Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 61

Project 2011 RFID

Based Attendance System

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

We should like to express our heartfelt gratitude to Mrs. C.G. Anitha,


Principal of our polytechnic for providing the best facility and atmosphere
for this Project work.

We greatly thankful to Mrs. Suhara .K.M, Head of Department of


Electronics for all necessary help extended by her in the fulfillment of this
Project.

We acknowledge our Project guide Mr.Devarajan.M.K, Mr.


Sureshkumar.K.B, Mrs.sussamma Mathew, Mrs. Padmaja Detha,
Lucturers in Electronics Engineering for the guidance and help they have
always given us.
Finally we thank all our colleagues for their heartfelt co-operation and
tremendous support they have given to us during the collection of
materials and also during our Project.

Department of Electronics 1 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CONTENTS

1.INTRODUCTION

2.BLOCK DIAGRAM DESCRIPTION

3.EXPLANATION

4.CIRCUIT DIAGRAM

5.FLOW CHART

6.PROGRAM

7.PCB LAYOUT

8.PCB FABRICTION

9. MERITS AND DEMERITS

10.FUTURE ENHANCEMENT

11.CONCLUSION

12REFERENCE

Department of Electronics 2 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION

Traditionally the attendance at an establishment is usually done in a


book register. It is time consuming. It is very difficult to verify the
attendance over long periods. This method is very time consuming and
very difficult to verify the attendance over a week or above. Keeping
attendance registers is space consuming. Here chances of doing
malpractice in marking attendance are high.

RFID based attendance system uses RFID tags for each person. A
person marks the attendance by swiping the tag near RFID reader module.
The attendance is temporarily saved in the EEPROM. At any time the
circuit can be connected to a computer and the attendance is moved from
EEPROM to a text file in computer. It has following advantages. (1)
Simplicity and reliability, (2) Saving attendance in a computer allows easy
verification and longer record keeping.

It works on radio frequency transmitters and receivers. Each person


is given a RF ID card which is having a unique code. When it is swiped on
a RF ID card reader, it reads the code and is stored. The attendance is
temporarily saved in the EEPROM. At any time the circuit can be
connected to a computer and the attendance is moved from EEPROM to a
text file in computer. The advantage of this system is simplicity and
reliability. Saving attendance in a computer allows easy verification and
longer record keeping.

Department of Electronics 3 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 2

BLOCK DIAGRAM AND EXPLANATION

2.1 Block Diagram

Figure 2.1 Basic block diagram

2.2 EXPLANATION

RFID READER

The DT125R series RFID Proximity OEM Reader Module has a built-
in antenna in minimized form factor. It is designed to work on the industry
standard carrier frequency of 125 kHz. This LF reader module with an
internal or an external antenna facilitates communication with Read-Only
Department of Electronics 4 Govt.Polytechnic
College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

transponders type UNIQUE or TK5530 via the air interface. The tag data
is sent to the host systems via the wired communication interface with a
protocol selected from the module pinout. The LF DT125R module is best
suited for applications in Access Control, Time and Attendance, Asset
Management, Handheld Readers, Immobilizers, and other RFID enabled
applications.The AUTOMATIC DATA COLLECTION Technology used
in th RFID reader.

Features
• Selectable UART or Wigand26.
• Plug-and-Play, needs +5V to become a reader.
• No repeat reads.
• LED/Beeper indicates tag reading operation.
• Excellent read performance without an external circuit.
• Compact size and cost-effective very efficient module for portable readers.

Data Transmission is in ASCII Standard. Data read from the tag is


Manchester encoded. The Manchester encoded data is decoded to ASCII
standard. Decoded data is sent to the UART serial interface for wired
communication with the host systems. ASCII data format is shown below:

Department of Electronics 5 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

2.2.2 Power supply

Block diagram of Power Supply

BRIDGE
TRANSFORMER
FILTER
RECTIFIER

TRANSFORMER
VOLTAGE
Regulated
REGULATOR
output
Figuer 2.2 Block diagram of power supply
Almost all electronic devices used in electronic circuits need a dc
source of power supply to operate .The source of dc power is used to
establish the dc operating points for the passive and active electronic
devices incorporated in the system. The combination of a transformer, a
rectifier, and a filter constitutes an ordinary dc supply, also called an
unregulated power supply. For many applications in electronics
unregulated power supply is not good because of the following reasons.
• Poor regulation.
• Variations in the ac supply main.
• Variations in temperature.

(1) Transformer

Transformers are devices which are designed to transfer electrical


energy from one electrical circuit to another. They do so utilizing the
Department of Electronics 6 Govt.Polytechnic
College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

principle of electromagnetic induction. In addition to performing such


energy transfer they are also capable of delivering a different value of ac
current or voltage at their output terminals than the value applied to other
input terminal. Transformer can provide isolation. In this circuit step down
transformer is used.

(2) Bridge rectifier

In the bridge circuit 4 diodes are connected I the form of a


Wheatstone bridge. When the upper end of the transformer secondary
winding is positive, say during first half cycle of the input supply, diodes
D1 and D3 are forward biased and current flows through the arm AB,
enters the load at positive terminal leaves the load at negative terminal.
During the negative half cycle, the diodes D2 and D4 are forward biased so
the current is not allowed to flow in arms AD and BC. In both cases the
direction of flow of current through load resistance is same.

(3) Voltage Regulator (7805)

Fixed three-terminal linear regulators are commonly available to


generate fixed voltage of plus 3V, and plus or minus 5V, 9V, 12V or 15V
when the load is less than about 7 amperes. The “78” series (7805, 7812,
etc) regulate positive voltages. Often, the last two digits of the device
numbers are the output voltages, e.g. a 7805 is a +5V regulator. These
regulators eliminate the distribution problems associated with single point
regulation.

