RFID Solutions
Radio frequency identification (RFID) is a generic term that is used to
describe a system that transmits the identity (in the form of a unique serial number) of an object or person
wirelessly, using radio waves. It's grouped under the broad category of automatic identification
technologies.
Auto-ID technologies include bar codes, optical character readers and some
biometric technologies, such as retinal scans. The auto-ID technologies have been used to reduce the amount of time
and labor needed to input data manually and to improve data accuracy.
Some auto-ID technologies, such as bar code systems, often require a person
to manually scan a label or tag to capture the data. RFID is designed to enable readers to capture data on tags and
transmit it to a computer system—without needing a person to be involved.
A typical RFID tag consists of a microchip attached to a radio antenna mounted on a
substrate. (For more detail and for information about tags that don’t use silicon chips, read “The Basics of
RFID Technology.”) The chip can store as much as 2 kilobytes of data. For example, information about a product
or shipment—date of manufacture, destination and sell-by date—can be written to a tag.
To retrieve the data stored on an RFID tag, you need a reader. A typical
reader is a device that has one or more antennas that emit radio waves and receive signals back from the tag. The
reader then passes the information in digital form to a computer system.
RFID technology has been used by thousands of companies for a decade or
more. (RFID Business Applications spells out some of the ways the technology has been and will be used.) The
technology is not new (see The History of RFID), so why is it taking off now?
Until recently, the cost of RFID has limited its use. For many applications,
such as tracking parts for just-in-time manufacturing, companies could justify the cost of tags—a dollar or more
per tag—by the savings an RFID system could generate. And when RFID was used to track assets or reusable containers
within a company’s own four walls, the tags could be reused.
But for tracking goods in open supply chains, where RFID tags are put on
cases and pallets of products by one company and read by another, cost has been a major obstacle to adoption. Tags
must, in effect, be disposable because the company putting them on cannot recycle them. They get thrown out with
the box. (Tags built into pallets could be reused, and some companies are looking to develop ways to recycle tags
on corrugated cases.)
The Auto-ID Center
In 1999, the Uniform Code Council and EAN International teamed with Gillette and Procter & Gamble to fund the
Auto-ID Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The center changed the equation by working with
private industry to develop an RFID tag that would be very low cost (the goal was five cents) when manufactured in
high volumes. That way, companies could put tags on everything they own and then connect them to the Internet
through a secure network. The center eventual gained the backing of the U.S. Department of Defense and some 100
global companies, including Kimberly-Clark, Metro, Target, Tesco, Unilever, Wal-Mart. These companies were
attracted to RFID because it held out the potential of offering perfect supply chain visibility—the ability to know
the precise location of any product anywhere in the supply chain at any time.
The 5-cent tag is still several years away. Today tags cost from 20 to 40
cents, depending on their features and packaging. (For more on this, see RFID Costs and Components). The Auto-ID
Center's contribution went beyond trying to create an inexpensive tag. It developed the Electronic Product Code
(EPC), a numbering scheme that makes it possible to put a unique serial number on every item manufactured. It
developed a way for tags and readers to communicate (the air interface protocol) and designed a network
infrastructure that stores information in a secure Internet database. A virtually unlimited amount of data
associated with a tag’s serial number can be stored online, and anyone with access privileges can retrieve
it.
The Auto-ID Center handed off its technology to a non-profit organization called EPCglobal,
which has created a second-generation air interface protocol and is developing the network infrastructure —now
called the EPCglobal Network—to enable companies to share data in real time. Here's how it will work. When Company
A ships a pallet full of soft drink, the tags on the cases and pallet are scanned as the shipment leaves, and
software is used to automatically let Company B know the shipment has left the warehouse. Company B can look up
data associated with the serial numbers on the shipment and learn what's coming, when it will arrive and so on.
When Company B receives the shipment, it scans the tags automatically, and a message can be immediately sent to
Company A to let it know the shipment arrived.
The potential efficiencies created by this visibility are enormous. Companies would be able to
reduce inventories while ensuring product is always in the right place at the right time. And because no humans
would have to scan the tags, labor costs and errors would also be greatly reduced.
The grand vision is to ultimately flip the supply chain around. Today, companies make goods
based on a monthly forecast. They then push the goods out into the supply chain and hope they sell. If demand is
greater than they forecast, they lose sales. If it is less than forecast, they have excess goods that are sold at a
loss or thrown away.
It would be much more efficient if goods could be pulled through the supply chain based on real
time demand. RFID readers on shelves would monitor how many products are being sold. They would signal the
backroom when the shelves get low and request more inventory be brought out. When inventory in the backroom
gets low, readers there would signal the warehouse to send more product. When inventory in the warehouse gets
low, readers would signal the manufacturer to send more product. And so on back through the manufacturer's
suppliers.
It's not clear if this vision can ever be fully achieved. The biggest obstacle is the cost of
the tags. The Auto-ID Center did research suggesting the price of tags could fall to 5 cents when 30 billion tags
are consumed annually. But 30 billion tags will never be consumed if the tags cost 25 cents or more. So the
industry faces a chicken-and-egg problem—tags won't get cheap until a lot of people use them, but a lot of people
won't use them until they get cheap.
Wal-Mart was the first retailer to require suppliers to put tags on cases and pallets of goods.
In June 2003, it told its top 100 suppliers that they would need to begin putting tags on shipments in January
2005. One reason Wal-Mart chose this approach was to solve the chicken-and-egg problem. If the giant retailer's top
suppliers began buying tags, that would begin to drive the price down. Lower prices would enable more companies to
use the technology. Then volumes would increase and prices would fall further.
Source: RFID Journal
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Inventory Management |
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Merchandise Control Systems |
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Supply Chain Management |
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Access Control Systems |
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Airline Luggage Management |
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Visibility and Traceability |
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Manufacturing / Operations |
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Defence / Security |
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And many more applications... |
We provide our customers with RFID solutions, from software development to hardware integration. Due to different
industry or company needs and demands, Tandem RFID solutions are often unique and highly customized. Detail
business studies are often conducted to identify areas of improvements, and re-engineer them if necessary to
increase efficiency.
For more info:
Dr.Kushendrata,
Call: +62-811803733
Email:
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