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AN ANALYSIS OF EFFECTIVE WAGON TRACKING FOR INDIAN RAILWAYS USING RFID TECHNOLOGY

By ANKUR RASTOGI S-9

MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION FACULTY OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF DELHI NEW DELHI March 2011

AN ANALYSIS OF EFFECTIVE WAGON TRACKING FOR INDIAN RAILWAYS USING RFID TECHNOLOGY
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the Degree of

MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION


By

ANKUR RASTOGI
S-9 Under supervision of

Dr. M. L. SINGLA
PROFESSOR FACULTY OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF DELHI

FACULTY OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF DELHI NEW DELHI MARCH 2011

ABSTRACT
AN ANALYSIS OF EFFECTIVE WAGON TRACKING FOR INDIAN RAILWAYS USING RFID TECHNOLOGY Indian Railways (IR) has the largest rail network in Asia and is the world's third largest under one management. IR transport 20 million passengers, 11,000 trains and more than 2.2 million tons of freight daily. It is the world's fourth largest freight carrier, with more than 1.6 million employees. IR traverses the length and breadth of the country, covering 10,350 stations over a total route length of more than 1,08,706 kilometers. On account of its rolling stock, IR owns over 2,50,000 wagons, 50,000 coaches and 8,000 locomotives. IR has 35% share in the freight traffic. Freight business is the biggest source of income, 70% of the revenues and most of its profits come from the freight sector.

In the present day scenario, the need to accurately track freight wagons has become more pronounced for the Indian Railways. With better roads infrastructure, trucks cargo services are competing fiercely with IR for freight traffic. Wagon leasing organizations want online information about their assets. Customers demand guaranteed transit times. To increase Railway's share in the freight movement, IR requires adopting new technologies with a view to satisfy the specific needs and helping the customers reduce their logistics costs.

Any further increase in physical capacity of the wagons is now difficult to achieve, so newer and more efficient methods are required to enhance the utilization of the existing wagon capacity. This again translates into a need for more accurate monitoring of wagon movement so as to reduce turnaround time.

This project tries to examine the role of RFID technology from the perspective of IR for improving the effectiveness of existing system to ensure efficiency, safety and provide better customer satisfaction. Attempt is also made to identify the appropriate RFID tags, suitable for varied geographic locations and diverse weather conditions across India.

CERTIFICATE This is to certify that this Project Report titled An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Business Administration, is based on the original research work, conducted under the guidance of Dr. M. L. Singla, Professor, Faculty of Management Studies, University of Delhi, and no part of this work has been copied from any source. Any material referred or borrowed has been duly acknowledged.

(Dr. M. L. Singla) Professor Faculty of Management Studies University of Delhi New Delhi

(Ankur Rastogi)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

This project has been performed by me under the able, inspiring and appreciable guidance of my revered supervisor and teacher Dr. M. L. Singla, Professor, Faculty of Management Studies, University of Delhi, New Delhi. I am deeply obliged to him for his valuable advice and suggestions, without which, it would not have been possible for me to bring this report in the present shape.

I wish to mention my sincere gratitude towards Mr. S. S. Mathur, General Manager, Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS), for being gracious enough to share with me the official records and technical documents pertaining to this project work.

I would like to acknowledge the unflinching support of Ms. Guljeet Grover, Senior Additional General Manager, CRIS, for her blessings and encouragement.

I also thank all my seniors and colleagues at CRIS. I would also like to make a special mention of Mr. Manish Kumar, Chief System Manager, CRIS, for providing invaluable inputs for completion of this project work; and Mr. Satya P. Panigrahi, Chief System Manager, CRIS, for his consideration and cooperation in helping me to continue my studies, along with the official duties and responsibilities assigned to me.

Last but not the least, I thank to the entire distinguished faculty members of Faculty of Management Studies (FMS), University of Delhi, who cultivated in me the right spirit of learning and research. I thank them all for making my experience in FMS even more enjoyable and worthwhile.

(Ankur Rastogi)

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
AAR AIDC AIM ANSI ATA AVI CPFR CRIS EAN EAN EPC FCC FOIS GCI GDS HF IR ISO IST IT NFC OCR POP RDSO RF RFID ROI UCC WILD American Association of Railroads Automatic Identification Data Collection Automatic Identification and Mobility American National Standards Institute Air Transport Association Automatic Vehicle Identification Collaborative Planning Forecasting and Replenishment Centre for Railway Information Systems European Article Numbering International European Article Numbering Association International Electronic Product Code Federal Communications Commission Freight Operations Information System Global Commerce Initiative Global Data Synchronization High Frequency Band Indian Railways International Standards Organization Information Society Technologies Information Technologies Near Field Communication Optical Character Recognition Point of Presence Research Designs and Standards Organisation Radio Frequency Radio Frequency Identification Device Return on Investments Uniform Code Council Wheel Impact Load Detector

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

Contents
Abstract Certificate Acknowledgement List of Abbreviations 1 2 (i) (ii) (iii) (iv)

INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................................... 4 ABOUT INDIAN RAILWAYS ...................................................................................................................... 6 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Responsibilities and Challenges .................................................................................................... 6 IT initiatives of Indian Railways ..................................................................................................... 7 About Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS) ................................................................. 7 Need of RFID in Indian Railways.................................................................................................. 11 RFID implementation SWOT ANALYSIS ....................................................................................... 13

ABOUT RFID .......................................................................................................................................... 15 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Automatic Identification ............................................................................................................. 15 The Basics of RFID ....................................................................................................................... 15 A brief history of RFID ................................................................................................................. 16 Tags and Readers ........................................................................................................................ 17 3.4.1 Active Tags ......................................................................................................................... 18 3.4.2 Passive Tags ....................................................................................................................... 18 3.5 RFID and other Identification Technologies ................................................................................ 18 3.5.1 RFID, Smart Cards and Other Form Factors ....................................................................... 18 3.5.2 RFID and Barcodes ............................................................................................................. 18 3.6 RFID Global Standards ................................................................................................................. 21 3.6.1 EPCglobal ........................................................................................................................... 21 3.6.2 Global Data Synchronization ............................................................................................. 21 3.6.3 International Organization for Standardization (ISO) ........................................................ 22 3.6.4 AIM Global ......................................................................................................................... 22 3.7 Uses of RFID ................................................................................................................................ 23

RFID UPDATE ON INDIAN RAILWAYS .................................................................................................... 26 4.1 4.2 Genesis of the Pilot Project ......................................................................................................... 27 RFID Pilot project ........................................................................................................................ 27

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

4.3 4.4 4.5 5 6 7

Challenges faced and progress made ......................................................................................... 33 Current Status ............................................................................................................................. 33 Potential Challenges in RFID Implementation ............................................................................ 34

OBSERVATION AND ANALYSIS .............................................................................................................. 36 CONCLUSION......................................................................................................................................... 40 RECOMMENDATIONS ........................................................................................................................... 42 7.1 7.2 Further Recommendations ......................................................................................................... 43 Limitations................................................................................................................................... 44

8 9

ACTION PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION ................................................................................................. 46 FUTURE EXPANSIONS ............................................................................................................................ 49

REFERENCES ................................................................................................................................................ 51 APPENDIX I................................................................................................................................................ 53 APPENDIX II............................................................................................................................................... 54 APPENDIX III.............................................................................................................................................. 58 APPENDIX IV ............................................................................................................................................. 67 ANNEXURE - I ............................................................................................................................................... 69 ANNEXURE II ............................................................................................................................................. 70

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

INTRODUCTION

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

1 INTRODUCTION
The transportation medium used to be the backbone of any countrys economy. Indian Railways undoubtedly is the backbone of public transport in India. With unprecedented growth in Information Technology, the world has now moved to an era where information transport has become the most dominant indicator of a countrys economy.

Since 2008, Indian Railways has embarked to deploy the technology for online automatic vehicle identification which allows the moving vehicle to be correctly identified and reported to traffic monitoring IT applications.

This report presents the current status of the RFID pilot project and suggests solutions for integration in a seamless and effective system, which can be extended further to cater for future growth.

Key objectives of this study include: o Examining the role of RFID technology, for improving the effectiveness of existing system, to ensure efficiency, safety and customer satisfaction o Identification of appropriate RFID technology, suitable for varied geographic locations and diverse weather conditions across India o Providing mechanism for automatic tracking of consignments without human interaction

The methodology adopted for the study is as follows: o Study of the present state of RFID usage in the Indian Railways and define an objective to be achieved by deployment of such technology o Study of the benchmark systems that has to be integrated for the vehicle identification o Identify the possible solutions to achieve tight and preferably seamless integration between vehicle identification and the existing system

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

ABOUT INDIAN RAILWAYS

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

2 ABOUT INDIAN RAILWAYS


Indian Railways (IR) has the largest rail network in Asia and is the world's third largest under one management, transporting 20 million passengers, 11,000 trains and more than 2.2 million tons of freight daily. It is the world's fourth largest freight carrier, with more than 1.6 million employees. IR traverses the length and breadth of the country, covering 10,350 stations over a total route length of more than 1, 08,706 kilometers. Regarding about the rolling stock, IR owns over 2, 50,000 wagons, 50,000 coaches and 8,000 locomotives. IR has 35% share in case of freight traffic. On account of earnings, 70% of the revenues and most of its profits come from the freight sector.

