Overview of RFID Glass Tag / RFID Animal Pet Microchip
Pet microchip glass tube m have been developed for subcutaneous injection, which is widely used for small animal identification. This glass tag can be used to identify any pet like cat, dog, furret, horse, fish and exotic animal. All products conform to ISO standards and are available with parylene coating to prevent migration of the tag once implanted.
1.25*7mm now is smallest sized pet microchip, widely used for tagging fish, mice, etc such very small animals; while 2x12mm is the common sized and popularly used on the market for dog, cat, horse, etc.
Specification of RFID Animal/ Pet Microchip
Type |
RFID Animal Glass Tag |
Material |
Glass and copper wire chip |
Protocol standard |
ISO11784 / ISO11785, ISO 14443A |
Operating frequency |
125Khz /1 34.2Khz/13.56Mhz |
Chip characteristics |
EM4305/TK4100 |
Available Size |
12x2mm, 8x2mm, 8x1.4mm, 7x1.25mm,( 13x5mm,22*4mm for industrial use) |
Reading range |
about 1- 5cm (Depending on reader) |
Antenna meterial |
RFID coil antenna |
Craft |
ID number programming |
Period of validity |
10years |
Injection material |
polypropylene |
Packing manner |
with or without syringe |
Bar code span if need |
Contains six adhsive-sticker one-dimensional bar code spans |
Pictures of Animal ID Responder
Q: What is Microchip?
A: A microchip implant is an identifying integrated circuit placed under the skin of an animal. The chip, about the size of a large grain of rice, uses passive RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) technology, and is also known as a PIT (Passive Integrated Transponder) tag.
Q:Why is animal microchip so popular? Where it is used for ?
Animal shelters, animal control officers and veterinarians routinely look for microchips to return lost pets quickly to their owners, avoiding expenses for housing, food, medical care, outplacing and euthanasia. Many shelters place chips in all outplaced animals.
Microchips are also used by kennels, breeders, brokers, trainers, registries, rescue groups, humane societies, clinics, farms, stables, animal clubs and associations, researchers, and pet stores.
Q: How to use microchip for pet tracking?
A: An enrollment form is completed with chip ID, owner contact information, pet name and description, shelter and/or veterinarian contact information, and an alternate emergency contact designated by the pet owner. etc. The form is sent to a registry, who may be the chip manufacturer, distributor or an independent entity such as a pet recovery service. Some countries have a single official national database.
Q: How does pet microchip work?
A: A microchip implant is a passive RFID device. Lacking an internal power source, it remains inert until it is powered by the scanner.
Most implants contain three elements: a 'chip' or integrated circuit; a coil inductor, possibly with a ferrite core; and a capacitor. The chip contains unique identification data and electronic circuits to encode that information. The coil acts as the secondary winding of a transformer, receiving power inductively coupled to it from the scanner. The coil and capacitor together form a resonant LC circuit tuned to the frequency of the scanner's oscillating magnetic field to produce power for the chip. The chip then transmits its data back through the coil to the scanner.These components are encased in biocompatible soda lime or borosilicate glass and hermetically sealed. Barring rare complications, dogs and cats are unaffected by them.
Q: Does microchip come with a syringe or injector?
A: Yes. You could buy independent microchip or microchip with syringe pack.
We also have microchip with needles, which will be given reusable syringe for free.
Q: What is the delivery time of microchip implant?
A: Usually, it need 3-15 working days for delivery.