Department of Electronics 7 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Figure 2.3 Power supply circuit

2.2.3 MICROCONTROLLER AT89C52


It has 8K Bytes of In-System Programmable (ISP) Flash Memory. It
has an endurance of 1000 write and erase cycles. It has a 256 x 8-bit
Internal RAM. It is having 32 programmable I/O lines. There are three 16-
bit Timers or Counters. There are eight interrupt sources. It consists of a
full duplex UART serial channel. The 8KB internal flash type ROM is
used for storing user program. It has low-power Idle and Power-down
modes. The AT89C52 is a low-power, high-performance CMOS 8-bit
microcomputer with 8K bytes of Flash programmable and erasable read
only memory (PEROM). The device is manufactured using Atmel’s high-
density nonvolatile memory technology and is compatible with the
industry-standard 80C51 and 80C52 instruction set and pinout. The on-
chip Flash allows the program memory to be reprogrammed in-system or
by a conventional nonvolatile memory programmer. By combining a
versatile 8-bit CPU with Flash on a monolithic chip, the Atmel AT89C52
is a powerful microcomputer which provides a highly-flexible and cost-
effective solution to many embedded control applications. The AT89C52
provides the following standard features: 8K bytes of Flash, 256 bytes of
RAM, 32 I/O lines, three 16-bit timer/counters, a six-vector two-level
interrupt architecture, a full-duplex serial port, on-chip oscillator, and
clock circuitry. In addition, the AT89C52 is designed with static logic for

Department of Electronics 8 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

operation down to zero frequency and supports two software selectable


power saving modes. The Idle Mode stops the CPU while allowing the
RAM, timer/counters, serial port, and interrupt system to continue
functioning.

ARCHITECTURE OF AT89C52

Figure 2.4 89C52 Architecture

Department of Electronics 9 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

The Accumulator

The Accumulator, as its name suggests, is used as a general register


to accumulate the results of a large number of instructions. It can hold an
8-bit (1-byte) value and is the most versatile register the 8052 has due to
the sheer number of instructions that make use of the accumulator.

The "R" registers

The "R" registers are a set of eight registers that are named R0, R1,
etc. up to and including R7. The "R" registers as very important auxiliary,
or "helper", registers. The Accumulator alone would not be very useful if it
were not for these "R" registers. The "R" registers are also used to
temporarily store values.

The "B" Register

The "B" register is very similar to the Accumulator in the sense that
it may hold an 8-bit (1-byte) value. The "B" register is only used by two
8052 instructions: MUL AB and DIV AB. Thus, if you want to quickly
and easily multiply or divide A by another number, you may store the
other number in "B" and make use of these two instructions. Aside from
the MUL and DIV instructions, the "B" register is often used as yet another
temporary storage register much like a ninth "R" register.

Dual Data Pointer Registers

To facilitate accessing both internal and external data memory, two


banks of 16-bit Data Pointer Registers are provided: DP0 at SFR address
locations 82H-83H and DP1 at 84H-85H. Bit DPS = 0 in SFR AUXR1
selects DP0 and DPS = 1 selects DP1. The user should always initialize the

Department of Electronics 10 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

DPS bit to the appropriate value before accessing the respective Data
Pointer Register.

The Program Counter (PC)

The Program Counter (PC) is a 2-byte address which tells the 8052
where the next instruction to execute is found in memory. When the 8052
is initialized PC always starts at 0000h and is incremented each time an
instruction is executed. It is also interesting to note that while you may
change the value of PC (by executing a jump instruction, etc.) there is no
way to read the value of PC.

The Stack Pointer (SP)

The Stack Pointer, like all registers except DPTR and PC, may hold
an 8-bit value. The Stack Pointer is used to indicate where the next value
to be removed from the stack should be taken from. This order of operation
is important. When the 8052 is initialized SP will be initialized to 07h. If
you immediately push a value onto the stack, the value will be stored in
Internal RAM address 08h. SP is modified directly by the 8052 by six
instructions: PUSH, POP, ACALL, LCALL, RET, and RETI.

SFRs

A map of the on-chip memory area is called the Special Function


Register (SFR) space. Note that not all of the addresses are occupied, and
unoccupied addresses may not be implemented on the chip. Read accesses
to these addresses will in general return random data, and write accesses
will have an indeterminate effect. User software should not write 1s to
these unlisted locations, since they may be used in future products to

Department of Electronics 11 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

invoke new features. In that case, the reset or inactive values of the new
bits will always be 0.

PSW Register (Program Status Word)

This is one of the most important SFRs. The Program Status


Word (PSW) contains several status bits that reflect the current state of the
CPU. This register contains: Carry bit, Auxiliary Carry, two register bank
select bits, Overflow flag, parity bit, and user-definable status flag. The
ALU automatically changes some of register’s bits, which is usually used
in regulation of the program performing.

Program Memory

Code memory is the memory that holds the actual 8052 program that
is to be run. In 89S52 the internal code memory is a Flash memory.
Internal code memory is limited to 8K. Code may also be stored
completely off-chip in an external ROM or, more commonly, an external
EPROM. Flash RAM is also another popular method of storing a program.

The microcontroller handle external memory depends on the pin EA


logic state:
EA=0. In this case, internal program memory is completely ignored, only a
program stored in external memory is to be executed.
EA=1 In this case, a program from built in FLASH is to be executed first
(to the last location). Afterwards, the execution is continued by reading
additional memory.
In both cases, P0 and P2 are not available to the user because
they are used for data and address transmission. Besides, the pins ALE and
PSEN are used too.
Data Memory (RAM)

Department of Electronics 12 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

The AT89S52 implements 256 bytes of on-chip RAM. The upper


128 bytes occupy a parallel address space to the Special Function
Registers. This means that the upper 128 bytes have the same addresses as
the SFR space but are physically separate from SFR space. When an
instruction accesses an internal location above address 7FH, the address
mode used in the instruction specifies whether the CPU accesses the upper
128 bytes of RAM or the SFR space. Instructions which use direct
addressing access the SFR space. Instructions that use indirect addressing
access the upper 128 bytes of RAM. Note that stack operations are
examples of indirect addressing, so the upper 128 bytes of data RAM are
available as stack space.
Counters and Timers

The 8052 microcontrollers have 3 timers/counters called T0, T1 and


T2. As their names tell, their main purpose is to measure time and count
external events. Besides, they can be used for generating clock pulses used
in serial communication, i.e. Baud Rate.