With ever increasing number of people and goods that use Indian Railways, the cost of maintenance and expansion of existing infrastructure is burgeoning. Being a medium of mass transport the railways cannot afford to increase its fare to keep up with its growing expenses.

2.1 Responsibilities and Challenges


In the present day scenario, the need to accurately track freight wagons has become more pronounced for the Indian Railways. With better roads infrastructure, trucks cargo services are competing fiercely with IR for freight traffic. Wagon leasing organizations want online information about their assets. Customers demand guaranteed transit times. To increase Railway's share in the freight movement, IR requires adopting new technologies with a view to satisfy the specific needs and helping the customers reduce their logistics costs.

Any further increase in physical capacity of the wagons is now difficult to achieve, so newer and more efficient methods are required to enhance the utilization of the existing wagon capacity. This again translates into a need for more accurate monitoring of wagon movement so as to reduce turnaround time.

There is an urgent need therefore, to look for ways to cut down its expenses, increase its efficiency, and look for additional measures to provide better customer satisfaction sources of

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

revenue, which will ensure that Indian Railways continues to provide a better service to Indian masses.

2.2 IT initiatives of Indian Railways


Today, Indian Railways is one of the most efficient government-controlled organizations in India. It houses one of the most brilliant engineers and administrators in the country. This is the reason it has continued to remain at the center-stage at the Indias economic development. Until recently (before Information Technology revolution), any countrys economy heavily depended on how effective the transportation medium of that country was. And, Indian Railways have continued to serve the Indian masses well, despite increasing burden.

However, looking from the perspective of current state of the technology available in the world, current modes of operations in Indian Railways can be vastly improved with further computerization.

2.3 About Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS)


In 1986, the Ministry of Railways established the Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS) at New Delhi. CRIS has been set up as an umbrella unit for all IT-related activities in Indian Railways. It is a project-oriented organization, with the mandate to develop and implement IT systems, ensure standardization of computer hardware and software, and also ensure close coordination of IT and business goals.

Important Indian Railways IT projects being handled by CRIS


1) Freight Operation Information System (FOIS)

FOIS has been designed to give strategic advantages to both Indian Railways and its customers. The system is implemented to perform the following functions: Monitoring of all freight trains indicating their position in computerized territory and their expected time of arrival at destination

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

Commodity wise flow of freight trains for customers like Power Houses, Refineries, Fertilizers and Cement Plants, Steel Depots and Public Freight Terminals

Enable the recipients of consignments to have an accurate forecast of cargo arrivals giving them adequate time to complete preparatory arrangement to handle the cargo Details of rakes/Wagons in various yards, their phase-wise detention in different terminals thus eliminating the need for costly manual documentation and tedious retrieval systems and inaccuracies Managerial reports regarding availability of rolling stock, i.e. wagons and locomotives at any instant of time to plan for their most efficient utilization

2)

Passenger Reservation System (PRS)

A countrywide online passenger reservation and ticketing system, is a complex online distributed client server application developed in C and Fortran programming languages on Digital OpenVMS operating system using RTR (Reliable Transaction Router) as middleware.

CONCERT (COuntry-wide Network of Computerised Enhanced Reservation & Ticketing) interconnects the five regional computing systems at New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and Secunderabad into a National PRS grid. It allows a passenger from any location to book train tickets from any station to any station. It handles reservations, modifications, and cancellations / refunds.

3)

Unreserved Ticketing System (UTS)

UTS constitutes a major component of the IRs overall ticketing volume and is an important source of revenue. UTS delivers fast and efficient unreserved ticketing from dedicated counters replacing manual Printed Card Tickets/EFTs/BPTs with centralised online sales accounting. The solution architecture lends itself to easy integration with handheld terminals, smart cards, automatic vending machines, etc.

4)

Web Enabled Claims

An Analysis of Effective Wagon Tracking for Indian Railways using RFID Technology

The web-based software enables the general public to not only file claim cases through the web but also track the progress of their claims. All the rules and regulations for claims and accident case filing along with contact details of all claims offices are available on the website.

5)

Rail Budget Compilation System (RBCS)

Developed for budgetary inputs from the different zones and production units of the Indian Railways, RBCS facilitates capturing of data, building of database, analysis of demands and pruning of the estimates for inclusion in the Railway Budget.

6)

Vigilance Software System (VSS)

VSS is designed especially for the requirements of Vigilance on Indian Railways and has been implemented in all the Zonal Railway Headquarters. VSS maintains information on vigilance cases / complaints including various reports and correspondence.

7)

Material Management Information System (MMIS)

This package is designed specifically for the requirements of stores accounting for P-Way materials and scrap disposal.

8)

Comprehensive Accounting & Transaction System (CATS)

CATS has been designed with a common database to address functionalities for personnel and Finance Departments. CATS contain two major modules: Financial Accounting System (FAS) and Payroll System (PS).

9)

Workshop Information SystEm (WISE)

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WISE is a MIS project for the various railway workshops around the country. Currently it is in operation in 15 workshops, viz. Kharagpur, Jagadhari, Ajmer, Kota, Charbagh, Liluah, Kacharapara, Matunga, Lower Parel, Parel, Bhusawal, Jhansi, Secundrabad, Lallaguda, Jamalpur. WISE is currently maintained by the group Project-II and provides managerial reports to the various managements. The project utilizes the ORACLE DBMS.

10)

Railway Crew Management (CMS)

CMS is software which provides information regarding railway crew at all times. It provides information regarding the presence of crew at home station or at out station, maintains their status-wise records and assigns crew to trains.

It also maintains information regarding the periodic and other rests, Road Learning & Traction knowledge. It is capable of booking crew on Coaching, Shunting, Freight services in the form of Links and Rosters.

The software system has tools to support the safety monitoring of the crew by it nominated Inspectors, monitoring of the crew knowledge through Quiz and has capacities to make the crew read the latest safety circulars put into the system for reading by the crew.

11)

Control Office Application (COA)

COA is software which provides a solution for the rail traffic Controllers of each division to manage the trains running over the track. This project is running in more than 30 of the 70 Control offices in the Indian Railways. The COA application is interfaced with other applications such as the National Train Enquiry System (NTES) to provide train running information to the passengers and other railway managers.

12)

E-Procurement system

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It provides a secure, fair and transparent method of procurement of material by the Railways through a web-based interface. This system is presently in operation in a few units of IR, and is to be expanded in the near future to all units of IR.

2.4 Need of RFID in Indian Railways


The need to use automated means to track railway wagons was first experienced in the Indian Railways as early as the 1970s. At that time, it was thought that manual tracking method would not be suitable in future, due to the increase in freight traffic. This increase in freight traffic was also the indicator of the beginning of increase of economic activities in India.

Around this time, computerized systems for managing freight railways were at an incipient stage in railway systems around the world. In 1997, a completely re-written, indigenously developed version of the Freight Operations System was conceived. It was rolled out between 1999 and 2004. It enabled the tracking of wagon consists, as well as individual freight wagons.

However, there was one serious lacuna in the system: individual wagon identification numbers were not automatically captured, but were recorded manually. Not only was manual recording tedious and stressful for the staff, but it introduced errors in the Freight Operations Systems database, and introduced delays in the tracking process.

This cost could potentially be reduced with the adoption of technology. Further, there are also cost and time savings in elimination of errors through automated tracking. Moreover, in the present day scenario, the need to track individual freight wagons accurately has become more pronounced for the Indian Railways.

Highways have improved, so trucks compete fiercely with rail for freight. Organized logistics chains have emerged that need real-time shipment-related information; just-in-time inventories have become common in industry; wagon leasing organizations want online information about their assets; and most customers demand guaranteed transit times.

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Figure 1: Freight transport in India in the year 2007 Source: Mckinsey

Also, the increase in the number of freight wagons is not keeping pace with the growing freight traffic. In recent years, a combination of newly replaced track and modern wagon designs has enabled axle loads (and hence the loading capacity of each wagon) to be increased significantly on major routes of the Indian Railways.

This has helped the Indian Railways to increase its freight loading by about 9% each year. Any further increase in physical capacity of the wagons is now difficult to achieve, so newer and more efficient methods are required to enhance the utilization of the existing wagon capacity.

This again translates into a need for more accurate monitoring of wagon movement so as to reduce turnaround time.

To achieve this, a technology for automatic tracking of individual wagons has become imperative. While this need appears to be indisputable, the methods to be adopted to accomplish such tracking are disputed by some important stakeholders within Indian Railways, delaying the adoption of suitable technology.

