RFID Tags Track Path and Condition of Nuclear Materials

Rfid

Radio frequency identification devices already track everything from Wal-Mart inventory to missing pets and busloads of NFL players during the Super Bowl.

Now scientists at the Argonne National Laboratory have created an RFID tracking system to keep a close watch on storage and transportation of nuclear materials.

The tags not only monitor the condition of the nuclear materials, they also track environmental and physical changes to the packages. The system sends real-time alerts during storage and transportation, says Yung Liu, a senior nuclear engineer and RFID project manager at Argonne.

"The Argonne system can simultaneously monitor thousands of drums in real time," says Liu. "If there’s any abnormal situation like a sudden shock, it triggers an alarm and sends real-time alerts that can be immediately investigated."

In the last decade RFID has gained popularity as a leading technology among companies to track and manage products. Retailer Wal-Mart has been a major supporter of the technology and has asked 300 of its top suppliers to put RFID tags on their shipping crates.

RFID tags usually contain an integrated circuit for storing and processing information, an RF signal modulator and an antenna. Active RFID tags, like the kind used by Argonne, also contain a battery that allows them to transmit signals.

Nuclear materials are usually transported in drums — similar to large beer kegs — that are securely sealed. Unlike most commercial RFID tags that generally have no memory, Liu’s team developed tags that include non-volatile memory to store sensor logs. They also have extended battery life. Commercial RFID tags can last for three or four years, but the Argonne system’s tags have long-life batteries that give it a life of more than 10 years.

Before attaching the RFID tags to the drum, an encrypted manifest of the drum is entered into the tag’s memory. The tags are also connected to seal sensors that can detect changes to pressure and temperature among other things. Any change triggers an alert that is immediately investigated, says Liu. (Here’s a video of how the system works.)

The data on the status and history of each container is available on a secure site and can be integrated into the U.S. Department of Energy’s existing systems for tracking nuclear materials.

A recent dry run with 14 drums over 1700 miles proved the effectiveness of the system, says Liu.

"The DOE is looking to consolidate its nuclear materials from different test sites so this is a good way to ensure the proper security and storage of the materials," says Liu.

See also:
With No Long-Term Solution, Nuclear Pallbearers Bury Waste in America’s Backyard

Photo: Argonne National Laboratory’s Yung Liu with a nuclear material transport drum/ANL

MIT’s quick charging batteries could revolutionize the world, maybe

Okay, so maybe the headline is a tad on the sensational side, but seriously, this has sensational written all over it. A team of brilliant MIT engineers have conjured up a beltway of sorts that allows for “rapid transit of electrical energy through a well-known battery material,” something that could usher in smaller and lighter cells that could recharge in moments versus hours. There’s even talk that this technology could be adapted for use in automobiles, and honestly, it doesn’t take an electrical engineer to understand how rapid charge / discharge batteries could “induce lifestyle changes.” Hey, laptop battery makers — could you guys look into getting these ready to go in machines by CES 2010? That’d be swell, thanks.

[Via BBC, thanks Simon]

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MIT’s quick charging batteries could revolutionize the world, maybe originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Mar 2009 09:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Philips’ transparent OLED lighting for post-modern identity masking, toilets

We’re still looking at another 3 to 5 years of development here, but transparent OLED lighting panels are definitely on the way. This 12-centimeter prototype panel developed by Philips Research is transparent until flipping the switch for illumination. Unfortunately, the panels are currently limited in size due to complexities in the manufacturing process that necessitate a clean-room environment. Ultimately though, larger panels will replace “dumb glass” in household windows and stall dividers in trendy Germany toilets. What, haven’t been to Berlin lately?

[Via OLED-Display]

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Philips’ transparent OLED lighting for post-modern identity masking, toilets originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 07:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft’s Vision For the Future Gives Me Hope For Humanity

Microsoft’s five minute video on what the year 2019 will look like is pretty goddamn amazing. I want to live in this world. GIVE IT TO ME NOW.

The clip was shown at Wharton Business Technology Conference and it’s called 2019. My own enthusiasm aside, it looks like Microsoft’s interpolating various research technologies like Surface and who-the-hell-knows-what else into showing surfaces that can be manipulated, electronic paper, crazy video cellphones, touchscreen/remote-control walls and amazing handheld wands. As Arthur C. Clarke says, “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic,” and this shit is magic.

Hit the link to see the entire 5 minutes and get your own e-boner. [I Started Something via Venture Beat]

<a href="http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-GB&#038;playlist=videoByUuids:uuids:a517b260-bb6b-48b9-87ac-8e2743a28ec5&#038;showPlaylist=true&#038;from=shared" title="Future Vision Montage">Video: Future Vision Montage</a>

World’s smallest periscope provides multi-dimensional view of cells

We never thought we’d say this, but the standard microscope‘s day may be coming to an end. Okay, so maybe that’s a stretch, but a new device conjured up by scientists at Vanderbilt University sure could stand in as a suitable and deserving replacement. In what’s being described as the world’s smallest version of the periscope, the so-called mirrored pyramidal wells are being used to allow researchers to see several sides of cells simultaneously. The pyramidal-shaped cavities are molded into silicon “whose interior surfaces are coated with a reflective layer of gold or platinum,” and when a cell is placed inside, it gives Earthlings a magical multi-dimensional view. It’s said that this technology is actually stupendously inexpensive compared to other methods of 3D microscopy, and according to Vandy’s own Ron Reiserer, this “could easily become as ubiquitous as the microscope slide.” Them’s fightin’ words, no?