UART (Universal Asynchronous Receiver and Transmitter)

The UART in the AT89S52 operates the same way as the UART in
the AT89C51 and AT89C52. Also known as a serial port. It is a duplex
port, which means that it can transmit and receive data simultaneously.
P0, P1, P2, P3 - Input/output ports

4 ports within a total of 32 input-output lines are available to the


user for connection to peripheral environment

Department of Electronics 13 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

T2CON – Timer/Counter 2 Control Register

TF2- Timer 2 overflow flag set by a Timer 2 overflow and must be cleared
by software. TF2 will not be set when either RCLK = 1 or TCLK = 1.
EXF2- Timer 2 external flag set when either a capture or reload is caused
by a negative transition on T2EX and EXEN2 = 1. When Timer 2 interrupt
is enabled, EXF2 = 1 will cause the CPU to vector to the Timer 2 interrupt
routine. EXF2 must be cleared by software. EXF2 does not cause an
interrupt in up/down counter mode (DCEN = 1).
RCLK- Receive clock enable. When set, causes the serial port to use
Timer 2 overflow pulses for its receive clock in serial port modes 1 and 3.
RCLK = 0 causes Timer 1 overflow to be used for the receive clock.
TCLK- Transmit clock enable. When set, causes the serial port to use
Timer 2 overflow pulses for its transmit clock in serial port modes 1 and 3.
TCLK = 0 causes Timer 1 overflows to be used for the transmit clock.
EXEN2- Timer 2 external enable. When set, allows a capture or reload to
occur as a result of a negative transition on T2EX if Timer 2 is not being
used to clock the serial port. EXEN2 = 0 causes Timer 2 to ignore events at
T2EX.
TR2- Start/Stop control for Timer 2. TR2 = 1 starts the timer.
C/T2- Timer or counter select for Timer 2. C/T2 = 0 for timer function.
C/T2 = 1 for external event counter (falling edge triggered).

Department of Electronics 14 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CP/RL2- Capture/Reload select. CP/RL2 = 1 causes captures to occur on


negative transitions at T2EX if EXEN2 = 1. CP/RL2 = 0, causes automatic
reloads to occur when Timer 2 overflows or negative transitions occur at
T2EX when EXEN2 = 1.

IE (Interrupt Enable Register)

EA - Disables all interrupts. If EA = 0, no interrupt is acknowledged. If


EA = 1, each interrupt source is individually enabled or disabled by setting
or clearing its enable bit.
ET2 - Timer 2 interrupt enable bit.
ES - Serial Port interrupt enable bit.
ET1 - Timer 1 interrupt enable bit.
EX1 - External interrupt 1 enable bit.
ET0 -Timer 0 interrupt enable bit.
EX0 - External interrupt 0 enable bit.

WATCH DOG TIMER

The WDT is intended as a recovery method in situations where the


CPU may be subjected to software upsets. The WDT consists of a 14-bit
counter and the Watchdog Timer Reset (WDTRST) SFR. The WDT is
defaulted to disable from exiting reset. To enable the WDT, a user must
write 01EH and 0E1H in sequence to the WDTRST register (SFR location
0A6H). When the WDT is enabled, it will increment every machine cycle
while the oscillator is running. The WDT timeout period is dependent on
the external clock frequency. There is no way to disable the WDT except

Department of Electronics 15 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

through reset (either hardware reset or WDT overflow reset). When WDT
overflows, it will drive an output RESET HIGH pulse at the RST pin.

2.2.4 REAL TIME CLOCK (DS12887)

It is totally nonvolatile with over 10 years of operation in the


absence of power. It has a self-contained subsystem that includes lithium,
quartz, and support circuitry. It counts seconds, minutes, hours, day of the
week, date, month, and year with leap year compensation valid up to 2100.
It also has binary or BCD representation of time, calendar, and alarm. It
has 12 or 24 hour clock with AM and PM in 12 hour mode. Daylight
savings time option is also present in it. It is interfaced with software as
128 RAM locations, ie.15 bytes of clock and control registers, and 113
bytes of general purpose RAM.

2.2.5 EEPROM

The EEPROM used is 24C08. The memory is internally organized as 1024 x 8


(8K). It has a 2-wire serial interface. It is guided on the basis of Bi-directional Data
Transfer Protocol. There is a write protect pin for hardware data protection. It has 16-
byte page write modes. It is highly reliable. Endurance is 1 Million Write Cycles. Data
retention is 100 years. There is 3 address inputs A0-A2. The Write Protect (WP) pin
allows normal read/write operations when connected to ground (GND). When the
Write Protect pin is connected to VCC, the write protection feature is enabled. SCL is
the serial clock input. SDA is the serial data.

Figure 2.5 Pin diagram of EEPROM

Department of Electronics 16 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

2.2.6 LCD MODULE

Figure 2.6 LCD Display

In recent years the LCD is finding widespread use replacing LEDs. This is due to
the following reasons:
• The declining price of the LCDs.
• The ability to display numbers, characters and graphics. This is in contrast to
LEDs, limited to displaying only numbers to few characters.

Features
• + 5V power supply (Also available for + 3V)
• 1/16 duty cycle
• To be driven by pin 1, pin 2 or pin 15, pin 16

LCD pin descriptions


These are the 16 pins and they are given below along with their basic functions
and symbols used to represent them.

