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The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Automatic Identification.

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Presentation on theme: "The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Automatic Identification."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Automatic Identification and Data Capture

2 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Outline n why use automatic identification? n technologies – bar code – cards – radio frequency tags – other n applications

3 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Why AutoID? n identify items n eliminate errors in data collection n speed up data collection n track items n store information about items

4 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros AutoID Technologies n bar codes – 1D (linear) – 2D (stacked or matrix) n cards – magnetic stripe – smart – optical n radio frequency tags n contact memory n voice

5 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros 1D (Linear) Bar Codes n most widely used technology n bars and spaces n may be numeric or alphanumeric n low storage capacity (15-50 characters) n usually used as “license plate” n most used codes: UPC, I-2/5, Code 39, Code 128

6 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros UPC Code n retail applications n numeric, 12 digits n format format – a character has n 2 bars and 2 spaces n 7 modules (bar, space is 1, 2, 3 or 4 modules wide) n dark module = 1, light module = 0 – left and right are different

7 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Interleaved 2 of 5 Code n industrial applications (distribution) n numeric, any even number of digits n format format – start and stop characters are different – a character has n 5 bars or 5 spaces n 2 are wide, 3 are narrow n odd digits are bars, even are spaces

8 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Code 39 (3 of 9) n industrial applications n numeric and upper case alpha, any length n format format – start and stop characters are the same – has intercharacter gap – a character has n 5 bars and 4 spaces n 2 bars and 1 space are wide

9 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Code 128 n industrial applications n full ASCII character set, any length n format format – different start and stop characters – uses a check character for error detection – a character has n 3 bars and 3 spaces n 11 modules total (bar, space is 1, 2, 3, or 4 modules wide)

10 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros 2 Dimensional Barcodes n Portable Data Base n Formats – Stacked – Matrix n PDF417 PDF417 – stacked code – up to 2000 characters – error correction

11 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros 2 D Barcodes (cont.) n Data Matrix Data Matrix – matrix, up to 500 characters, error correction – scaleable down to.001 in square – marking small items – IC’s, single dose meds n Maxicode Maxicode – matrix, 93 characters, error correction – 1 inch square, locating bullseye – package sortation and tracking

12 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Bar Code Readers n handheld or fixed mount n contact wands (pens) – slow, inexpensive n laser scanners – longer distance scanning – fixed or handheld – can read stacked bar codes n image scanners – fixed or handheld – can read stacked bar or matrix codes

13 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Cards n magnetic stripe – low cost – low storage capacity – contact reader – can be rewritten – easily damaged (less easily for high coercivity stripes) n example: credit cards, bank cards

14 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Cards (cont.) n “smart cards” – imbedded microchip n memory only – stored value cards n microprocessor – high storage capacity – can be rewritten – can execute programs n example: some credit cards

15 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Radio Frequency Tags n transponder (tag) is programmed with information n reader has an antenna which sends radio signals to activate tag, read or write it n types of tags – active (has battery) n read and write – passive (activated by reader) – often read-only n noncontact, non line-of-sight

16 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros RFID Applications n railroad cars, commercial trucks n automobiles on assembly lines n parts carriers in hazardous environments n toll collection on highways n theft prevention in retail

17 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Why RFID? n tags can be used in harsh conditions – usually housed in protective packaging n tags can be read over distances greater than 90 feet n tags can be read through snow, grime, cutting fluid, paint, etc. n tags can be read at high speed n more costly than bar code n lack of standardization between manufacturers

18 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Contact Memory n a memory chip in a stainless steel case that resembles a button battery n read by touching the case with a probe n read only or read-write n license plate or portable database n additional capabilities can be built in – real-time clock – temperature sensor – cryptography

19 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Use of Contact Memory n asset tracking n access control n digital cash n maintenance records n store manufacturing history for products

20 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Voice Data Collection n hands free n easy to use n must be “trained” to recognize operator

21 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Some AutoID Applications n Ford Engine plant n Nabisco warehouse n Ryder trucks n Bigwords warehouse n other applications can be found in: – Supply Chain Systems Magazine Supply Chain Systems – Modern Material Handling Magazine Modern Material Handling

22 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Ford Engine Plant n RFID tags: manufacturing info and test data

23 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Ford (continued) n Essex Engine Plant, Windsor Ontario Essex Engine Plant, Windsor Ontario n 700,000 engines/year, 12 varieties n engine work sequence loaded into the tag n each station asks tag for its operations n test data written to tag source: Supply Chain Systems Magazine

24 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Nabisco n order picking in warehouses order picking n picker logs on by voice n system asks for truck number n system speaks SKU and quantity n picker says “got it” to verify pick source: Supply Chain Systems Magazine

25 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Ryder n tracks maintenance records on rental vehicles n stores customer name and odometer reading n stores fueling info n contact memory contact memory

26 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Bigwords.com n college textbook e-tailer college textbook e-tailer n key issues – speedy delivery – order accuracy – peak at start of semester – few weeks source: Supply Chain Systems Magazine

27 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Bigwords.com Order Flow n order taken on web site – if in stock, order transferred to WMS at the DC – else, EDI to publisher, usually ships same day n incoming books scanned, add to inventory n picking – RF terminals – combo pack list/ship label printed – formatted for UPS, USPS, etc. – pickers take “waves” of labels – scan book bar code – place in carton, put label on carton – scan label to confirm order complete

28 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Bigwords.com (cont.) n electronic manifesting system – tracks shipment through package carrier – does verification scan of label n benefits – speed – up to 25,000 orders on a peak day – high order accuracy, 99.9% inventory accuracy

29 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Bigwords.com (cont.) n how? integration of systems

30 The Marcus Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State Facility Layout and Material HandlingD. J. Medeiros Summary n AutoID systems provide many capabilities: – identify and track products – store information about products – allow real-time data collection n Information is a valuable asset n AutoID speeds information flow


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