Bibliotheca RFID Library Systems, a Switzerland-based maker of RFID products for libraries, is providing the RFID system, including all hardware, software and integration services. The system uses
ISO 15693-compliant tags and readers operating at 13.56 MHz (high frequency). Bibliotheca sources RFID-enabled book labels from
UPM Raflatac and manufactures its own labels for optical media, which have metallic content that often interferes with or prevents RF communication between the
tag and reader (see
Tags for CDs Get a Boost). From
Feig Electronics, Bibliotheca sources the RFID interrogator modules it designs into both its fixed-position and handheld interrogators. It also provides
middleware needed to link the tag data with the library information system (LIS) software used to manage all of the library's circulation and patron accounts.
Thus far, staff at the 10 branches have added RFID tags to about a third of its collection of more than 1 million books, CDs, DVDs and other media, which circulate through the library system as a floating, or shared collection. That means that items are loaned from or returned to any branch rather than being assigned to specific locations. To add a tag to a book, a staff person scans the book's existing
bar code, which calls up its unique call number in the LIS. He then places an RFID label in the book and uses an interrogator to encode it with the call number (linked to the book's title and author name in the LIS database), pulled from the LIS by the Bibliotheca middleware. (The same process is used for CDs and other media, utilizing the optical media tags.) All tags contain an I-Code SLI
chip manufactured by
Philips. To protect the tagged media from being read by an unauthorized party with a 13.56 MHz interrogator, the tag data is encrypted and can be read only by interrogators linked to the library's network.
As the library transitions into using the RFID technology for self-checkout, the existing bar-code scanners will remain functional. In August, the institution plans to begin making the RFID-based self-checkout counters available to patrons at its Wheat Ridge location, followed by its Arvada branch, now under construction and set to open in September. During the transition time, patrons will be instructed to place the books they are borrowing on top of the reader at the self-checkout counter, and to check a computer monitor on the counter to see if any or all of the books or other media have yet been checked out. Those that haven't will need to be checked out using the bar code. The library expects to have its entire collection RFID-tagged in approximately one year.
Jefferson County Public Library is the second-largest library system (following Denver's) in the entire Rocky Mountain region, but it's not the only one interested in RFID. According to Powers, the library systems of Colorado's Douglas and Arapahoe counties are also looking into RFID.