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Element ID Unveils RFID Readers for Industrial Automation

The startup company's new interrogators can read HF tags moving in excess of 600 feet per minute, and have been optimized for sharing real-time data with automation systems.

By Beth Bacheldor

Apr. 21, 2009—Element ID, a startup firm based in Bethlehem, Pa., is leveraging its founders' roots in industrial automation to deliver RFID equipment optimized to work in manufacturing, production and assembly lines, sorting facilities, and warehouses.

The company, founded in 2006, has unveiled its first products: two high-frequency (HF) interrogators designed for such automated applications as manufacturing and work-in-process monitoring, tracking of totes or product carriers, and replacement of fixed depth-of-field bar-code line scanners. Both readers—the HF1 and HF1-B (the more basic of the two)—operate at 13.56 MHz, support the ISO 15693 standard, and have a read range of 8 inches. Central to the new products' functionality are software components embedded in the readers, enabling them to quickly share data with a variety of legacy and newer automation systems that companies currently use, for instance, to control their production lines or sorting systems.


Element ID's interrogators work with a variety of external antennas.

In an industrial automation environment, says Jack Romaine, Element ID's CEO, tag data read by RFID interrogators typically needs to take two paths. The information needs to be delivered very precisely, via a real-time interface, to PLCs, sortation controllers, or other devices that help route boxes to an end location. The data also needs to be delivered to back-end systems, such as enterprise resource planning (ERP) or warehouse management systems, to help companies track, for example, inventory. Most RFID technology vendors have focused on the latter, Romaine says, leveraging readers and middleware that can then filter and deliver RFID data to back-end systems.

"The piece that was missing was that real-time connection to automation systems," Romaine explains, adding that the HF1 and HF1-B models "are designed to eliminate any bottlenecks." The new readers, he says have been tested in Element ID's labs, at conveyor speeds in excess of 600 feet per minute.

The two software components that enable the real-time connection to automation systems include Element ID's HyperSage technology, designed to accelerate read rates and pre-process data to deliver only the information required, in the desired format, to the appropriate automation systems operating on the floor. The other component, TagLink (for which Element ID has a patent pending), provides algorithms and calculations that, when combined with RFID tag reads, enable it to deliver instructions to sorting and other automation systems at precisely the proper moment, so that companies can track and sort containers, packages and other objects as they move down a conveyor.

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