Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology has been slow to materialize. However, these applications have numerous economic interests: automation of real-time traceability, effective logistics management, and efficient antitheft system integrated into the supply chain and the authentication system to fight against counterfeiting. The major advantage is that all of the information is carried by a single RFID tag. The mounting techniques currently being used are presented, as well as their cost of production and their relevance to market demands. Reference is made to the reasons which may explain the delay in the adoption of RFID and the research areas encouraging its growth.
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Read the articleAUTHOR
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Yannick GRASSET: ESIEE engineer - Technical Director and President RFIDeal
INTRODUCTION
Numerous market studies predict very large, even incredible, business volumes for RFID technology applications.
However, RFID applications have been slow to be deployed on a large scale, despite the many economic benefits provided by the services rendered by the technology:
Automated, real-time traceability versus loss of information or difficulties in acquiring this information, for production or product distribution, for example;
Controlled logistics, versus lack of visibility of product circulation, leading to a need for overstocking to compensate for possible "line losses";
Efficient anti-theft system integrated very early in the value chain, versus anti-theft system installed at the end distributor and not valued throughout the distribution chain;
Authentication system to combat counterfeiting...
all of which can be achieved by a single element: an RFID tag.
Yet many applications today require the use of RFID technology: air transport, for example, which handles around 1.5 billion pieces of luggage a year, suffers from an incomplete read rate, resulting in the loss of 25 million pieces of luggage a year, and a cost of around $2 billion a year for airlines. But how can 1.5 billion tags be produced tomorrow, when the total market in 2010 represented some 4 to 5 billion units? Can the market absorb growth of nearly 35% on a single application, and what's more, on an application for which one of the dominant criteria is price?
The cost of RFID tags currently seems too high for some applications to take the plunge, but is this really the only reason for the delay?
Isn't the mismatch between production capacity and the announced size of markets also a factor that is disrupting the adoption of RFID technologies?
Lower RFID tag prices are a key factor in the technology's success, but are they enough?
Are production volumes adapted to the size of existing and future markets (represented by new applications)?
In this article, we present the assembly techniques currently in use, and their suitability for market requirements. We will also take a look at the research avenues available to promote the deployment of RFID.
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Mounting passive RFID tags
Bibliography
Standards and norms
- Identification cards – Contactless integrated circuit cards – Proximity cards (13.56 MHz operating frequency). - ISO/CEI 14443 - 03.2008
- Identification cards – Contactless integrated circuit cards – Neighborhood maps (13.56 MHz operating frequency). - ISO/CEI 15693 - 10.2010
- Information Technology – Radio frequency identification (RFID) for object management – Part 3: 13.56 MHz air interface communications...
Websites
RFID label and inlay manufacturers
Alien Technology: http://www.alientechnology.com/
ASK : http://www.ask.rfid.com/
Avery Dennison: http://www.averydennison.com/
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