TY - JOUR
T1 - Embedded devices for supply chain applications
T2 - Towards hardware integration of disparate technologies
AU - Musa, Ahmed
AU - Gunasekaran, Angappa
AU - Yusuf, Yahaya
AU - Abdelazim, Abdelrahman
N1 - Funding Information:
Texas Instruments CC430F5137 chip was used as the RFID terminal. The chip belongs to a family of ultra-low-power microcontroller systems-on-chip (SsoC) with integrated RF transceiver cores. The main advantages of this chip include: support for Dash7 bandwidth 433 MHz; it has a large flash memory (32 KB), which is capable of holding OpenTag library along with the customized program; it has many general purpose ports for communication with the main microprocessor; and the ports can work in UART mode. The chip must be configured before it starts to work within the embedded device. The configuration includes setting up the RF transmission mode and deploying the OpenTag and the customised program. The configuration was done by direct connection between the chip and a PC. The chip was connected to the main microprocessor by one of its general purpose ports (ports P1 and P5). The communication method was by UART, which is supported by both the chip and the microprocessor. The chip costs 5 British pounds.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - The emergence of the RFID technology and its application to supply chain processes has in particular led to the creation of such standards as the EPCglobal's model of supply networks as a tool for materializing intra- and inter-enterprise visibility of resources and products, collaboration and integration. Among other critical uses, RFID has been deployed by supply networks to improve asset utilization, effectively combat counterfeiting, and advance targeted product recalls. However, new affordable and deployable technologies and microsensors have recently appeared and keep maturing. This paper discusses the needs and the possibilities that exist for leveraging these technologies and sensors with RFID to guarantee continuous and seamless visibility of all assets (fixed and mobile resources and field personnel) of smart enterprises, thereby expanding and complementing the roles of RFID. It examines the design challenges for the integration of these technologies for advanced logistics operations at the level of product classes or their instances. It then outlines our development of an embedded microsystem that combines RFID, GPRS, GPS and environmental sensors for applications in logistics. The prototyped microsystem demonstrated the feasibility of the multi-sensor integration paradigm that the paper proposes.
AB - The emergence of the RFID technology and its application to supply chain processes has in particular led to the creation of such standards as the EPCglobal's model of supply networks as a tool for materializing intra- and inter-enterprise visibility of resources and products, collaboration and integration. Among other critical uses, RFID has been deployed by supply networks to improve asset utilization, effectively combat counterfeiting, and advance targeted product recalls. However, new affordable and deployable technologies and microsensors have recently appeared and keep maturing. This paper discusses the needs and the possibilities that exist for leveraging these technologies and sensors with RFID to guarantee continuous and seamless visibility of all assets (fixed and mobile resources and field personnel) of smart enterprises, thereby expanding and complementing the roles of RFID. It examines the design challenges for the integration of these technologies for advanced logistics operations at the level of product classes or their instances. It then outlines our development of an embedded microsystem that combines RFID, GPRS, GPS and environmental sensors for applications in logistics. The prototyped microsystem demonstrated the feasibility of the multi-sensor integration paradigm that the paper proposes.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84885175688
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84885175688#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1016/j.eswa.2013.07.017
DO - 10.1016/j.eswa.2013.07.017
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84885175688
SN - 0957-4174
VL - 41
SP - 137
EP - 155
JO - Expert Systems With Applications
JF - Expert Systems With Applications
IS - 1
ER -