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Automatic vehicle identification is a vital and basic requirement of any IT application for asset management and maintenance management. Although a number of technology solutions are available for meeting this requirement, a survey of the deployment on various railways of the world indicates that RFID based AVI is widespread due to better read rates, lesser errors and ability to function in day and night under all weather conditions.

Research Designs and Standards Organisation (RDSO), in 2006-07, had explored use of RFID based vehicle tags. The results of this exploration were published as an article, copy of which is placed at Annexure III: AVI with RFID A first hand experience.

2.5 RFID implementation SWOT ANALYSIS

STRENGTH
o o o o o RFID provide better read rates Has lesser chances of error Has ability to function day & night Suitable for all weather condition RFID tags has longer life

WEAKNESS
o RFID is suitable for identifying the rolling stocks only o Trust Issue: vulnerable image of RFID o Equipment still expensive for mass scale roll out o Lack of well established standards

OPPORTUNITY
o Increased efficiency of production, trade & services o Customer satisfaction o Automated monitoring o Has potential to integrate seamlessly with WILD project

THREATS
o High initial & transition costs o Rapid technological evolution may displace the technology before it is widely adopted o If not implemented properly, there is a risk of missing real benefits

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ABOUT RFID

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3 ABOUT RFID
RFID stands for Radio Frequency IDentification. Among emerging technologies, RFID is gaining popularity due to its implementation advantages. It is a generic term for technologies that use radio waves to automatically identify individual items.

There are different methods to identify objects using RFID technology. The most common is to store a serial number that identifies an item / product and other information on a microchip that is attached to an antenna (the chip and the antenna together are called an RFID transponder or RFID tag).

3.1 Automatic Identification


Automatic identification is a broad term used for a group of technologies that help machines identify objects and capture data.

Companies want to identify items/products automatically, extract information from them and process it directly to a computer without having employees manually type out the data.

The aim of using these auto-ID technologies is to increase efficiency, reduce typographical errors and so free up staff to perform more value added functions.

A number of technologies that fall under the auto-ID umbrella are bar codes, smart cards, optical character recognition (OCR), radio frequency identification (RFID), among others.

3.2 The Basics of RFID


Automatic identification (auto ID) technologies help machines or computers identify objects by using automatic data capture. RFID is one type of auto ID technology that uses radio waves to identify, monitor, and manage individual objects as they move between physical locations. Although there are a variety of methods for identifying objects with RFID, the most common method is by storing a serial number that identifies a product and its related information. RFID

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devices and software must be supported by an advanced software architecture that enables the collection and distribution of location-based information in real time.

Figure 2: A schematic diagram of an RFID system

The antenna enables the chip to transmit the identification information to a RFID reader. The RFID reader converts the radio waves returned from the RFID tag to a form that can then be passed on to computers, which make use of it.

Standard frequency for RFID devices in India is 865-867 MHz with 4 W erp power. This standard was approved in May 2005.

3.3 A brief history of RFID


RFID was developed out of the radar experiments and development during the Second World War. The actual date of invention is 1948, but this was followed by decades of development and experimentation before commercial applications were implemented.

In July 1963, a passive RFID transponder developed and patented by Richardson, the device could couple and rectify from an interrogators EM field and transmit signals at a harmonic of the received frequency.

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In January 1967, Vinding developed a simple and inexpensive interrogator transponder system based on inductive coupling, the transponder used repetitive tuning or loading of its antenna circuit at a rate characteristic of the particular under interrogation. In august 1975, Koelle, Depp and Freyman introduced the novel concept of transponder antenna load modulation as a simple and effective way for backscatter modulation. In the late of 1960s, the first commercial application of RFID Electronic Article Surveillance was developed by companies such as Kongo, sensormatic and check point.

In the 1980s and 1990s, RFID becomes commercial the united states included transportation and personnel access, while European countries were interested in short range systems for tracking animals, industrial and business applications.

In October 1987, in Alesund the first RFID based toll-collection system became operational. The increase in commercial use of RFID prompted a need for standards, which led to many standardization activities in the 1990s, the international standards organization (ISO) developed the (ISO-11785) and the (ISO-14443) standards for animal tracking.

In 1999, the European Article Numbering International (EAN) and the Uniform Code Council (UCC) of the United States adopted a UHF frequency band for RFID and established the auto-ID center at the Massachusetts Institute of technology.

3.4 Tags and Readers


An RFID system consists of tags and readers. RFID tags are small devices containing a chip and an antenna that store the information for object identification. Tags can be applied to containers, pallets, cases, or individual items. With no line-of-sight requirement, the tag transmits information to the reader, and the reader converts the incoming radio waves into a form that can be read by a computer system. An RFID tag can be active (with a battery) or passive (powered by the signal strength emitted by the reader).

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Figure 3: A RFID tag

3.4.1 Active Tags


Can be read from a long-range distance of more than 100 feet. Are ideal for tracking high-value items over long ranges, such as tracking shipping containers in transit. Have high power and battery requirements, so they are heavier and can be costly.

3.4.2 Passive Tags


Can only be read from a short-range distance of approximately 510 feet. Can be applied in high quantities to individual items and reused. Are smaller, lighter, and less expensive (and therefore more prevalent) than active tags.

3.5 RFID and other Identification Technologies


3.5.1 RFID, Smart Cards and Other Form Factors
RFID technology is currently being used in conjunction with smart card technology in the financial industry, primarily in Europe. Financial institutions are issuing smart cards to record personal finance information such as account balances. RFID technology is also being used in other form factors such as key fobs, bulk metal tags, garment disks, and even metal nails that can be driven into pallets.

3.5.2 RFID and Barcodes


Although it is often thought that RFID and barcodes are competitive technologies, they are in fact complementary. The primary element of differentiation between the two is that RFID does not

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require line-of-sight technology. Barcodes must be scanned at specific orientations to establish line-of-sight, such as an item in a grocery store, and RFID tags need only be within range of a reader to be read or scanned.

Figure 4: Hype cycle of emerging technologies, 2009 Source: Gartner, 2009

Although RFID and barcode technologies offer similar solutions, there are significant advantages to using RFID: Tags can be read rapidly in bulk to provide a nearly simultaneous reading of contents, such as items in a stockroom or in a container.

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Tags are more durable than barcodes and can withstand chemical and heat environments that would destroy traditional barcode labels. Barcode technology does not work if the label is damaged. Tags have read and write capabilities and can be updated. Barcodes contain static information that cannot be updated unless the user reprints the code. Tags can potentially contain a greater amount of data compared to barcodes, which commonly contain only static information such as the manufacturer and product identification. Tags do not require any human intervention for data transmission whereas barcodes do.

Figure 5: Innovation Diffusion Model

It is easy to see how RFID has become indispensable for a wide range of automated data collection and identification applications. With the distinct advantages of RFID technology, however, comes an inevitably higher cost. RFID and barcode technologies will continue to

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coexist in response to diverse market needs. RFID, however, will continue to expand in markets for which barcode or similar optical technologies are not as efficient.

3.6 RFID Global Standards


As RFID technology continues to expand, the need for establishing global standards is increasingly apparent. Many retailers have completed RFID trials within their supplier communities, adding pressure on manufacturers and suppliers to tag products before they are introduced into the supply chain. However, manufacturers cannot cost-effectively manage RFID tagging mandates from disparate retailers until global standards are established. This process requires the creation and acceptance of data standards that apply to all countries, and it requires scanners to operate at compatible frequencies.

3.6.1 EPCglobal
EPCglobal is a member-driven organization of leading firms and industries focused on developing global standards for the electronic product code (EPC) Network to support RFID. The EPC is attached to the RFID tag, and identifies specific events related to the product as it travels between locations. By providing global standards on how to attach information to products, EPC enables organizations to share information more effectively. The vision of EPCglobal is to facilitate a worldwide, multi-sector industry adoption of these standards that will achieve increased efficiencies throughout the supply chainenabling companies to have real-time visibility of their products from anywhere in the world. The detailed report is placed at Appendix II: EPC Radio-Frequency Identity Protocols Class-1 Generation-2 UHF RFID.

3.6.2 Global Data Synchronization


Global Data Synchronization (GDS) is an emerging market in Supply Chain Management. It is the foundation for next-generation applications such as RFID-based tracking, collaborative planning forecasting and replenishment (CPFR), and more.

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GDS is designed to keep supply chain operations synchronized by ensuring that basic product data, such as the description and category stored by one company, matches the data stored by its trading partners. Organizations submit product data in a specific format to data pools around the globe, and the data is then validated against a global data registry. Standards for GDS are guided by the Global Commerce Initiative (GCI), a collective group of retailers and manufacturers. The standards are being developed by the European Article Numbering Association International and The Uniform Code Council (EAN UCC). These standards assign attributes to product data that enables manufacturers, suppliers, retailers, and other participants in the supply chain to share product-related data across the globe. For example, manufacturers could have their product catalog accessible worldwide, and retailers could search for any type of product and take advantage of unlimited global access.