PIN SYMBOL FUNCTION


NUM
BER
1 Vss GND
2 Vdd + 3Vor + 5V
Department of Electronics 17 Govt.Polytechnic
College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

3 Vo Contrast Adjustment
4 RS H/L Register Select Signal
5 R/W H/L Read/Write Signal
6 E H ->L Enable Signal
7 DB0 H/L Data Bus Line
8 DB1 H/L Data Bus Line
9 DB2 H/L Data Bus Line
10 DB3 H/L Data Bus Line
11 DB4 H/L Data Bus Line
12 DB5 H/L Data Bus Line
13 DB6 H/L Data Bus Line
14 DB7 H/L Data Bus Line
15 A/Vee + 4.2V for LED/Negative Voltage Output

16 K Power Supply for B/L (OV)


Table 2.1 Lcd pin discription

Vcc, Vss, Vee


The Vcc or Vdd pin is used to provide supply of +5V, Vss is the ground pin and
the Vee or Vo is used for controlling LCD contrast.
RS, Register Select
There are 2 very important types of register inside the LCD. The RS pin is used
for their selection as follows. If RS=0, the command code register is selected. If RS=1,
the data register is selected, allowing user to send data to be displayed on the LCD.

R/W, Read/Write
R/W input allows the user to write the information to the LCD or read
information from it. If this pin is set high then read will be selected, else if zero implies
write.

E, Enable
This pin is used by the LCD to latch information presented to its data pins. When
data is supplies to data pins, a high to low pulse must be applied to this pin in order for
the LCD to latch in the data present in the data pins. This pulse must be a minimum of
450ns wide.

DO - D7, Data lines


The 8-bit data pins, DO - D7, are used to send information to the LCD or read
the contents of the LCD's internal registers. To display letters and numbers, we send
ASCII codes for the letters A - Z, a - z, and numbers 0 - 9 to these pins while making

Department of Electronics 18 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

RS = 1. There are also instruction command codes that can be sent to the LCD to clear
the display or force the cursor to the home position or blink the cursor. We also use RS
= 0 to check the busy flag bit to see if the LCD is ready to receive information The
busy flag is D7 and can be read when R/W = 1 and RS = 0, as follows: if R/W = 1,RS =
O. When D7 = 1 (busy flag = 1 ) , the LCD is busy taking care of internal operations
and will not accept any new information.

2.2.7 MAX 232

It meets or Exceeds TIA/EIA-232-F and ITU. It operates from a single 5-V


power supply with 1.0µF Charge-Pump Capacitors. It can operate up to 120 kbit/s. It
has two drivers and two receivers and 30-V input levels. It works at low supply current
8 mA typical. ESD Protection Exceeds JESD 22. 2000-V Human-Body Model A114A.
Upgrade with improved ESD (15-kV HBM) and 0.1µF Charge-Pump capacitor is
available with the MAX202.

2.2.8 KEYPAD ENCODER

The MM74C922 and MM74C923 CMOS key encoders provide all the
necessary logic to fully encode an array of SPST switches. The keyboard scan can be
implemented by either an external clock or external capacitor. These encoders also
have on-chip pull-up devices which permit switches with up to 50 kW on resistance to
be used. No diodes in the switch array are needed to eliminate ghost switches. The
internal debounce circuit needs only a single external capacitor and can be defeated by
omitting the capacitor. The Data available output returns to a low level when the
entered key is released, even if another key is depressed. The Data available will return
high to indicate acceptance of the new key after a normal debounce period; this two-
key roll-over is provided between any two switches. An internal register remembers the
last key pressed even after the key is released. The 3-STATE outputs provide for easy
expansion and bus operation and are LPTTL compatible.

Department of Electronics 19 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Figure 2.7 74C922 Encoder

Features

• 50 kW maximum switch on resistance


• On or off chip clock
• On-chip row pull-up devices
• Keybounce elimination with single capacitor
• Last key register at outputs

Department of Electronics 20 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 3

CIRCUIT DIAGRAM

3.1 Circuit Diagram

Figure 3.1 Circuit diagram

Department of Electronics 21 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

3.2 Working

Microcontroller reads time from real time chip DS12887. Whenever a RFID tag
is brought near RFID module, it sends the card number in ASCII fomat to the
microcontroller. The microcontroller compares this number with those numbers in the
EEPROM. If match is found, it first check whether it is a master card, then it displays
menu for master card. If not, it displays the ID number and then sends the time and date
details along with ID number to EEPROM for marking daily attendance. If no matches
found, the microcontroller displays ‘Card Not Programmed’ in LCD.

Master card menu consists of set time, add, edit, delete, transfer. The various
options are selected using the keypad keys- up, down, enter, cancel. Keypad encoder
converts the key pressed into corresponding hex file. The output from RFID is given as
the serial input. The card ID number is 8 bytes long and two extra bytes serve as start
and stop bits.

Set time: It is used to edit the time of RTC. The time is entered using the keypad.

Add: It is used to add a new tag and store the new tag number and ID number to
EEPROM.

Edit: It is used to edit the card ID number. The new ID number is entered through
keypad.

Delete: It is used to delete a card from record.

Transfer: This option is used to transfer the marked attendance stored in EEPROM to
the computer.

MAX232 is used to convert the TTL voltage to RS232 compatible voltage. Real
time clock is used to provide the date, month, and year details for marking the
attendance.

Department of Electronics 22 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 4

PROGRAM FLOW CHART

Department of Electronics 23 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Department of Electronics 24 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Department of Electronics 25 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 5

PROGRAM

#include<reg52.h>
#include<aBsacc.h>

//----------------------- PORT DECLARATION ---------------------------------------------------//


sfr ldata = 0xA0;
sbit RS = P1^4;
sbit EN = P1^5;
sbit sda = P3^5;
sbit sclk = P3^4;
sbit IN = P1^6;

//---------------------------------- GLOBAL VARIABLES


----------------------------------------------------//
unsigned char hr,min,sec,day,mnt,yr;
unsigned char code1,laddr,l2addr,addr,data1[8];
unsigned char nadd=0,nedit=0,ndel=0,w,r,choice=0;
unsigned char dwaddr[]={0xA0,0XA2,0XA4,0XA6},draddr[]={0XA1,0XA3,0XA5,0XA7};

