Nano-based RFID tags may soon make long lines at store checkouts history
Saturday - Mar 20, 2010, 05:46pm (GMT+5.5)
Washington, Mar 20 (ANI): Those never-ending lines at store checkouts could soon be history, thanks to radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags printed through a new roll-to-roll process that could replace bar codes and make checking out of a store a snap.
Rice University researchers, in collaboration with a team led by Gyou-jin Cho at Sunchon National University in Korea, have come up with an inexpensive, printable transmitter that can be invisibly embedded in packaging.
It would allow a customer to walk a cart full of groceries or other goods past a scanner on the way to the car; the scanner would read all items in the cart at once, total them up and charge the customer's account while adjusting the store's inventory.
More advanced versions could collect all the information about the contents of a store in an instant, letting a retailer know where every package is at any time.
The technology is based on a carbon-nanotube-infused ink for ink-jet printers first developed in the Rice lab of James Tour. The ink is used to make thin-film transistors, a key element in RFID tags that can be printed on paper or plastic.
"We are going to a society where RFID is a key player," said Cho.
The researchers are developing the electronics as well as the roll-to-roll printing process that will bring the cost of printing the tags down to a penny apiece and make them ubiquitous, he said.
Already, RFID tags are almost everywhere-the tiny electronic transmitters are used to identify and track products and farm animals. They're in passports, library books and devices that let drivers pass through tollbooths without digging for change.
The researchers described a three-step process to print one-bit tags, including the antenna, electrodes and dielectric layers, on plastic foil.
They are now working on 16-bit tags that would hold a more practical amount of information and be printable on paper as well.
Printable RFIDs are practical because they're passive. The tags power up when hit by radio waves at the right frequency and return the information they contain.
The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices. (ANI)
| Other Articles: |
 |
Why we tend to be nice with strangers (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Indian military experts develop grenade using world's hottest chilli (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Key mechanism that guides cells to form heart tissue identified (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Moon smash-up may have created new Jupiter ring (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
There were 18,500 humans in the world 1.2 million years ago (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
How transcendental meditation can prevent war and terrorism (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
World's oldest temple found in Turkey (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Moon may have bucketloads of water! (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Stem cells used to rebuild 10-year-old Brit boy's windpipe (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Stiff skin syndrome causes found (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Pretty girls increase risky behaviour in young men (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Fossilized feces reveal monster croc could take down large dinos 79 mln yrs ago (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Even pre-human ancestors cried while cutting onions (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Bangladesh shuts three phone operators for illegal telephony (20th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Mysterious 'dark flow' might be tug of another Universe (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Scientists turns mosquito into 'flying vaccinator' (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
India and China need to team up to deal with environmental problems (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Saturn may have oxygen atmosphere, reveals Cassini's latest snapshot (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Brain receptor behind learning deficits post-puberty identified (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Songbirds offer insight into human speech production (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Recognising sensual sounds is culture specific (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
NASA mission prepares for study of arctic glaciers (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Blocking protein may prevent smoke-induced lung damage (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Velociraptor's closest cousin discovered by scientists (19th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Sperm of ants battle inside the queens (19th Mar, 2010) |
|