3.6.3 International Organization for Standardization (ISO)


The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is a network of national standards institutes of 148 countries working in partnership with international organizations, governments, industries, and business and consumer representatives. The ISO asserts jurisdiction over the Air Interface (the frequency spectra used for RFID transmission) through standards-in-development ISO 18000-1 through ISO 18000-7. These are represented in the United States by American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

3.6.4 AIM Global


AIM Global is the global trade association for the Automatic Identification and Mobility industry that manages the collection and integration of data for information management systems. Serving more than 900 members in 43 countries, AIM Global is dedicated to accelerating the use of automatic identification data collection (AIDC) technologies around the world. As the leader in developing international RFID standards, AIM Global strives to educate the community. The company is participating as the RFID Association Sponsor for a series of

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symposiums worldwide to build consensus about standards for using RFID technology on commercial airplanes. Aircraft manufacturers Boeing and Airbus plan to collaborate; both companies are moving toward RFID adoption based on the Air Transport Association (ATA) automated identification and data capture guidelines.

3.7 Uses of RFID


Although RFID is a proven technology that has existed since before World War II, it took several years for a large scale implementation to occur in the United States. The implementation eventually included freeway toll booths, parking areas, vehicle tracking, factory automation, and animal tagging. The most common application of RFID technology today is for tracking goods in the supply chain, tracking assets, and tracking parts from a manufacturing production line.

Figure 6: RFID tag market forecast

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Another common application is for securityRFID is used to control building access and network security, and also for payment systems that let customers pay for items without using cash. As technological advancements in RFID lead to an even higher level of data transmissionin addition to an inevitably lower costRFID technology will become ubiquitous within the supply chain industry and other industries, increasing overall efficiencies and dramatically improving the return on investment (ROI).

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RFID UPDATE ON INDIAN RAILWAYS

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4 RFID UPDATE ON INDIAN RAILWAYS


The concept of automatic identification of wagons using Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) was first conceived in the mid-1990s. The basic concept was to encode an RFID tag with the wagon number and affix it to the side of each wagon. Trackside readers were to be installed to read the tag from a distance and transmit the encoded tag information over a network to a central computer. In this way, each moving wagon could be identified and its movement tracked. The technology was tried out as early as 1996, when Bharat Electronics Ltd. tested RFID tags for automatic identification of wagons in the Bangalore area. At that time RFID technology was still evolving and expensive, and it was difficult to provide network connectivity between the trackside readers and the computer system. Therefore this attempt was not extended further.

Figure 7: Technology Acceptance Model In recent years, RFID technology has become widely prevalent and network connectivity has become inexpensive and widely prevalent. Therefore, the use of RFID technology for wagon identification and tracking has become feasible.

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4.1 Genesis of the Pilot Project


For maintaining records of assets in Railway Board, accurate census of wagons is essential. With a view to preventing inaccuracies in the master records of wagons, a paper was circulated by C & IS Directorate in 2003 with the outline of a proposed system for wagon identification and tracking using RFID technology. When FOIS Phase 1 was implemented in 2002, it was observed that incorrect recording of wagon numbers through manual means was a major problem in maintaining correct data in the system. CRIS therefore proposed a work for identification of wagons using RFID tags in 2005. Based on the above two requirements, Board directed CRIS to implement a pilot project in 2006.

4.2 RFID Pilot project


A pilot project has been implemented by CRIS in ECoR in the VSKP-Talcher-Paradeep section on 500 CC BOBR/BOBRN wagons. The equipment was installed and the wagons tagged between June 2008 and September 2008. Technology from Transcore has been used for the tags, antennas, and readers.

Figure 8: Schematic diagram of the implementation of Pilot Project

Read-only tags are used. The Wagon Number, Wagon Type, and Owning Railway are encoded on the tag. These can be decoded by the reader itself. The wagon identifier given above, along with the reader ID and reader timestamp, is sent to the central server through a wide area network being used by the FOIS system.

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Railway Board had approved the enclosure of the Pilot Project for using RFID technology or automatic identification of Railways Wagons at an approximate cost of Rs. 2 crores in the existing work of FOIS. It was decided to implement the pilot in East Coast Railway, in the Vishakhapatnam- TalcherParadeep section, on 500 BOBRN / BOBR wagons running in closed circuit. For the pilot, 500 wagons were tagged, and trackside readers were placed at 5 locations, along with hand held readers at major yards and loading / unloading points as part of the pilot. Pilot Project Status Sheet of RFID is placed as Annexure I. The work was awarded to M/s Wipro Ltd (Infotech Division). They have, in turn, obtained the readers and tags from M/s Transcore, USA. Transcore have authorized M/s Rajkamal Barscan Ltd to provide installation and maintenance services for their equipment for the pilot project. Other equipment such as converter (Adam) boxes, Wi-fi equipment, Catamaran middleware and middleware server, is directly maintained by Wipro.

Figure 9: Pilot project using RFID at ECoR showing tag reader and tag on a wagon

On successful completion of the pilot project, it was planned to expand the system to tag all the wagons on Indian Railways, and place readers in all the major stations yards, and maintenance facilities.

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Tags
Tags provided are of Transcore make, model XT5120. They are passive UHF tags, that is, they do not have a battery, and are beam powered, or dependent on the tag reader for their power. Their operating frequency is 865-867 MHz.

Figure 10: Tag

Mounting of tag
The tags are mounted on both sides of the wagons. Mounting plates are welded to the side of the wagon and the tags are riveted to the plates using two pop rivets. On two rakes, steel rivets have been used. On other rakes, aluminum rivets have been used. Seen from each end of the wagon, the tags are located at the nearer left corner as shown below. They are identified as X side tags if they are closer to the X (brake rigging) end of the wagon, and Y side tags if they are closer to the Y (hopper apparatus) end of the wagon.

Figure 11: Mounting of Tag on a Wagon

Encoding of data on tag


The following data is encoded on the tag: 1) 2) Wagon number Wagon type (coded)

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3) 4) 5)

Owning Railway Side code Code 37 encoding is used to fit the data into the 96 bits available on the tag.

Readers
Transcore AI 1200 readers are used along with AR 2200 RF modules. These are provided with SP 470 antennas, two per reader, on either side of the track. The tag is read by the antenna which in turn sends the signal via the RF module to the reader. The equipment in the reader box is powered by an ordinary single phase 220 V power source. Low power is required (about 50 100 W). The readers are provided with a UPS, and the whole assembly is placed in a weather-proof enclosure. Two Transcore Encompass 1 handheld readers are also provided in order to read the tags in the yard area. These readers are used to register the wagons in a rake at the time of initial rake set up.

Figure 12: Hand Held Readers

Converter box
The reader connects to the network through an ADAM 6500 series converter. The Adam 6500 is an Ethernet enabled industrial controller running Windows CE.Net. The Adam controller runs the Catamaran client.

Figure 13: Adam Box

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Last mile network and WAN connectivity


The data flows from the Adam converter to the Motorola Canopy 5700 wireless antenna and is transmitted wirelessly using Wi-fi (IEEE 802.11b) network standard, to the nearest FOIS pointof-presence (POP). At the POP, a network switch is provided to connect to the FOIS router and move the data over the FOIS WAN to the central computer placed in CRIS, Chanakyapuri.

Figure 14: Wireless Antenna

Application server
The data goes to the application server (HP Xeon using Windows 2003 server and SQL Server 2003) that runs the Catamaran middleware software from Shipcomm. This converts the data into a format readable by FOIS.

Figure 15: Catamaran middleware architecture

FOIS connectivity

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The Catamaran server connects to the FOIS system through a software interface that enables the data to move into the FOIS database.

Figure 16: FOIS and RFID middleware interconnectivity

Tag encoder
Tags are encoded by placing them in the Transcore AP 4118 Tag Programmer and running the encoding program.

Provision of data connectivity


Connectivity between the readers placed at the three sites, that is, Talcher, Paradeep, and Vishakhapatnam, was to be provided through point-to-point wireless links. However, the equipment proved to be difficult to place and install in the field. Therefore, in order to reduce the delays in the project, cable pairs were provided at all locations from the reader to the nearest FOIS POP (point-of-presence). The cable pairs were initially used to move data from the readers to the FOIS network, on which the central server was connected. In December 2008, local

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connectivity was switched over to the wireless link at Vishakhapatnam. In September 2009, local connectivity at Talcher and Paradeep was also shifted to the wireless link exclusively.

4.3 Challenges faced and progress made


The pilot implementation has indicated that the tag and reader are quite rugged and have not been damaged even after two years of running in harsh environments. While reading of the wagon identity through the tag and reader sub-system appears to be reliable, problems of connectivity and power supply have caused interruptions in service.