//---------------------------------- DISPLAY MESSAGES


----------------------------------------------------//
code unsigned char msg0[]={"ATTENDANCE-SYSTEM"};
code unsigned char msg1[]={"CARD NOT-PROGRAMMED"};
code unsigned char msg2[]={"DETECTED CARD-NO"};
code unsigned char msg3[]={"MASTER CARD- MENU"};
code unsigned char *msg4[]={"SET TIME"," ADD","EDIT","DELETE","TRANSFER"};
code unsigned char msg5[]={"SHOW CARD-TO DELETE"};
code unsigned char msg6[]={"ENTER HOUR -0~24"};
code unsigned char msg7[]={"ENTER MINUTES -'00~59'"};
code unsigned char msg8[]={"ENTER DAY -'01~31'"};
code unsigned char msg9[]={"ENTER MONTH -'01~12'"};
code unsigned char msg10[]={"ENTER YEAR -'00~99'"};
code unsigned char msg11[]={"SHOW CARD-TO ADD"};
code unsigned char msg12[]={"SHOW CARD-TO EDIT"};
code unsigned char msg13[]={"ENTER THE- ID NO"};
code unsigned char msg14[]={"CARD ADDED"};
code unsigned char msg15[]={"CARD EDITED"};
code unsigned char msg16[]={"RECORD -MEMORY FULL"};
Department of Electronics 26 Govt.Polytechnic
College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

code unsigned char msg17[]={"SENDING DATA.."};


code unsigned char msg18[]={"DELETE DATA?"};
code unsigned char msg19[]={"DATA DELETED"};

//------------------------------------ FUNCTION PROTOTYPE


-------------------------------------------------//
void msdelay(unsigned int);
void lcdcmd( unsigned char);
void lcddata( unsigned char);
void lcdinit();
void display(unsigned char []);
void bcdascii(unsigned char);
void hexascii(unsigned char);
unsigned char hexbcd(unsigned char);
void nop(void);
unsigned char checkcard();
void prog();
void senddetails();
void settime();
unsigned char input(unsigned char);
void added();
void edited();
void sendcode(unsigned char);
void sendadd(unsigned char);
void start_s_eeprom();
void send_byte_s_eeprom(unsigned char);
unsigned char get_byte_s_eeprom();
void stop_s_eeprom();
void send_to_mem(unsigned char, unsigned char);
unsigned char get_from_mem(unsigned char);
void transmit();
void serial(unsigned char);
void del();

//----------------------------------- SERIAL INTERRUPT ----------------------------------------------//

void serialintr() interrupt 4


{
unsigned char num,j;
static int l=0;

if(TI ==1)
T1=0;
else
{
num=SBUF;

Department of Electronics 27 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

if(num!=0x0D && num!=0x0A)


{
data1[l]=num;
l++;
}
else if(num==0x0D)
if(l==8)
{
if(nadd==1)
added();

else
{
j=checkcard();
if(j==0)
display(msg1);
else if(j==1)
{
if(nedit==1)
edited();
else if(ndel==1)
del();
else
{
senddetails();
display(msg2);
hexascii(code1);
}
}
else
prog();
}
l=0;
lcdcmd(0x01);
}
RI=0;
}
}

//-------------------------------------Main Program-------------------------------------------------------

void main()
{ msdelay(80);
TH1= -3;
TMOD=0x20;
SCON=0x50;
TR1=1;

Department of Electronics 28 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

IE=0x90;
lcdinit();
w=0;
r=0;
laddr=get_from_mem(0xFD);
msdelay(4);
w=get_from_mem(0xFE);
msdelay(4);
l2addr=get_from_mem(0XFF);
msdelay(4);
r=1;
display(msg0);
lcdcmd(0x01);
while(1)
{
hr=XBYTE[4];
bcdascii(hr);
lcddata(':');
min=XBYTE[2];
bcdascii(min);
lcddata(':');
sec=XBYTE[0];
bcdascii(sec);
lcdcmd(0xC0);
day=XBYTE[7];
bcdascii(day);
lcddata('-');
mnt=XBYTE[8];
bcdascii(mnt);
lcddata('-');
yr=XBYTE[9];
lcddata('2');
lcddata('0');
bcdascii(yr);
lcdcmd(0x80);
}
}
//-----------------------------Function Definition-------------------------------------------------

void msdelay(unsigned int td)


{
unsigned int i,j;
for(i=0; i<td; i++)
for(j=0; j<1275; j++);
}

void lcdcmd( unsigned char value)

Department of Electronics 29 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

{
ldata=value;
RS=0;
EN=1;
msdelay(1);
EN=0;
msdelay(60);
}

void lcddata( unsigned char value)


{
ldata=value;
RS=1;
EN=1;
msdelay(1);
EN=0;
msdelay(60);
}

void lcdinit()
{
lcdcmd(0x38);
lcdcmd(0x0E);
lcdcmd(0x01);
lcdcmd(0x06);
lcdcmd(0x80);
}

void display(unsigned char msg[])


{
short int i=0;
lcdcmd(0x01);
lcdcmd(0x80);
while(msg[i]!='\0')
{
if(msg[i]=='-')
lcdcmd(0xC0);
else
lcddata(msg[i]);
i++;
}
}

void bcdascii(unsigned char num)


{
unsigned char x,y;
x=num&0x0F;

Department of Electronics 30 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

x=x|0x30;
y=num&0xF0;
y=y>>4;
y=y|0x30;
if(choice==0)
{
lcddata(y);
lcddata(x);
}
else
{
serial(y);
serial(x);
}
}

void hexascii(unsigned char val)


{
unsigned char x,y,z;
x=val/100;
val=val%100;
y=val/10;
z=val%10;
x=x|0x30;
y=y|0x30;
z=z|0x30;
if(choice==0)
{
lcddata(x);
lcddata(y);
lcddata(z);
}
else
{
serial(x);
serial(y);
serial(z);
}
}

unsigned char hexbcd(unsigned char num)


{
unsigned char n[2];
n[1]=num/10;
n[0]=num%10;
n[1]=n[1]<<4;
num=n[1] | n[0];

Department of Electronics 31 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

return num;
}

void nop(void)
{
}

unsigned char checkcard()


