Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is one of the most widely used wireless communications technologies nowadays. Among the numerous processes executed within an RFID system, the identification processis the most important one. There have been several proposals to efficiently execute such a mechan...
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doaj-cbc267acdd8b4fc99d93e46959590be92020-11-24T21:41:01ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202018-07-01187235010.3390/s18072350s18072350Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡Leonardo Sanchez0Victor Ramos1Department of Systems, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Azcapotzalco, CDMX 02200, MexicoDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Iztapalapa, CDMX 09340, MexicoRadio Frequency Identification (RFID) is one of the most widely used wireless communications technologies nowadays. Among the numerous processes executed within an RFID system, the identification processis the most important one. There have been several proposals to efficiently execute such a mechanism, which are based on the use of an RFID identification method. Besides, one of the most studied scenarios comprises one reader and a set of RFID tags, which we call the centralized approach. Recent work shows that executing the identification process in a distributed or parallel way may be of great benefit for applications with high requirements on time and resources usage, i.e., applications where the time required to execute the identification process needs to be low. In this paper, we focus is on large RFID systems and compare two identification mechanisms, one based on the centralized approach and the other based on the distributed approach. Our aim is to find the advantages and disadvantages of each approach for general RFID scenarios. We observe that the distributed approach is very promising compared to the traditional approach since considerable improvements are found in identification delay, and also the implementation costs would be highly reduced.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/18/7/2350distributed identificationRFID systemsEPC-Gen2 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Leonardo Sanchez Victor Ramos |
spellingShingle |
Leonardo Sanchez Victor Ramos Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡ Sensors distributed identification RFID systems EPC-Gen2 |
author_facet |
Leonardo Sanchez Victor Ramos |
author_sort |
Leonardo Sanchez |
title |
Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡ |
title_short |
Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡ |
title_full |
Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡ |
title_fullStr |
Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡ |
title_full_unstemmed |
Towards an Efficient Identification Process for Large-Scale RFID Systems ‡ |
title_sort |
towards an efficient identification process for large-scale rfid systems ‡ |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Sensors |
issn |
1424-8220 |
publishDate |
2018-07-01 |
description |
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is one of the most widely used wireless communications technologies nowadays. Among the numerous processes executed within an RFID system, the identification processis the most important one. There have been several proposals to efficiently execute such a mechanism, which are based on the use of an RFID identification method. Besides, one of the most studied scenarios comprises one reader and a set of RFID tags, which we call the centralized approach. Recent work shows that executing the identification process in a distributed or parallel way may be of great benefit for applications with high requirements on time and resources usage, i.e., applications where the time required to execute the identification process needs to be low. In this paper, we focus is on large RFID systems and compare two identification mechanisms, one based on the centralized approach and the other based on the distributed approach. Our aim is to find the advantages and disadvantages of each approach for general RFID scenarios. We observe that the distributed approach is very promising compared to the traditional approach since considerable improvements are found in identification delay, and also the implementation costs would be highly reduced. |
topic |
distributed identification RFID systems EPC-Gen2 |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/18/7/2350 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT leonardosanchez towardsanefficientidentificationprocessforlargescalerfidsystems AT victorramos towardsanefficientidentificationprocessforlargescalerfidsystems |
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