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Scientific News Instruments Domestic electric appliances BETTER THAN BARCODES
BETTER THAN BARCODES
That bar code on your cereal box holds
information read by a laser scanner. It's not much information, but it's enough
to let the supermarket take your money, keep track of inventory, follow trends
in customer preference, and restock its shelves. Scanners and bar codes speed up
checkout, but they've got a few limitations. The scanning laser needs a direct
line of sight to the bar code, and the bar code itself needs to be reasonably
clean and undamaged – one reason your cashier might have to swipe that bag of
spuds four or five times before the scanner reads it.
Now there's something better, and it comes out of
an Office of Naval Research program that goes back four decades. Very small
electric crystal chips can now be embedded into products to provide up to 96
bits of information when they're read by an electromagnetic scanner. (That's
roughly 6 times as much as bar codes hold. It also meets the new industry
standard developed by the MIT-led Auto-ID Center.) These new radio-frequency
scanners, unlike the optical ones in most supermarkets today, can read the chip
whether they have direct line-of-sight to it or not. And dirt? Ordinary dirt
matters not at all.
The chips themselves are so small (less than an
inch long with the antenna attached, and only about as thick as a pencil lead)
and so simple that they don't need a power source--it all comes from the
scanner. The new chips store enough information to uniquely tag just about every
individual manufactured item. In effect, the scanner reads not only the category
and model number, but a serial number for the particular item that bears the
tag. The tags can be used for all kinds of marking, supply, tracking, inventory
management, and logistical tasks. Imagine checking out by just pushing your cart
through the supermarket's door--that's one of the new possibilities some major
retailers are looking at.
From 1962 to 1976, the Office of Naval Research
(ONR) sponsored development of "surface acoustic wave (SAW)
technology" for filters in electromagnetic systems, electronic warfare
surveillance devices, color TV receivers, and other devices of use to the Navy
and Marine Corps. The original work was performed at Texas Instruments by
Clinton Hartman and Lew Clairborne, who have since spun the technology off into
their Texas-based company, RF SAW, Inc.
Just another example of better living through
(Navy-sponsored) science.
###
For more information on the technology, or
to interview those scientists involved in SAW research, please contact John
Petrik or Gail Cleere at 703-696-5031, or email petrikj@onr.navy.mil
or cleereg@onr.navy.mil
Contact: cleereg@onr.navy.mil,
703-696-4987, Office
of Naval Research
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Office
of Naval Research
Publishing date: August 20, 2002
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