{
unsigned char a=0,data2[8],flag=0,taddr,temp1,temp2;
unsigned char i,j;
temp1=w;
temp2=r;
w=0;
r=0;
for(addr=0x00;addr<=laddr;)
{
flag=0;
taddr=addr;
for(i=0;i<9;i++)
{ if(i!=8)
data2[i]=get_from_mem(taddr++);
else
code1=get_from_mem(taddr++);
}

for(j=0;j<8;j++)
if(data1[j]!=data2[j])
flag=1;
if(flag==0)
{ if(addr==0x00)
a=2;
else
a=1;
break;
}
else
addr=taddr;
}
w=temp1;
r=temp2;
return a;
}

unsigned char input(unsigned char c)


{
unsigned char count=1,n1,num=0,c1[]={1,10,100};

Department of Electronics 32 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

while(count<=c)
{
while(IN==0);
while(IN==1);
n1=P1;
n1=n1&0x0F;
if(c==1)
break;
else
if(n1<0x0A)
{
if(count==1)
{
num=n1*c1[(c-1)];
count++;
}
else if(count==2)
{
num=num+n1*c1[(c-2)];
count++;
}
else
{
num=num+n1;
count++;
}
}
}
if(c==1)
return n1;
else
return num;
}

void prog()
{
unsigned char k=0,inp;
display(msg3);
display(msg4[k]);
do
{
display(msg4[k]);
inp=input(1);
if(inp==0x0C)
{
if(k==0)

Department of Electronics 33 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

k=4;
else
k--;
}
else if(inp==0x0D)
{
k++;
if(k>4)
k=0;
}
else if(inp==0x0F)
break;
else if(inp==0x0E)
{
switch(k)
{
case 0: settime();
break;
case 1: display(msg11);
nadd=1;
break;
case 2: display(msg12);
nedit=1;
break;
case 3: display(msg5);
ndel=1;
break;
case 4: display(msg17);
transmit();
break;
}
break;
}
}while(inp!=0x0F);
}

void settime()
{
msdelay(80);
XBYTE[10]=0x20;
XBYTE[11]=0x83;
display(msg6);
hr=input(2);
hr=hexbcd(hr);
display(msg7);
min=input(2);
min=hexbcd(min);

Department of Electronics 34 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

display(msg8);
day=input(2);
day=hexbcd(day);
display(msg9);
mnt=input(2);
mnt=hexbcd(mnt);
display(msg10);
yr=input(2);
yr=hexbcd(yr);
XBYTE[0]=0x00;
XBYTE[2]=min;
XBYTE[4]=hr;
XBYTE[7]=day;
XBYTE[8]=mnt;
XBYTE[9]=yr;
XBYTE[11]=0x03;
}

void added()
{
unsigned char i=0,k,taddr;
taddr=laddr;
display(msg13);
k=input(3);
display("Adding");
for(i=0;i<8;i++)
{ send_to_mem(taddr+i,data1[i]);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4); // page write
}
send_to_mem(taddr+8,k);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
display(msg14);
laddr=laddr+0x09;
send_to_mem(0xFD,laddr);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
nadd=0;
}

void edited()
{
unsigned char k,caddr;
display(msg13);
k=input(3);
caddr=addr+0x08;

Department of Electronics 35 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

display("Editing");
send_to_mem(caddr,k);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
display(msg15);
nedit=0;
}

void del()
{
unsigned char i=0,taddr;
taddr=addr;
send_to_mem(taddr,0xFF);
for(i=1;i<7;i++) // page write
send_byte_s_eeprom(0xFF);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
send_to_mem(taddr+7,0xFF);
send_byte_s_eeprom(0xFF);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
display(msg19);
ndel=0;
}

void senddetails()
{
if(w<4)
{
start_s_eeprom();
send_byte_s_eeprom(dwaddr[w]);
send_byte_s_eeprom(l2addr);
send_byte_s_eeprom(code1);
send_byte_s_eeprom(hr);
send_byte_s_eeprom(min);
send_byte_s_eeprom(day);
send_byte_s_eeprom(mnt);
send_byte_s_eeprom(yr);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
l2addr+=7;
if(l2addr==0xFC)
{
w+=1;
if(w==4)
l2addr=0xFC;

Department of Electronics 36 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

else
l2addr=0x00;
}
send_to_mem(0xFE,w);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);
send_to_mem(0xFF,l2addr);
stop_s_eeprom();
msdelay(4);

}
else
display(msg16);
}

void transmit()
{
unsigned char i,num,temp,addr2=0x00;
choice=1;
temp=w;
if(temp==4)
temp--;
w=1;
r=1;
do
{
serial('@');
for(i=0;i<7;i++)
{
num=get_from_mem(addr2++);
if(i==0)
hexascii(num);
else
bcdascii(num);
}
serial('#');
msdelay(4);
if(w==temp)
if(addr2>=l2addr)
break;
if(addr2==0xFC)
{
w+=1;
r+=1;
addr2=0x00;
}
}while(w<=temp);

Department of Electronics 37 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

choice=0;
display(msg18);
if(input(1)==0x0E)
{
l2addr=0x00;
w=1;
r=1;
display(msg19);
}
}

void serial(unsigned char n)


{
SBUF=n;
while(TI==0);
TI=0;
}

void send_to_mem(unsigned char s_address,unsigned char s_data)


{
start_s_eeprom();
send_byte_s_eeprom(0XA0);
send_byte_s_eeprom(s_address);
send_byte_s_eeprom(s_data);
// stop_s_eeprom();
}

unsigned char get_from_mem(unsigned char s_address)


{
unsigned char i = 0;
//-------dummy write seq----+ word address------------------------------------

start_s_eeprom();
send_byte_s_eeprom(dwaddr[w]);
send_byte_s_eeprom(s_address);

//----------------dummy over----------------------------------------------------

start_s_eeprom();
send_byte_s_eeprom(draddr[r]);
i = get_byte_s_eeprom();
stop_s_eeprom();
return(i);
}
void send_byte_s_eeprom(unsigned char s_byte)
{
unsigned char temp = s_byte;