[Via Physorg]

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World’s smallest periscope provides multi-dimensional view of cells originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 09:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBM ThamesBlue supercomputer uncovers antediluvian English words

Granted, we could personally think of much more amazing ways to put supercomputers to work, but maybe there is some sort of benefit to humanity by knowing precisely what our ancestors’ first words were. All that aside, the IBM ThamesBlue supercomputer has been tapped by language masters at the University of Reading in order to find that ‘I,’ ‘we,’ ‘who’ and the numbers ‘1,’ ‘2’ and ‘3’ are amongst the most ancient across all Indo-European languages. Comically enough, it was also found that words like ‘squeeze,’ ‘guts,’ ‘stick,’ ‘throw’ and ‘dirty’ were also markedly archaic, which sure says a lot about how men in particular, um, don’t evolve. At any rate, these new computational powers have reportedly opened up another 25,000 years or so of language study, so we suspect the folks on this project will be occupied for some time to come.

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IBM ThamesBlue supercomputer uncovers antediluvian English words originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 01 Mar 2009 10:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Self-assembling nanoscale discovery could catapult data storage capacity

Ready to have your mind blown? What if 250 DVDs could fit onto a storage module no larger than a quarter? According to research conducted by brilliant geeks at the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Massachusetts Amherst, it’s all within the realm of feasibility. Reportedly, an easily implemented technique “in which nanoscale elements precisely assemble themselves over large surfaces” could soon blow open the doors to significant improvements in data storage capacity. Without getting too Ph.D on you, the process essentially works by taking advantage of just how precise molecules can self-assemble. The end result has researchers achieving “defect-free arrays of nanoscopic elements with feature sizes as small as 3 nanometers, translating into densities of 10 terabits per square inch.” Per square inch, son.

[Via TheStandard, thanks Apoc]

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Self-assembling nanoscale discovery could catapult data storage capacity originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 01 Mar 2009 06:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jacketed hamsters demonstrate movement-powered nanogenerators

Imagine this — one day, with enough steroids, your pet hamster actually could power your home by just running on its wheel. Georgia Tech researchers have discovered ways to “convert even irregular biomechanical energy into electricity,” and it’s demonstrating the finding by showing off jacket-wearing rodents that are game to run. According to the institution’s Zhong Lin Wang, the minuscule nanogenerators “can convert any mechanical disturbance into electrical energy,” which theoretically means that power can be driven by simple, irregular mechanical motion such as the vibration of vocal cords, flapping of a flag or the tapping of fingers. As with most of these university discoveries, there’s no telling how soon this stuff will be pushed out to the commercial realm, but at least they’ve found something to keep the rats busy during the off hours.

[Via news:lite, thanks Charles]

Continue reading Jacketed hamsters demonstrate movement-powered nanogenerators

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Jacketed hamsters demonstrate movement-powered nanogenerators originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Feb 2009 00:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Research says WiMAX and LTE will live different lives, coexist

Thinking that there’s only room in this town world for either WiMAX or LTE? Research firm In-Stat would love to disagree, as a new report from it asserts that both will actually live on for at least the next little while. Unsurprisingly, it’s expected that mobile WiMAX will “outpace LTE over the next few years due to its head start on deployments,” and potentially more importantly, the company believes that WiMAX and LTE will take “very different paths.” In fact, it’s stated that most WiMAX support will come from fixed network carriers looking to spruce up their existing offerings, while LTE expansion will likely be pushed solely (or mostly, anyway) by mobile operators. To us, it all boils down to support, and it only takes a quick survey of the field to see that LTE has the most of that. For better or worse, it seems the next-gen data war is but beginning, even though we already thought we were nearing the end.

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Research says WiMAX and LTE will live different lives, coexist originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 08:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Anthropomorphic robot shows off its Rock, Paper, Scissors-playing skills

BERTI (built by a partnership of the Bristol Robotics Laboratory and Elumotion Ltd.) is a fully automated robotic torso designed to perform “credible conversational gestures.” The robot is capable of quite complex hand movements, and, in the demonstration video above, plays a game of Rock, Paper, Scissors with a fine gentleman wearing a Goldfinger t-shirt, becoming another addition to the long line of gaming bots. Hit the read link to find out more info about BERTI and the project.

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Anthropomorphic robot shows off its Rock, Paper, Scissors-playing skills originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 22 Feb 2009 10:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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