9053400
    Abstract: Embodiments are directed to a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) integrated circuit (IC) having a first circuit block electrically coupled to first and second antenna contacts. The first antenna contact is disposed on a first surface of the IC and the second antenna contact is disposed on a second surface of the IC different from the first surface. The first and second antenna contacts are electrically disconnected from each other.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 23, 2013
    Date of Patent: June 9, 2015
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Ronald L. Koepp, Harley K. Heinrich, Theron Stanford, Ronald A. Oliver, Shailendra Srinivas
  • Patent number: 9024731
    Abstract: RFID readers transmit a Quiet Technology (QT) command to RFID tags causing at least one of the tags to transition between a private profile and a public profile. When a tag is inventoried in the private profile, it replies to the reader with contents from its private memory. When a tag is inventoried in the public profile, it replies to the reader with contents from its public memory, where the contents of the public memory may be a subset and/or modified version of the private memory contents, or entirely different altogether. The tag's profile can be switched again by another QT command from the reader, or following a loss of power at the tag. An access password and/or a short-range mechanism may be employed to allow only authorized readers to transition tag profiles or interrogate the private memory contents of tags in the public profile.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 22, 2013
    Date of Patent: May 5, 2015
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Christopher J. Diorio, Theron Stanford, Scott A. Cooper, Harley K. Heinrich, Chad A. Lindhorst, Kambiz Rahimi
  • Patent number: 8830064
    Abstract: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags may receive one or more run commands, prior to being singulated, that specify one or more programs for the tag to execute. A run command may encapsulate the programs, in which case the tag may execute or store and execute the program(s). A run command may alternatively specify programs stored on the tag. The tag may execute the program(s) upon receipt, upon a trigger event, serially or in parallel, and/or may modify the instructions or program(s) by adjusting parameters. A reader may tell the tag to execute the instructions or program(s) via the run command or another command which, in some cases, may be sent prior to tag singulation. A tag may, based on a result of the executed program(s), determine whether to participate in a subsequent inventory round, modify a behavior during a subsequent inventory round, or store the result in tag memory.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 2011
    Date of Patent: September 9, 2014
    Assignee: Impinj Inc.
    Inventors: Theron Stanford, Christopher J. Diorio, Harley Heinrich
  • Patent number: 8830065
    Abstract: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) readers may transmit one or more run commands specifying one or more programs for tag execution prior to tag singulation. A run command may encapsulate the program(s), in which case a tag may store or store and execute the program(s). A run command may alternatively specify programs stored on a tag. The reader may instruct a tag to execute the program(s) upon receipt, upon a trigger event, serially or in parallel, and/or may cause the tag to modify the program(s) by adjusting parameters. The reader may instruct tags to execute the program(s) via the run command or another command, which may be sent prior to tag singulation. A reader may cause a tag to determine whether to participate in a subsequent inventory round, modify a behavior during a subsequent inventory round, or store a result in a tag memory, based on the executed program(s).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 2011
    Date of Patent: September 9, 2014
    Assignee: Impinj, Inc.
    Inventors: Theron Stanford, Christopher J. Diorio, Harley Heinrich
  • Patent number: 8830038
    Abstract: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags may receive one or more encapsulated commands within the payload of an encapsulating command. An encapsulated command includes at least a command code and an instruction. A tag may store the encapsulated command(s) or the instruction portion of the encapsulated command(s) for later execution. A sequence of encapsulated commands may be contained within one encapsulating command or spread across multiple encapsulating commands. The sequence of encapsulated commands, or the sequence of instructions associated with the encapsulated commands, may form a program. The tag may execute the instructions or program upon receipt, upon a trigger event, serially or in parallel, and/or may modify the instructions or program by adjusting parameters. The tag may later be told by a reader to execute the instructions or program via another command which, in some cases, may be sent prior to tag singulation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 18, 2013
    Date of Patent: September 9, 2014
    Assignee: Impinj Inc.
    Inventors: Theron Stanford, Christopher J. Diorio, Harley Heinrich