4.4 Current Status


The Pilot Project for Automatic Identification of Wagons using RFID has been running since September 2008. Five hundred BOBRN / BOBR wagons have been provided with RFID tags and are running in the Vishakhapatnam Talcher Paradeep coal circuit of ECoR.

Readers have been provided at Vishakhapatnam (Ore Exchange Yard), Talcher (NTPC hut) and Paradeep (weighbridge).

Figure 17: Schematic diagram of RFID implementation by CRIS

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4.5 Potential Challenges in RFID Implementation


The potential challenges to consider when implementing an RFID solution are:

1. Large volumes of data


Readers scan each RFID tag several times per second, which generates a high volume of raw data. Although the data is redundant and discarded at the reader level, processing large volumes of data can be difficult.

2. Product information maintenance


When a high volume of RFID tags are processed by the reader, the attributes of each tagged product must be continually retrieved from a central product catalog databasea process that results in challenges for large-scale implementations.

3. Configuration and management of readers and devices


When a large number of readers and related hardware devices are deployed across multiple facilities, configuration and management can be challenging. The implementation of automated devices for these processes is essential.

4. Data integration across multiple facilities


In an enterprise with multiple facilities that are geographically distributed, it is increasingly difficult to manage data in real time while at the same time aggregating it into the central IT facilitya process that can place a significant burden on the network infrastructure.

5. Data ownership and partner data integration


When there are different companies involved in business processes, such as commonly found in the Retail supply chain, it can create issues pertaining to the ownership and integration of the data, thereby compromising the integrity of the solution architecture.

6. Data security and privacy


Depending on the nature of the business application and the solution scenario, security and privacy challenges could have a significant impact on the architecture.

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OBSERVATION AND ANALYSIS

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5 OBSERVATION AND ANALYSIS


The observations and learning from the pilot project are:

1)

The basic technology adopted (that is, tags and readers to modified AAR specifications) has been found to be workable in IR conditions

2)

Supporting equipment placed at the reader site for the pilot project, that is, data converter box, UPS, switch, etc. should be made more robust and monitor able from a central site

3)

Latency in the data network should be maintained within limits; it is preferable that local network at site should not be provided through Wi-Fi links

4)

Procedures for mounting of the tags on the wagons should be drawn up in detail and a cross-functional team should be set up to execute the project

After fresh exercises on the system, the following data was received from the reader at the location.

(i)

AVI through RFID for the month of October 2010

(ii)

AVI through RFID for the month of November 2010

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(iii)

AVI through RFID for the month of December 2010

(iv)

Automatic Vehicle Identification through RFID for the month of January 2011

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(v)

Application to monitor the tagged wagon movement

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CONCLUSION

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6 CONCLUSION
After consulting the technical documents and scrutinizing the available data, it was found that the basic equipment tags, readers, antennas, encoders were robust and provided reliable service. The key findings emerged from the study of providing the automatic identification system for wagons using RFID are: 1. It will enable automatic collection of rake composition data into FOIS at the time of rake formation. 2. It will enable in-motion weighbridges as well as automatic devices for trackside diagnostics to accurately identify the wagons. 3. It will give an accurate count of wagons present in a particular yard, division, and zone. 4. Annual wagon census will be eliminated. On the basis of study, Railway Board has sanctioned a work for Automatic Identification of Wagons using RFID at an estimated cost of Rs. 57 crore in 2010-11, for provision of RFID tags in the coal and ore carrying rakes of three zonal Railways in the Eastern part of the country.

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RECOMMENDATIONS

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7 RECOMMENDATIONS
There are still some technical concerns that needed to be addressed before full blown implementation. These are given in the table below:

S.No.

Concerns

Requirement

Observation

Recommendations
It is proposed to read the tags using the hand-held readers. The data read by the handheld reader should be verified against the data read by the trackside readers

1.

Verification of accuracy of tag

99.9% read accuracy should be maintained.

No misreads or defective tags found

2.

Occasional reading of a tag by both antennas of the reader

Each antenna should read only the tags passing on the track nearest to it

Antennas are now tuned, resulting in reduction of this phenomenon

No further action is required as issue is now resolved

3.

Data from the reader should Delay in receipt reach the central of data at the server central server instantaneously after being read at the reader Clock synchronization should be maintained between server and the reader clocks

Delays in data reaching the central server have been attributed to high network latency and network downtime

Delayed data movement occurs frequently from Talcher and Paradeep. The causes for these frequent drops need to be studied further

4.

Clock synchronization between central server and readers

Clocks are synchronized manually at present.

Synchronization of two systems clock should be managed by application software

The pilot system should also be utilized to carry out certain additional technology trials in order to determine the most robust design of the RFID system before the roll-out starts. These are proposed to be as given below:

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S.No.

Concern Installation of IP addressable equipment at reader sites

Observation Equipment such as UPSs, switches, etc. installed in the reader sites are not remotely addressable

Recommendation UPSs and switches should be replaced with IP addressable equipment so that all of them can be monitored remotely

1.

2.

Installation of train presence indicators

Proposals from those vendors should be invited, Direction of movement of the who have facility to provide train is not recoded axle counters / laser beam devices to detect train presence and direction Proposals for providing a complete system of trackside diagnostics and wagon identification with correlation between the wagon identification data and the diagnostic data captured should be obtained

3.

Integration of RFID system with weighbridge and other trackside diagnostic systems

Positive identification of the wagons being weighed by the in-motion weighbridges or going past other trackside diagnostic equipment is required.

7.1 Further Recommendations


In parallel with the activities to be done in the pilot implementation, certain preparatory activities for the roll-out project can be taken up immediately, so that detailed estimate can be prepared and further action started. 1. Appropriate location of tag on the wagons and a better method of affixing the tag on the side of the wagon needed to be ascertained 2. Data to be encoded in the tag should be decided upon and broad encoding scheme should be worked out 3. Reader locations should be determined. Also care has to be taken to ensure that reader locations cannot be bypassed because of change in traffic pattern

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4. Power from solar panels should be explored to eliminate breakdowns owing to poor power supply / power cuts 5. IP addressable UPS should be provided in each field location for centralized monitoring 6. Due to fast changes in technology, constant reviewing process is required. Further validations are required for comparison between the AAR technology (as used in the pilot) and other technology such as EPC Gen2. This task should be carried out by a technical team comprising experts from RDSO, CRIS and Railways Board representatives.

7.2 Limitations
This report is based on the work done in the areas of deployment and monitoring of wayside inspection devices on the Indian Railways by the members of the committee. Presently there is no integration of WID and AVI systems on Indian Railways. As such the concept of the integrated working has been developed solely by reading literature available on the internet and from other sources. The concept of integration presented in this report is theoretical. It is not based on any tests in laboratories or trials on the field and as such requires extensive testing for verification and validation of each component prior to implementation.

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ACTION PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION

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8 ACTION PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION


A proposal for phase wise implementation should be tried and validated before a full scale rollout. Since the project needs diverse skills and experience, a task force should be nominated for implementing the pilot project. A scheme of this magnitude should be tested and validated for the efficiency and economic benefits before a railway wide rollout. A possible site is the TATA-NOMD section on Chakradharpur (CKP) Division of South Eastern Railway. This site has the following salient features: The site has one of highest traffic densities on the Indian Railways which can make validation of data models faster Closed loop vehicles are available on the section feeding iron ore to Tata Steel plant The section is geographically small and the total route km is about 127 km

Figure 11: Map of proposed area for pilot project

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An action plan for the pilot project is summarized in the following table:

Activity Id
1. 2. 3.

Description
Setting up of task force for implementation of the integrated system Expression of Interest for system to be developed, based on AAR standards Setup of infrastructure and trial at CKP division Development of first working document for standard data format for communication between the Identification device and the system Setting up of additional servers Setting of data centre and 24x7 online contact centre Creation of Identification mechanism of subcomponents, such as, Loco, wagon, brake van, container Implementation at CKP division in first phase Monitoring of data and validations

Estimated Predecessor Duration


1 month 3 months 6 months None 1 2

4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

3 months 3 months 3 months

2,3

Given the scale of technology inputs and the likely changes in the maintenance procedures, it is suggested to test out the technology on a small and closed but highly functional setup. The TATA-NOMD section and the associated rolling stock on merry go round system on the Chakradharpur division of SER are suggested for a pilot rollout. An action plan for the pilot roll out is proposed listing the following elements.

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FUTURE EXPANSIONS

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9 FUTURE EXPANSIONS
Through RFID technology we can automatically identify, locate, track, monitor and protect a variety of things. Resources that can be RFID tagged include: 1. Personnel 2. Assets 3. Vehicles 4. Inventory and also the conditions and the environment around them RFID can operate around the enterprise in a local area, indoors or out. Through RFID assets can be automatically protected giving the owner the freedom to come and go from a secured location with the assets as they please. Wagons/Coaches/Trailers/Containers and personnel can be automatically identified and coordinated resulting in dramatic efficiencies in personnel and asset utilization, all of which can enable increased revenue. This Hands free mode provides automatic visibility, improved productivity and dramatically reduces human intervention. Active tags can provide the additional security. Tag can be configured to alarm and send an alert signal, if they are removed. Therefore, active tags provide a very good security solution for assets, containers, loaded wagon, parcel vans etc. Tags equipped with the motion sensor onboard can alarm in the event of unauthorized application, inventory movement etc. Beaconing tags can provide an automated inventory count. A signal i.e. sent to a receiver at predetermined time intervals to provide continuous monitoring of the inventory and its location. Active tags can be integrated with different sensor types to monitor the change of conditions of such things as temperature, humidity and pressure, as well as hazardous chemicals or radiation.

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REFERENCES
Books: 1. Sandip Lahiri, RFID Sourcebook, Prentice Hall, 2005, Pages: 304 2. Himanshu Bhatt, Bill Glover, RFID Essentials, O'Reilly, 2006, Pages: 276 Articles: 1. Integration of Way Side Inspection Devices & Automatic Vehicle Identification Systems on Indian Railways, Ministry of Railways, 2011, Pages: 108 2. Building India: Transforming the nations logistics infrastructure, Infrastructure Practice, Mckinsey & Company, 2010, Pages: 72 3. Indian Railways Vision 2020, Government of India, Ministry of Railways, December, 2009, Pages: 62 4. Shirish C. Srivastava, Sharat S. Mathur, Thompson S. H. Teoz, Tracking Freight Railcars in Indian Railways: Technology Options and Stakeholder Interests, International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS), 2008, Pages: 12 5. RFID Technologies: Emerging Issues, Challenges and Policy Options, Joint Research Centre, Institute for Prospective Technological Studies, European Union, 2007, Pages: 278 Websites: 1. http://www.indianrailways.gov.in/indianrailways/indexhome.jsp 2. http://cris.org.in/wps/portal/CRISPortal 3. http://www.it.indianrail.gov.in/RFID.HTM 4. http://www.enigmaticconsulting.com/ 5. http://www.rfidjournal.com 6. http://www.ncsl.org/ 7. http://www.rfid-library.com 8. http://autoid.mit.edu/ 9. http://www.epcglobalus.org

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APPENDIX I
Indian Railways is a multi-gauge, multi-traction system covering the following: Track Kilometers Route Kilometers Broad Gauge Meter Gauge Narrow Gauge Total 86,526 18,529 3,651 108,706 Total Electrified 16,001 63,028

Other Interesting facts about Indian Railways: Passenger trains in a day Freight trains in a day Locomotives Coaching vehicles Freight wagons Stations Yards Good sheds Repair shops Work force
7,000 (approx.)

4,000 (approx.) 7566 37,840 222,147 6853 300 2300 700 1.54 million

(Source: http://www.indianrailways.gov.in/indianrailways/evolution/evolution.jsp)

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APPENDIX II
AAR MANUAL OF STANDARDS AND RECOMMENDED PRACTICES

AUTOMATIC EQUIPMENT IDENTIFICATION Standard: S-918 AAR (American Association of Railroads) specifies standards for automatic electronic identification of equipments that are used in rail transportation. These equipments include: 1) 2) 3) 4) Railcars Locomotives Intermodal vehicles End of train devices

The system and data outputs described in this standard are compatible with ANSI Standard MH5.1.9-1990 and ISO Standard 10374, for the automatic identification of containers. Identification system requirements Tags mounted on transportation equipment shall be read by an interrogator (reader) that operate on ultra high frequency radio waves The reader shall decode the altered radio waves reflected by the tags on the equipment The altered radio waves (modulation) shall indicate the alphanumeric identification code of the equipment as well other predefined information The interrogator may optionally add its own identification number, date and time System shall accurately read trains moving up to 80 mph with any equipment in areas of one or more parallel tracks, with or without trains standing or operating on any or all of these tracks, in the same or opposite direction The tag unit shall be tamper-proof and their life shall not be less than 15 years without any maintenance The tags shall survive and maintain the integrity of stored data in a maximum peak field strength of 1500 V/m for 60 pulses in the 1.2 to 1.4 GHz range, and 100 V/m for 60 seconds for any continuous wave radio frequency source The tags shall be capable of full operation in the electromagnetic environment normally found at railroad facilities Tags shall be capable of being programmed in the railroad environment Interrogator (Reader) Requirements Interrogator units shall be capable of interrogating multiple tags within their reading field, discriminating between the tags without misreading

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Error detection shall be used to ensure reading accuracy Modulated Backscatter Communication The tag shall not be a transmitter and shall not contain components to generate radio frequency (RF) signals The tags must act merely as field disturbance devices, slightly modifying and reflecting the signal transmitted by the reader system This slight modification of the signal includes the unique identification code of the tag. This method of communication is called modulated backscatter. System Operations

Block Diagram of RF module, reader, antenna and tag

RF Module The RF module is responsible for transmitting and receiving radio energy The RF module shall transmit a single frequency of RF energy and receive that same frequency after it is reflected from the tag The tag information shall be encoded into 20- and 40-kHz signals Reader The RF module receives the modulated signal from the tag and passes the 20- and 40-kHz modulating frequencies to the reader The reader shall decode the frequencies into binary information equivalent to the 128 bits of data stored in the tag

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Antenna The reader system shall be capable of using a single antenna to transmit and receive RF energy Tag The clock circuit sequences all circuit functions such that information stored in the memory circuit is conveyed to the reader system within precise timing The information stored in the memory circuit is permanent and is a unique code that is specified by the owner prior to installation of the tag onto its respective object Tag Classes Nonbattery tags must be sufficiently close to the reader system's antenna in order to collect enough energy to activate the tag's electronics Battery-powered tags do not require as close proximity to the reader system's antenna Advantages of the battery tag shall include greater range and reduced RF power required from the reader system Advantage of the nonbattery tag is a longer life Regardless of whether the tag has a battery or not, a tag does not transmit RF energy; it only reflects energy transmitted by the reader system Tag Frequency of Operation and Sensitivity The nonbattery tag shall not operate in root mean square (RMS) electric field strengths below 2.0 V/m, and shall operate properly in RMS electric field strengths above 3.5 V/m The field strength required for nonbattery tag operation shall not increase by more than 3 dB when it is rotated by 25 in any plane Battery-powered dynamic tags shall have a minimum sensitivity such that an interrogating signal of 750 mV/m will allow proper tag operation Other battery and end-of-train device tags shall have a minimum sensitivity such that an interrogating signal of 150 mV/m will allow proper tag operation Battery-powered dynamic tags shall be operational within 7 ms of excitation by an interrogating signal from sensing equipment All other tags shall be operational within 4 ms of excitation by an interrogating signal from the sensing equipment Location and Mounting of Tags on Equipment No area on the tags rear surface may be more than 1/4 in. from the metal mounting surface A 1/8 in. or thicker smooth metal back plate at least as large as the tag should be used In all cases, back plates are preferred and they should extend 1 in. beyond the full perimeter of the tag

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Each railcar and locomotive shall carry two tags. On railcars, one tag shall be located in a window on the BL (B EndLeft) portion and the other shall be located in a window on the AR (A EndRight) On locomotives, one shall be located in a window on the Front-Right (F EndRight) portion and the other in a window on the Rear-Left (R EndLeft) portion Tags must be placed in a vertical plane at least 4 ft from the centerline of the track The tags must be in a rectangular area bounded by horizontal lines 2 to 5 ft above top of rail, measured for an empty car Tags shall be mounted on a plane perpendicular to the ground and shall be oriented with horizontal polarization The long axis of the tag must be within 10 of parallel to the rail. The face of the tag must not be rotated outward toward the ground more than 10 from the car mounting surface Inward rotation of the tag is prohibited. As a minimum, all tags must be manufactured in a facility certified as meeting or exceeding AAR Quality Assurance Specification M-1003. REPORT FORMAT Standard: S-918B Adopted: 2009 Salient features: Provides the reasonably compact and accurate method to report inspection data to the data collection system in a consistent file format Is extension of S-198A data format Does not specify any standard communication handshaking or protocol between the inspecting system and any data collection system Configuration options Output formats 1. Fixed lengths, no delimiters 2. Fixed field lengths, delimiter 3. Variable field lengths, delimiters (Standard) (User Selectable) (User Selectable)

Control file Used for specifying the standard units of measure, looping structure, separators and delimiters. This is an optional feature.

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APPENDIX III
EPC Radio-Frequency Identity Protocols Class-1 Generation-2 UHF RFID Protocol for Communications at 860 MHz - 960 MHz, Version 1.2.0 Specification for RFID Air Interface This specification defines the physical and logical requirements for a passive-backscatter, Interrogator-talks-first (ITF), radio-frequency identification (RFID) system operating in the 860 MHz - 960 MHz frequency range. The system comprises Interrogators (also known as Readers) and Tags (also known as Labels). An Interrogator transmits information to a Tag by modulating an RF signal in the 860 MHz - 960 MHz frequency range. The Tag receives both information and operating energy from this RF signal. Tags are passive, meaning that they receive all of their operating energy from the Interrogator's RF waveform. An Interrogator receives information from a Tag by transmitting a continuous-wave (CW) RF signal to the Tag; the Tag responds by modulating the reflection coefficient of its antenna, thereby backscattering an information signal to the Interrogator. The system is ITF, meaning that a Tag modulates its antenna reflection coefficient with an information signal only after being directed to do so by an Interrogator. Interrogators and Tags are not required to talk simultaneously; rather, communications are halfduplex, meaning that Interrogators talk and Tags listen, or vice versa. Tags A Tag shall: Operate over the frequency range from 860 960 MHz Modulate a backscatter signal only after receiving the requisite command from an Interrogator Modulate a backscatter signal unless commanded to do so by an Interrogator using the signaling layer Command structure and extensibility This specification allows four command types:

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(1) Mandatory (2) Optional (3) Proprietary (4) Custom Terms and definitions The principal terms and definitions used in this specification are described in ISO/IEC 19762. Additional terms and definitions Extended temperature range 40 C to +65 C (see nominal temperature range). Full-duplex communications A communications channel that carries data in both directions at once. Half-duplex communications A communications channel that carries data in one direction at a time rather than in both directions at once. Inventoried flag A flag that indicates whether a Tag may respond to an Interrogator. Tags maintain a separate inventoried flag for each of four sessions; each flag has symmetric A and B values. Within any given session, Interrogators typically inventory Tags from A to B followed by a re-inventory of Tags from B back to A (or vice versa). Inventory round The period initiated by a Query command and terminated by either a subsequent Query command (which also starts a new inventory round) or a Select command. Multiple-Interrogator environment An operating environment (defined below) within which a modest number of the available channels are occupied by active Interrogators (for example, 5 active Interrogators operating in 25 available channels). Nominal temperature range 25 C to +40 C (see extended temperature range). Operating environment A region within which an Interrogators RF transmissions are attenuated by less than 90dB. In free space, the operating environment is a sphere whose radius is approximately 1000m, with the Interrogator located at the center. In a building or other enclosure, the size and shape of the operating environment depends on factors such as the material properties and shape of the building, and may be less than 1000m in certain directions and greater

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than 1000m in other directions. Operating procedure Collectively, the set of functions and commands used by an Interrogator to identify and modify Tags. (Also known as the Tag-identification layer.) PacketCRC A 16-bit cyclic-redundancy check (CRC) code that a Tag may dynamically calculate over its PC, optional XPC, and EPC and backscatter during inventory. PacketPC Protocol-control information that a Tag with nonzero-valued XI dynamically calculates and backscatters during inventory. Passive Tag (or passive Label) A Tag (or Label) whose transceiver is powered by the RF field. Permalock or Permalocked A memory location whose lock status is unchangeable (i.e. the memory location is permanently locked or permanently unlocked) except by recommissioning the Tag is said to be permalocked. Persistent memory or persistent flag A memory or flag value whose state is maintained during a brief loss of Tag power. Physical layer The data coding and modulation waveforms used in Interrogator-to-Tag and Tag-toInterrogator signaling. Protocol Collectively, a physical layer and a Tag-identification layer specification. Q A parameter that an Interrogator uses to regulate the probability of Tag response. An Interrogator commands Tags in an inventory round to load a Q -bit random (or pseudorandom) number into their slot counter; the Interrogator may also command Tags to decrement their slot counter. Tags reply when the value in their slot counter (i.e. their slot see below) is zero. Q is an integer in the range (0,15); the corresponding Tag response probabilities range from 20 = 1 to 2-15 = 0.000031. Random-slotted collision arbitration A collision-arbitration algorithm where Tags load a random (or pseudo-random) number into a slot counter, decrement this slot counter based on Interrogator commands, and reply to the Interrogator when their slot counter reaches zero. Recommissioning

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A significant altering of a Tags functionality and/or memory contents, as commanded by an Interrogator, typically in response to a change in the Tags usage model or purpose. Session An inventory process comprising an Interrogator and an associated Tag population. An Interrogator chooses one of four sessions and inventories Tags within that session. The Interrogator and associated Tag population operate in one and only one session for the duration of an inventory round. For each session, Tags maintain a corresponding inventoried flag. Sessions allow Tags to keep track of their inventoried status separately for each of four possible time-interleaved inventory processes, using an independent inventoried flag for each process. Single-Interrogator environment An operating environment within which there is a single active Interrogator at any given time. Singulation Identifying an individual Tag in a multiple-Tag environment. Slot Slot corresponds to the point in an inventory round at which a Tag may respond. Slot is the value output by a Tags slot counter; Tags reply when their slot (i.e. the value in their slot counter) is zero. StoredCRC A 16-bit cyclic-redundancy check (CRC) code that a Tag calculates over its StoredPC and EPC and stores in EPC memory at power-up, and may backscatter during inventory. StoredPC Protocol-control information stored in EPC memory that a Tag with zero-valued XI backscatters during inventory. Tag-identification layer Collectively, the set of functions and commands used by an Interrogator to identify and modify Tags (also known as the operating procedure ). Tari Reference time interval for a data-0 in Interrogator-to-Tag signaling. The mnemonic Tari derives from the ISO/IEC 18000-6 (part A) specification, in which Tari is an abbreviation for Type A Reference Interval. Protocol requirements An Interrogator sends information to one or more Tags by modulating an RF carrier using doublesideband amplitude shift keying (DSB-ASK), single-sideband amplitude shift keying (SSB-ASK), or phase-reversal amplitude shift keying (PR-ASK) using a pulse-interval encoding (PIE) format.

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Tags receive their operating energy from this same modulated RF carrier. An Interrogator receives information from a Tag by transmitting an unmodulated RF carrier and listening for a backscattered reply. Tags communicate information by backscatter modulating the amplitude and/or phase of the RF carrier. The encoding format, selected in response to Interrogator commands, is either FM0 or Miller- modulated subcarrier. The communications link between Interrogators and Tags is half-duplex, meaning that Tags shall not be required to demodulate Interrogator commands while backscattering. A Tag shall not respond to a mandatory or optional command using full-duplex communications. An Interrogator manages Tag populations using three basic operations: a) Select The operation of choosing a Tag population for inventory and access. A Select command may be applied successively to select a particular Tag population based on user-specified criteria. This operation is analogous to selecting records from a database. b) Inventory The operation of identifying Tags. An Interrogator begins an inventory round by transmitting a Query command in one of four sessions. One or more Tags may reply. The Interrogator detects a single Tag reply and requests the PC/XPC word(s), EPC, and CRC from the Tag. Inventory comprises multiple commands. An inventory round operates in one and only one session at a time. c) Access The operation of communicating with (reading from and/or writing to) a Tag. An individual Tag must be uniquely identified prior to access. Access comprises multiple commands, some of which employ one-time-pad based cover-coding of the R=>T link. Description of operating procedure The operating procedure defines the physical and logical requirements for an Interrogator-talksfirst (ITF), random-slotted collision arbitration, RFID system operating in the 860 MHz 960 MHz frequency range. Signaling The signaling interface between an Interrogator and a Tag may be viewed as the physical layer in a layered network communication system. The signaling interface defines frequencies, modulation, data coding, RF envelope, data rates, and other parameters required for RF communications. Operational frequencies

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Tags shall receive power from and communicate with Interrogators within the frequency range from 860 MHz to 960 MHz, inclusive. An Interrogators choice of operational frequency will be determined by local radio regulations and by the local radio-frequency environment. Interrogators certified for operation in dense-Interrogator environments shall support, but are not required to always use. . Interrogator-to-Tag (R=>T) communications An Interrogator communicates with one or more Tags by modulating an RF carrier using DSBASK, SSB-ASK, or PR-ASK with PIE encoding. Interrogators shall use a fixed modulation format and data rate for the duration of an inventory round. The Interrogator sets the data rate by means of the preamble that initiates the round. Interrogator frequency accuracy Interrogators certified for operation in single- or multiple-Interrogator environments shall have a frequency accuracy that meets local regulations. Interrogators certified for operation in denseInterrogator environments shall have a frequency accuracy of +/ 10 ppm over the nominal temperature range (25C to +40C) and +/ 20 ppm over the extended temperature range (40C to +65C). Interrogators rated by the manufacturer to have a temperature range wider than nominal but different from extended shall have a frequency accuracy of +/ 10 ppm over the nominal temperature range and +/ 20 ppm to the extent of their rated range. If local regulations specify tighter frequency accuracy then the Interrogator shall meet the local regulations. Modulation Interrogators shall communicate using DSB-ASK, SSB-ASK, or PR-ASK modulation. Tags shall demodulate all three modulation types. Tag states and slot counter Ready state Tags shall implement a ready state. Ready can be viewed as a holding state for energized Tags that are neither killed nor currently participating in an inventory round. Upon entering an energizing RF field a Tag that is not killed shall enter ready. The Tag shall remain in ready until it receives a Query command whose inventoried parameter (for the session specified in the Query) and sel parameter match its current flag values. Matching Tags shall draw a Q -bit number from their RNG, load this number into their slot counter, and transition to the arbitrate state if the number is nonzero, or to the reply state if the number is zero. If a Tag in any state except killed loses power it shall return to ready upon regaining power. Arbitrate state Tags shall implement an arbitrate state. Arbitrate can be viewed as a holding state for Tags

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that are participating in the current inventory round but whose slot counters hold nonzero values. A Tag in arbitrate shall decrement its slot counter every time it receives a QueryRep command whose session parameter matches the session for the inventory round currently in progress, and it shall transition to the reply state and backscatter an RN16 when its slot counter reaches 0000h. Tags that return to arbitrate (for example, from the reply state) with a slot value of 0000 shall decrement their slot counter from 0000 h to 7FFF h at the next QueryRep (with matching session) and, because their slot value is now nonzero, shall remain in arbitrate. Reply state Tags shall implement a reply state. Upon entering reply a Tag shall backscatter an RN16. If the Tag receives a valid acknowledgement (ACK) it shall transition to the acknowledged state, backscattering the reply. If the Tag fails to receive an ACK within time T2 (max), or receives an invalid ACK or an ACK with an erroneous RN16, it shall return to arbitrate. Tag and Interrogator shall meet all timing requirements. Acknowledged state Tags shall implement an acknowledged state. A Tag in acknowledged may transition to any state except killed, depending on the received command. If a Tag in the acknowledged state receives a valid ACK containing the correct RN16 it shall re-backscatter the reply. If a Tag in the acknowledged state fails to receive a valid command within time T2 (max) it shall return to arbitrate. Tag and Interrogator shall meet all timing requirements. Open state Tags shall implement an open state. A Tag in the acknowledged state whose access password is nonzero shall transition to open upon receiving a Req_RN command, backscattering a new RN16 (denoted handle) that the Interrogator shall use in subsequent commands and the Tag shall use in subsequent replies. Tags in the open state can execute all access commands except Lock and BlockPermalock. A Tag in open may transition to any state except acknowledged, depending on the received command. If a Tag in the open state receives a valid ACK containing the correct handle it shall re-backscatter the reply. Tag and Interrogator shall meet all timing requirements except T2 (max); in the open state the maximum delay between Tag response and Interrogator transmission is unrestricted. Secured state Tags shall implement a secured state. A Tag in the acknowledged state whose access password is zero shall transition to secured upon receiving a Req_RN command, backscattering a new RN16 (denoted handle) that the Interrogator shall use in subsequent commands and the Tag shall use in subsequent replies. A Tag in the open state whose access password is nonzero shall transition to secure upon receiving a valid Access command sequence, maintaining the same handle that it previously backscattered when it transitioned from the acknowledged state to the open state. Tags in the secured state can execute all access commands. A Tag in secured may transition to any state except open or acknowledged, depending on the received command. If a Tag in the secured

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state receives a validACK containing the correct handle it shall re-backscatter the reply. Tag and Interrogator shall meet all timing requirements except T2 (max); in the secured state the maximum delay between Tag response and Interrogator transmission is unrestricted. Killed state Tags shall implement a killed state. A Tag in either the open or secured states shall enter the killed state upon receiving a valid Kill command sequence with a valid nonzero kill password, zero-valued Recom bits, and valid handle. If a Tag does not implement recommissioning then it treats nonzero Recom bits as though Recom = 0. Kill permanently disables a Tag. Upon entering the killed state a Tag shall notify the Interrogator that the kill operation was successful, and shall not respond to an Interrogator thereafter. Killed Tags shall remain in the killed state under all circumstances, and shall immediately enter killed upon subsequent power-ups. Killing a Tag is irreversible. Slot counter Tags shall implement a 15-bit slot counter. Upon receiving a Query or QueryAdjust command a Tag shall preload into its slot counter a value between 0 and 2 Q 1, drawn from the Tags RNG. Q is an integer in the range (0, 15). A Query specifies Q; a QueryAdjust may modify Q from the prior Query. Tags in the arbitrate state decrement their slot counter every time they receive a QueryRep with matching session, transitioning to the reply state and backscattering an RN16 when their slot counter reaches 0000h. Tags whose slot counter reached 0000h, who replied, and who were not acknowledged (including Tags that responded to an original Query and were not acknowledged) shall return to arbitrate with a slot value of 0000h and shall decrement this slot value from 0000h to 7FFFh at the next QueryRep. The slot counter shall be capable of continuous counting; meaning that, after the slot counter rolls over to 7FFFh it begins counting down again, thereby effectively preventing subsequent replies until the Tag loads a new random value into its slot counter. Managing Tag populations Interrogators manage Tag populations using the three basic operations. Each of these operations comprises one or more commands. The operations are defined as follows: a) Select: The process by which an Interrogator selects a Tag population for inventory and access. Interrogators may use one or more Select commands to select a particular Tag population prior to inventory. b) Inventory: The process by which an Interrogator identifies Tags. An Interrogator begins an inventory round by transmitting a Query command in one of four sessions. One or more Tags may reply.

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The Interrogator detects a single Tag reply and requests the PC word, optional XPC word or words, EPC, and CRC-16 from the Tag. An inventory round operates in one and only one session at a time. c) Access: The process by which an Interrogator transacts with (reads from or writes to) individual Tags. An individual Tag must be uniquely identified prior to access. Access comprises multiple commands, some of which employ one-time-pad based cover-coding of the R=>T link.

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APPENDIX IV
RFID terminology
Antenna: This is the conductive element that enables the tag to send and receive data. Back scatter: This is a method of communicating between tags and readers. Tags reflect back a portion of the radio waves that are received from the readers. Bar code: This is a standard method of identifying the manufacturer and product category of a particular item. Bar code scanners have to have line of sight to be able to read them. Closed loop systems: This refers to RFID tracking systems within a company. Open standards can be by-passed in these RFID tags as they are supposed to be within the companys territory. Die: RFID microchips use the silicon block on which circuits have been etched. These silicon blocks are called die. Error correcting protocol: This protocol refers to the set of rules by which two items interact and understand each other. GTAG: This is a standardisation initiative of the UCC and the EAN for asset tracking and logistics based on radio frequency identification. Modulation: This refers to changing the frequency or amplitude of a wave to transmit data that is converted into digital form. Nano Block: This term, coined by Alien Technology, is used to describe the tiny microchips, which are about the width of three human hairs. Physical Markup Language (PML): This is a language for describing products in a way that a computer can understand. RFID reader: The reader communicates with the RFID tag via radio waves and passes the information in digital form to a computer system for processing thereby by-passing human intervention. RFID tag: This is a microchip attached to an antenna for picking up signals and sending signals back to the RFID reader. It contains a globally unique serial number known as EPC (Electronic Product Code). Silent Commerce: This covers all business solutions enabled by tagging, tracking, sensing and other technologies, including RFID, which make everyday objects intelligent and interactive. It can be combined with continuous and pervasive Internet connectivity, so making a new infrastructure where companies can collect data and deliver services without human interaction.

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ANNEXURE - I
PILOT PROJECT STATUS SHEET OF RFID STATUS AS ON 01.01.09 RADIO FREQUENCY IDENTIFICATION DEVICE 2004- 05 Rs. 2 Crore GM/IT CPM/FOIS & DY.CPM/FOIS/G Provide tools to Manages to: 1.Accurate & automatic identification of wagon /coaches. 5 Objectives/Features 2. Keeping track of wagons & rakes and capture of online information of wagon no. 3. Optimising turn round time for loading & unloading.

NAME OF PROJECT 1 a. Sanction Year of Project 2 b. Initial Sanctioned Amount Nodal officer in CRIS 3 coordinating the project Nodal officer in FOIS 4 coordinating the project

6 Scope of work -Location 7 Software development agency 8 Current Status of the project Next milestone to be achieved 9 with target date.

1000 RFID tags in 500 wagons Three pilot locations at Talcher, Paradeep & Vishakapattnam East Coast Railway (ECOR) CRIS 500 wagons are having 1000 RFID tags Staff Training will be started from 3rd week of Nov.08

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ANNEXURE II
Tag encoding scheme used for tagging IR wagons

Field 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Entry Equipment Code Tag Type Railway Code Wagon Number Side Indicator

Bits Required 5 2 5 58 1

Data bit position in Reader String From 1 6 8 13 91 68 To 5 7 12 67 93 68

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