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RFID Technology

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RFID Technology RFID Technology Mike Arnold Randall Chang Brent Hedberg Lauren Nelson Brad Samples RFID What is it? Acronymn: Radio Frequency Identification ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RFID Technology


1
RFID Technology
RFID Technology
  • Mike Arnold
  • Randall Chang
  • Brent Hedberg
  • Lauren Nelson
  • Brad Samples

2
RFID What is it?
  • Acronymn Radio Frequency Identification Device
  • Holds a small amount of unique data a serial
    number or other unique attributes of the item
  • The data can be read from a distance no contact
    or even line of sight necessary
  • Enables items to be individually tracked from
    manufacture to consumption
  • Many uses Logistics, Military, Pets.

3
RFID History
  • Technology used in RFIDs was first developed in
    the 1920s
  • First used by Soviets in 1945 as an espionage
    tool (passive, covert listening)
  • Similar technology, the IFF transponder, was used
    by the British in WWII to identify airplanes as
    friend or foe
  • A 1948 paper by Harry Stockman first explored the
    vast potential for RFID technology
  • RFID systems did not appear until the 1960s

4
RFID System Components
  • RFID Tag
  • Transponder
  • Located on the object
  • RFID Reader
  • Transceiver
  • Can read and write data to Tag
  • Data Processing Subsystem

5
Transponder
  • Consists of microchip (tag) that stores data and
    antenna
  • Active transponders have on-tag batteries
  • Passive transponders obtain all power from the RF
    interrogation signal of reader
  • Active and passive only communicate when
    interrogated by transceiver

6
Transceiver
  • Consists of an RF module, a control unit, and a
    coupling element to interrogate tags via RF
    communication
  • Also have secondary interface to communicate with
    back-end systems
  • Reads tags located in an external environment and
    are obscured from view

7
Data Processing Subsystem
  • Backend System
  • Connected via high-speed network
  • Computers used for business planning (ERP)
  • Database storage
  • Can be as simple as a reader attached to a cash
    register

8
RFID - Current Uses
  • RFIDs are currently used for
  • Inventory Monitoring
  • Library book and bookstore tracking
  • Pallet tracking (Wal-Mart and the Dept. of
    Defense)
  • Access Control
  • Hand Implants
  • ID badges (Mt. Bachelor ski resort season passes)
  • Payment Systems
  • The American Express Blue Card, a feature they
    call ExpressPay
  • Exxon Mobile SpeedPassAirline baggage tracking
  • Cell phones are including RFID tags built in
  • High-end VIP nightclubs
  • Commercially for truck and trailer tracking in
    shipping yards
  • Long range access control for vehicles
  • Entry gates
  • Electronic toll collection

9
RFID Implants
After implant surgery
Before
10
RFID Potential Future Uses
  • RFID tags are often envisioned as a replacement
    for UPC barcodes in the future
  • Proposed to use RFID for point of sale store
    checkout to replace the cashier with an automatic
    system which needs no barcode scanning
  • Possibility of your refrigerator tracking what
    groceries you are out of, what has gone bad, etc.
    (eg. How old is the milk in the fridge?)
  • Sporting events have readers at the start and
    finish lines
  • Passports

11
Auto-ID Center
  • A non-profit partnership by major software,
    consulting, tag and reader manufacturers and by
    MIT, Cambridge University and Adelaide University
  • All research and solutions publicly available
  • Mission of a global approach to automatic ID of
    every product
  • Developed standards for tags and readers
  • Electronic Product Code (EPC)
  • Has since dissolved and transferred work and
    research to EPCglobal and the Auto-ID Labs at
    University of St. Gallen, Keio University and MIT

12
RFIDs and EPC Systems
  • Electronic Product Codes (EPC)
  • A code electronically recorded on an RFID tag
  • EPC is a 64-bit or 96-bit code
  • Intended to be an improvement on the UPC barcode
    system

13
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14
RFIDs - Active vs. Passive
Active RFID Passive RFID
Tag Power Source Internal to tag Energy transferred using RF from reader
Tag Battery Yes No
Availability of power Continuous Only in field of reader
Required signal strength to read tag Very Low Very High
Range Up to 100 meters Up to 3-5m, usually less
Multi-tag reading 1000s of tags recognized speeds up to 100 miles/hour. Few hundred within 3m of reader
Data Storage Up to 1Mb of read/write with sophisticated search and access 128 bytes of read/write
15
Active RFID Tags
  • Battery Powered tags
  • Have much greater range 100m
  • Hold much more information Kbytes
  • Can integrate sensing technology
  • Temperature, GPS
  • Can signal at defined time
  • Multiple tags can be recorded/read at once
  • Used for higher value items
  • Shipping containers
  • Electronic assets
  • Cost between 20 and 40 per item
  • Life between 2 4 years

16
Passive RFID Tags
  • Traditional tags used in retail security
    applications
  • Tag contains an antenna, and a small chip that
    stores a small amount of data
  • Tag can be programmed at manufacture or on
    installation
  • Tag is powered by the high power electromagnetic
    field generated by the antennas usually in
    doorways
  • The field allows the chip/antenna to reflect back
    an extremely weak signal containing the data
  • Collision Detection recognition of multiple
    tags in the read range is employed to
    separately read the individual tags
  • These passive tags form the basis of the Auto-ID
    designs, and, if manufactured in billions, will
    come down in price from 0.80 to 0.05 in the
    next 2 years.

17
Controversy
  • Consumer privacy advocates often refer to RFIDs
    as spychips
  • RFIDs can be tracked by anyone with a high-gain
    antenna, potentially allowing the contents of a
    home to be scanned at a distance.
  • Could be used to track an individuals movements
    without their knowledge
  • Information about an individual can be gleaned
    from an RFID even after its disposal
  • Three main privacy concerns in a retail scenario
  • Purchaser of item may not be aware of its
    presence
  • Tag can be read at a distance without purchasers
    knowledge
  • May be possible to tie RFID ID to purchasers
    credit card and personal information
  • Julie England, vice president at Texas
    Instruments has stated that the key to success
    is finding this right balance between privacy
    protection and the appropriate use of data.

18
Case Study Wal-Mart
  • Their main interest is in tracking pallets or
    crates containing many items, rather than to tag
    items individually
  • By providing accurate, real-time inventory data,
    RFID has the potential to enhance supply-chain
    efficiency and reduce costs.
  • In general, item-level tagging of consumer goods
    is unlikely to occur for some years.

19
Case Study Wal-Mart
  • First phase of implementation involved its top
    100 suppliers tagging cases and pallets of
    products headed to three Dallas/Fort Worth area
    distribution centers by January 2005.
  • After that, an additional 37 suppliers
    voluntarily asked to meet the same milestone.
  • In the initial test in April, 2004, cases and
    pallets of 21 products from eight suppliers were
    shipped to Wal-Mart's Sanger,Texas distribution
    center and then local Supercenters with RFID tags
    attached.
  • Although Wal-Mart is currently focusing on case
    and pallet tagging, there were three products in
    which the case is also consumer packaging. On the
    outer packaging of these suppliers placed an
    EPCglobal sticker next to the RFID tag to notify
    customers of its existence.

20
Regulation
  • Currently no global body governing RFID frequency
    allocation
  • In Europe, tags must be removed from packaging
    before disposal due to recycling disruptions and
    health regulations
  • There is limited or no regulation of RFIDs for
    the most part leading to more controversy

21
Conclusion
  • RFID technology is rapidly is becoming more
    standardized, but problems do still exist
  • The number of adopters of RFID technology is
    growing
  • Regulation and education is necessary to quell
    some of the fears regarding RFID technology and
    its implications

22
References
  • http//www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/cjs/tech.html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFID
  • http//www.rfidanalysis.org/
  • http//www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jh
    tml?articleID181401622subSectionBreakingNews
  • http//www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/217
    8/1/1/
  • http//www.rsasecurity.com/rsalabs/node.asp?id211
    5
  • http//walmartstores.com/GlobalWMStoresWeb/navigat
    e.do?catg25contId4833
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