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Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Tag

The RFID tags and RFID handheld reader used by Piping Technology & Products, Inc. at the Bechtel Red Hills Power Plant.

Piping Technology & Products, Inc. shipped approximately 150 pipe supports to Bechtel Red Hills Power Plant project for the RFID pilot application. The material shown here arrived from PT&P's manufacturing facility in Houston, Texas with an RFID tag affixed to each pipe support assembly.

The Need

For the receipt and tracking of pipe supports material at construction jobsites, the proprietary electronic identification tags, RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) was designed and manufactured by SAT Corporation. With Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology, no line of sight or direct contact is required between the reader and the tag. Since RFID does not rely on optics, it is ideal for dirty, oily, wet or harsh environments. RFID is an automatic identification technology, similar to bar code technology, with positive identification and automatic data transfer between a tagged object and a reader. Since the RFID tags are read by low wattage radio waves, instead of light waves (as with bar-codes) they will communicate through non-metallic materials such as paint, plastic, grease, and dirt, and are impervious to vibration, light, water, and heat up to 100 degrees C in most cases.

The Technology

A RFID system consist of two major components (reader and the tag) which work together to provide the user with a non-contact solution to uniquely identify people, assets, and locations. The reader performs several functions, one of which is to produce a low-level radio frequency magnetic field. The RF magnetic field services as a "carrier" of power from the reader to the passive (no battery required) RFID tag. When a tag is brought into the magnetic field produced by the reader, the recovered energy powers the integrated circuit in the tag, and the memory contents are transmitted back to the reader. Once the reader has checked for errors and validated the received data, the data is decoded and restructured for transmission to a user in the format required by the host computer system. The RFID tags used were both readable and writable. This capability enables information to be written back to the tag for enhanced asset management. RFID tags do not require a line of sight for identification and readability is not affected by bright lighting situations.

The Benefits

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags provide for error-free data gathering.

Status

The RFID-Pipe Supports project is being led by Dr. Ed Jaselskis of Iowa State University and is being conducted and sponsored in conjunction with the Construction Industry Institute (CII). Piping Technology & Products, Inc., in conjunction with the Construction Industry Institute (CII), Bechtel Corp. and SAT Corp. has completed the first pilot test of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology on Feb. 18, 2000 in Houston, TX, USA.

Barriers

Points of Contact

Refrences

  1. SAT Corporation. http://www.sat-corp.com
  2. Piping Technology & Products, Inc.
  3. Proceedings - Construction Industry Institute 2000 Annual Conference

Disclaimer Statement

Neither the Construction Industry Institute nor Purdue University in any way endorses this technology or represents that the information presented can be relied upon without further investigation.

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