Apparel NEWS Text size: T T T

Researchers Seek to Reduce Wastage for First-Strike Rations

A Florida group is studying ways to track the temperatures of food rations traversing the U.S. military's supply chain, and is developing software that would calculate how temperature could alter shelf-life.

By Claire Swedberg

Jan. 26, 2012—Researchers at the University of South Florida Polytechnic (USF Poly) and the University of Florida are currently working on the second phase of a project to determine how radio frequency identification technology could be used in conjunction with temperature sensors to attain visibility into the temperatures to which First-Strike Rations (FSR) for U.S. troops are exposed during shipment and storage, as well as how that might affect the products' shelf life. The project is intended to help the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) determine how monitoring the temperatures of FSRs could improve the safety and freshness of the meals, while also reducing the amount of wastage resulting from food becoming spoiled prior to consumption.

To date, the group has completed Phase I of the project, which consisted of creating algorithms that can be used by software to calculate a food product's shelf life based on its temperature, and testing various models of semi-passive RFID sensor tags. As part of this project, the University of Florida provided research into the effects that temperature can have on food degradation, which served as the basis for the shelf-life algorithms. In addition, the University of Florida, the Georgia Institute of Technology and Franwell collaborated to develop software for interpreting and storing data generated by tag reads, thereby creating a history of temperature levels recorded by each tag, and predicting a particular product's shelf life based on the results.


First-Strike Rations are designed to improve tactical mobility by lightening the load of troops during combat operations.

The project is headed by Ismail Uysal, an associate professor at USF Poly's College of Technology and Innovation, and the director of the College of Technology and Innovation Research Lab. Uysal led the RFID tag-testing efforts and the development of algorithms during phase I as a member of the University of Florida's staff, before taking his current position at USF Poly. During this second phase, Uysal says, his team is tasked with validating the shelf-life model presented to the DOD upon the conclusion of Phase I. To do so, the researchers have created a series of software-based simulated supply chain environments. In these environments, he reports, the group has thus far proven that RFID could effectively provide necessary temperature fluctuation data during the transportation and storage of products, as well as alerts related to expiration dates. The next step, Uysal says—which the group is presently working on—is to determine if a first-expired, first-out (FEFO) method would allow more meals to reach troops before their shelf-life expiration date, at which time they must be discarded.

First-Strike Rations are lightweight, high-calorie products designed to be eaten by soldiers on the move. Because an FSR consists of semi-perishable food, each one is immediately stamped with a use-by date that expires two years from the day of packaging. What occurs between the time of manufacture and when an FSR reaches the troops, however, could affect that shelf life. For example, high temperatures could cause accelerated food degradation. Nevertheless, it has not been clear how much temperature fluctuation a ration might be exposed to, how that exposure could be measured or how that fluctuation could affect shelf life. The University of Florida created a template, based on temperature fluctuation, for indicating the amount of shelf life remaining for a particular FSR.


Ismail Uysal
Beginning in 2008, the University of Florida researchers started testing ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) passive temperature tags. The Department of Defense also requested that only handheld readers be used, since deploying fixed interrogators would not be possible at many points along a supply chain, including when war fighters received their rations. Although the DOD wanted a passive tag, the tag would require a battery to power the sensor so that it could measure and record temperatures at regular intervals. "There are a lot of active temperature-sensing tags," Uysal states, "but for passive, there wasn't a lot of choice." In fact, he notes, only three companies provided such a tag at the time: CAEN RFID, Intelleflex and Infratab. The DOD also instructed researchers to use those off-the-shelf tags, rather than design their own.

post a comment


Login and post your comment!

Forgot your password?


Not a member?
Signup for an account now to access all the features of RFIDJournal.com.




more Apparel articles

PREMIUM CONTENT
TOOLS & RESOURCES
How to Choose the Right RFID Technology for Your Application

sending it your way

Sign up for one of our E-Newsletters.

Enter Your Email Address:

take the poll

Do you think 2012 will be a year of enterprise RFID deployments?

RFID EVENTS

RFID Journal LIVE! 2012
Apr. 3-5, 2012
Orlando, Fla.

RFID Journal LIVE! Europe—Scandinavia
Oct. 24-25, 2012
Oslo, Norway

RFID Journal LIVE! Europe—UK
Oct. 30, 2012
London, England

RFID Marketing Services
Cost-effective marketing now available.
rfidjournal.com/marketing
Get Pay-Per Click Ads on RFID Journal
More qualified leads than Google.
rfidjournal.com/textads