The receiver circuit in Figure 1 sounds an audio alarm when the  transmitter (Figure 2) moves beyond a designated perimeter. The  transmitter, a voltage-controlled oscillator, operates at approximately  915 MHz in the unlicensed ISM (industrial/scientific/medical) band. It  has a tuning voltage of 1.5V=3×R2/(R1+R2), which lets you easily adjust  the frequency by varying the values of resistors R1 and R2.
The receiver comprises low-noise amplifier IC1, power detector IC2,  comparator IC3, and a buzzer. When the transmitter is within range—for  example, when a child or a pet is carrying it—the receiver detects the  RF signal and provides a voltage greater than 400 mV at the inverting  terminal of the comparator. Resistors R9 and R10 preset the reference  voltage at the comparator’s noninverting terminal. The reference voltage  is 3×R10/(R9+R10), and the comparator’s output remains low.
Circuit keeps wandering children and pets nearby figure 2When the  transmitter moves outside the predetermined boundary, the detected RF  produces less than 400 mV at the comparator. The comparator then  generates an output of approximately 3V, which turns on the buzzer and  sounds an alert that the transmitter has moved beyond the restricted  perimeter. To increase the detection range, you can place additional  low-noise amplifiers or VGAs (variable-gain amplifiers) in front of the  power detector. You can also increase or decrease the desired perimeter  by adjusting R10 to change the comparator’s reference voltage. Link 



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