Department of Electronics 38 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

unsigned char i,j;

for(i = 8 ; i > 0 ; i--)


{
j=i-1;
temp = s_byte;
temp = temp >> j;
temp = temp & 0X01;

if(temp == 0)
sda = 0;
else
sda = 1;
sclk = 1;
nop();
nop();
nop();
sclk = 0;
}

sda = 1;
nop();
sclk = 1;
nop();
nop();
nop();
sclk = 0;
}

unsigned char get_byte_s_eeprom()


{
unsigned char temp, temp_h, i,j;
temp = 0;
temp_h = 1;
sda = 1;
for(i = 8; i >0 ; i--)
{
j=i-1;
sclk =0;
nop();
nop();
nop();
nop();
sclk = 1;
if(sda == 1)
temp = temp | temp_h<<j ;
}

Department of Electronics 39 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

sclk = 0;
return(temp);
}

void start_s_eeprom()
{
sda = 1;
sclk = 1;
nop();
nop();
nop();
sda = 0;
nop();
nop();
nop();
sclk = 0;
}

void stop_s_eeprom()
{
sda = 0;
nop();
nop();
nop();

sclk = 1;

nop();
nop();
nop();

sda = 1;
}

Department of Electronics 40 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

FABRICATION OF PCB
Making a Printed Circuit Board is the first step towards building electronic
equipment by any electronic industry. We should keep in mind that quality
of soldering affects the quality of the output. The procedure for fabricating
the PCB for setting up the circuit of any multipurpose project is described
below.

PCB Making:

The making of PCB is as much as art on a technique particularly so when


they are to fabricated in very small numbers. There are several ways of
drawing PCB patterns and making the final boards.

The making of PCB essentially involves two steps:

1. Preparing PCB drawing

2. Fabricating PCB from the drawing

The traditional method of drawing with complete placement of parts,


taking a photographic negative of the drawing, developing the image of the
negative formed on photo sensitized copper plate and dissolving the excess
copper by etching is a standard practice being followed by large scale
operations. However for small-scale operations, where large numbers of
copies are not required, the cost saving method presented here may be
adopted.

PCB Drawing:

Making of PCB drawing involves placement of components, locating


holes, optimum area each component should occupy shape and size of pads
for the components, track size and spacing and prevention of overcrowding
of components at a particular area. With these details the sketch of the
PCB is made. For anchoring leads of component 1mm diameter holes and
for fixing PCB holding screws to the 3mm holes diameter can be made.
Following these hints, a sketch of PCB is made.

PCB Fabrication:

Department of Electronics 41 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

The fabrication of the PCB starts by transferring the PCB drawing onto a
copper clad sheet. For a small number of PCB, a direct photographic
transfer of the PCB drawing from a negative image of the drawing to a
photo sensitized copper clad sheet is carried out. The copper from the
unexposed area is later etched away. For large quantity production, screen
printing method is used to transfer the PCB drawing image to the copper
clad sheet. For etching the copper clad sheet 20-30grms of ferric chloride
75ml of water heated to about 60degree Celsius may be used . The copper
clad sheet is placed in the solution with its copper side upwards in a plastic
tray. Stirring the solution helps in speedy etching. The dissolution of
unwanted copper would take about 45min. If etching takes longer, the
solution may be heated again and the process is repeated. The paint on the
pattern can be removed by rubbing with a rag soaked in thinner, turpentine
or acetone. The PCB can then be washed and dried.

The pads are drilled with proper drill sizes of 0.9mm, 1mm, 3mm etc for
the leads and mounting holes.

Department of Electronics 42 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 6

MERITS AND DEMERITS

Advantages

• Unauthorized attendance can be avoided.

• Easy to verify the attendances over a long period of time.

• Promiscuity of tags.
• Non-contact and non-line-of-sight.

• Space consumption can be reduced to a greater extent.

• No need to connect this system to a P.C always.

Disadvantages

• Identity theft.

• System affected by metal interference.

• Very little power available to digital portion of the IC, limited functionality.

• Lack of standards and protocols

Department of Electronics 43 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 7

FUTURE ENHANCEMENT

Protocols may be rolled out which make tags obstinate to power interruption
and fault induction. Power loss graceful recovery of tags can be implemented. Research
works could be conducted on smart cards and other embedded systems. Many
multitudes of labour can be done associating low cost hardware . Improved memory
storage can make it possible to mark the attendances of a large group of people, without
connecting to the system. By using active tags or using high frequency RFID readers,
the range can be increased.

Department of Electronics 44 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

APPENDIX

Department of Electronics 45 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

AT89C52

Features
• Compatible with MCS-51™ Products
• 8K Bytes of In-System Reprogrammable Flash Memory
• Endurance: 1,000 Write/Erase Cycles
• Fully Static Operation: 0 Hz to 24 MHz
• Three-level Program Memory Lock
• 256 x 8-bit Internal RAM
• 32 Programmable I/O Lines
• Three 16-bit Timer/Counters
• Eight Interrupt Sources
• Programmable Serial Channel
• Low-power Idle and Power-down Modes

Description

The AT89C52 is a low-power, high-performance CMOS 8-bit


microcomputer with 8K bytes of Flash programmable and erasable read only
memory (PEROM). The device is manufactured using Atmel’s high-density
nonvolatile memory technology and is compatible with the industry-standard
80C51 and 80C52 instruction set and pinout. The on-chip Flash allows the
program memory to be reprogrammed in-system or by a conventional
nonvolatile memory programmer.

