(Press-News.org) Contact information: Sarah Collins
sarah.collins@admin.cam.ac.uk
44-012-233-32300
University of Cambridge
Near error-free wireless detection made possible
The accuracy and range of radio frequency identification (RFID) systems, which are used in everything from passports to luggage tracking, could be vastly improved thanks to a new system developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge.
The vastly increased range and accuracy of the system opens up a wide range of potential monitoring applications, including support for the sick and elderly, real-time environmental monitoring in areas prone to natural disasters, or paying for goods without the need for conventional checkouts.
The new system improves the accuracy of passive (battery-less) RFID tag detection from roughly 50 per cent to near 100 per cent, and increases the reliable detection range from two to three metres to approximately 20 metres. The results are outlined in the journal IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation.
RFID is a widely-used wireless sensing technology which uses radio waves to identify an object in the form of a serial number. The technology is used for applications such as baggage handling in airports, access badges, inventory control and document tracking.
RFID systems are comprised of a reader and a tag, and unlike conventional bar codes, the reader does not need to be in line of sight with the tag in order to detect it, meaning that tags can be embedded inside an object, and that many tags can be detected at once. Additionally, the tags require no internal energy source or maintenance, as they get their power from the radio waves interrogating them.
"Conventional passive UHF RFID systems typically offer a lower useful read range than this new solution, as well as lower detection reliability," said Dr Sithamparanathan Sabesan of the Centre for Photonic Systems in the Department of Engineering. "Tag detection accuracy usually degrades at a distance of about two to three metres, and interrogating signals can be cancelled due to reflections, leading to dead spots within the radio environment."
Several other methods of improving passive RFID coverage have been developed, but they do not address the issues of dead spots.
However, by using a distributed antenna system (DAS) of the type commonly used to improve wireless communications within a building, Dr Sabesan and Dr Michael Crisp, along with Professors Richard Penty and Ian White, were able achieve a massive increase in RFID range and accuracy.
By multicasting the RFID signals over a number of transmitting antennas, the researchers were able to dynamically move the dead spots to achieve an effectively error-free system. Using four transmitting and receiving antenna pairs, the team were able to reduce the number of dead spots in the system from nearly 50 per cent to zero per cent over a 20 by 15 metre area.
In addition, the new system requires fewer antennas than current technologies. In most of the RFID systems currently in use, the best way to ensure an accurate reading of the tags is to shorten the distance between the antennas and the tags, meaning that many antennas are required to achieve an acceptable accuracy rate. Even so, it is impossible to achieve completely accurate detection. But by using a DAS RFID system to move the location of dead spots away from the tag, an accurate read becomes possible without the need for additional antennas.
The team is currently working to add location functionality to the RFID DAS system which would allow users to see not only which zone a tagged item was located in, but also approximately where it was within that space.
The system, recognised by the award of the 2011 UK RAEng/ERA Innovation Prize, is being commercialised by the Cambridge team. This will allow organisations to inexpensively and effectively monitor RFID tagged items over large areas.
###
The research was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and Boeing.
For more information, contact:
Sarah Collins
Communications Office, University of Cambridge
Tel: +44(0)1223 332300
Mob: +44(0)7500 883612
sarah.collins@admin.cam.ac.uk
Notes for editors:
The paper "Wide Area Passive UHF RFID System using Antenna Diversity Combined with Phase and Frequency Hopping" is published in the journal IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=6657729&searchWithin%3Dsabesan%26sortType%3Dasc_p_Sequence%26filter%3DAND%28p_IS_Number%3A4907023%29
Near error-free wireless detection made possible
2014-01-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Insulin-producing beta cells from stem cells
2014-01-23
The findings of the scientists of the Institute of Diabetes and Regeneration Research ...
Choose your love
2014-01-23
To test whether female mate choice enhances the health and disease-resistance of offspring, either through immune resistance, tolerance to infection, ...
Mitochondrial ribosome revealed
2014-01-23
The ribosome can be thought of as a decryption device housed within the cell. It is able to decipher the genetic code, which is delivered in the form of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA), and translate it into ...
New microscopy technique improves imaging at the atomic scale
2014-01-23
When capturing images at the atomic scale, even tiny movements of the sample can result in skewed or distorted images – and those movements are virtually impossible to prevent. Now microscopy ...
Detecting sickness by smell
2014-01-23
Humans are able to smell sickness in someone whose immune system is highly active within just a few hours of exposure to a toxin, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the ...
Interventions work to stem freshman drinking
2014-01-23
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- A new systematic review of data published in more than 40 studies of freshman alcohol interventions finds that there are many effective ways for colleges to mitigate common drinking ...
Fur and feathers keep animals warm by scattering light
2014-01-23
WASHINGTON, Jan. 23—In work that has major implications for improving the ...
Are enough women included in medical device studies, as required by the FDA?
2014-01-23
New Rochelle, NY, January 23, 2013-The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) mandates adequate enrollment of women in post-approval studies (PAS) of medical ...
Practice makes perfect if you have a partner's touch, according to new study
2014-01-23
People improve their performance more when they practise with a partner rather than on their own, according to a new study.
The research could ultimately help people rehabilitating ...
Natural History Museum, London, yields remarkable new beetle specimens from Brazil
2014-01-23
A visit to the Natural History Museum, London, yielded an unexpected surprise for Dr. Joseph Parker, a UK biologist based in New York at Columbia University and the American Museum of Natural History.
Among ...