Department of Electronics 46 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Absolute Maximum Ratings

Operating Temperature.......................................... -55°C to +125°C


Storage Temperature ............................................. -65°C to +150°C
Voltage on Any Pin with Respect to Ground .........-1.0V to +7.0V
Maximum Operating Voltage .................................. 6.6V
DC Output Current................................................... 15.0 mA

DC CHARACTERISTICS

Department of Electronics 47 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

External Program and Data Memory Characteristics

74C922- 16 KEY ENCODER


These CMOS key encoders provide all the necessary logic to fully encode
an array of SPST switches. The keyboard scan can be implemented by either an
external clock or external capacitor. These encoders also have on-chip pullup
devices which permit switches with up to 50 kX on resistance to be used. No
diodes in the switch array are needed to eliminate ghost switches. The internal
debounce circuit needs only a single external capacitor and can be defeated by
omitting the capacitor. A Data Available output goes to a high level when a valid
keyboard entry has been made. The
Data Available output returns to a low level when the entered key is released,
even if another key is depressed. The Data Available will return high to indicate
acceptance of the new key after a normal debounce period; this two-key rollover

Department of Electronics 48 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

is provided between any two switches. An internal register remembers the last
key pressed even after the key is released. The TRI-STATEÉ outputs provide for
easy expansion and bus operation and are LPTTL compatible.

Features
• 50 kX maximum switch on resistance
• On or off chip clock
• On-chip row pull-up devices
• 2 key roll-over
• Keybounce elimination with single capacitor
• Last key register at outputs
• TRI-STATE outpust LPTTL compatible
• Wide supply range 3V to 15V
• Low power consumption

Department of Electronics 49 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

DC Electrical characteristics

Department of Electronics 50 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Department of Electronics 51 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

EEPROM 24C08
Features
• Low-voltage and Standard-voltage Operation
–2.7 (VCC = 2.7V to 5.5V)
– 1.8 (VCC = 1.8V to 5.5V)
• Internally Organized 128 x 8 (1K), 256 x 8 (2K), 512 x 8 (4K), 1024 x 8 (8K )
or 2048 x 8 (16K)
• 2-wire Serial Interface
• Schmitt Trigger, Filtered Inputs for Noise Suppression
• Bi-directional Data Transfer Protocol
• 100 kHz (1.8V) and 400 kHz (2.5V, 2.7V, 5V) Compatibility
• Write Protect Pin for Hardware Data Protection
• 8-byte Page (1K, 2K), 16-byte Page (4K, 8K, 16K) Write Modes
• Partial Page Writes are Allowed
• Self-timed Write Cycle (5 ms max)
• High-reliability
– Endurance: 1 Million Write Cycles
– Data Retention: 100 Years
• Automotive Grade, Extended Temperature and Lead-free/Halogen-free
Devices
Available
• 8-lead PDIP, 8-lead JEDEC SOIC, 8-lead MAP, 5-lead SOT23,
8-lead TSSOP and 8-ball dBGA2™ Packages

Absolute Maximum Ratings


Operating Temperature...................................... -55° C to +125°C
Storage Temperature ......................................... -65° C to +150°C
Voltage on Any Pin with Respect to Ground ...-1.0V to +7.0V
Maximum Operating Voltage ............................ 6.25V
DC Output Current............................................. 5.0 mA

Department of Electronics 52 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Real time clock DS12887


FEATURES
• Drop-in replacement for IBM AT computer clock/calendar
• Pin compatible with the MC146818B and DS1287
• Totally nonvolatile with over 10 years of operation in the absence of
power
• Self-contained subsystem includes lithium, quartz, and support circuitry.

Department of Electronics 53 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

• Counts seconds, minutes, hours, days, day of the week, date, month, and
year with leap year compensation valid up to 2100
• Binary or BCD representation of time, calendar, and alarm
• 12– or 24–hour clock with AM and PM in 12–hour mode
• Daylight Savings Time option
• Selectable between Motorola and Intel bus timing
• Multiplex bus for pin efficiency
• Interfaced with software as 128 RAM locations
• 15 bytes of clock and control registers
• 113 bytes of general purpose RAM
• Programmable square wave output signal
• Bus–compatible interrupt signals (IRQ)
• Three interrupts are separately software maskable and testable
• Time–of–day alarm once/second to once/day
• Periodic rates from 122 ms to 500 ms
• End of clock update cycle
• Century register

Department of Electronics 54 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Department of Electronics 55 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

RFID READER


Features
• Selectable UART or Wigand26

Department of Electronics 56 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

• Plug-and-Play, needs +5V to become a reader


• No repeat reads
• LED/Beeper indicates tag reading operation
• Excellent read performance without an external circuit
• Compact size and cost-effective
• A very efficient module for portable readers.

Pin description

Department of Electronics 57 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Applications of LF DT125R Series


Applications of the RFID OEM LF DT125R Reader Module are limited
by the imagination of the designer because of the compact form factor and low
power consumption. Some of the common applications for this module are:
• Access control
• Handheld readers
• Asset management
• Time and Attendance
• Immobilizers

LCD DISPLAY
Absolute Maximum Ratings

Department of Electronics 58 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

Electrical Characteristics

PIN Description

Department of Electronics 59 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

CHAPTER 8

CONCLUSION

The project RFID based attendance system has been completed and
working has been observed. RFID tag shown over the reader identifies the
person and the code can be entered by the use of keypad. The ID number and
related details are sent to the computer . RFID module comprising of a RFID
Reader and a RF Tag avails an easy implementation option and is a far less
tedious bid. It is a simple method and is reliable. Saving attendance in a
computer allows easy verification and longer record keeping.

Department of Electronics 60 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom
Project 2011 RFID
Based Attendance System

REFERENCES

1. The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems (Second Edition) by


Muhhammad Ali Mazidi, Janice Gillispie Mazidi, Rolin D McKinlay

2. Electric and Electronics Measurement and Instrumentation (Fourth


edition), A.K.Sawhney
3. Kenneth J Ayala, “The 8051 Microcontroller”, Pearson Education.
4. Muhammad Ali Mazzidi, “The 8051 Microcontroller Architecture,
programming and applications”, J.B. Gupta , “Electronic Devices And
Circuits”
5. www.dallas.com

6. www.cornell.com

7. www.electronics4u.com

8. www.datasheet4u.com

Department of Electronics 61 Govt.Polytechnic


College,Nattakom

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi