With the aid of RFID technology (identification through radio frequency), our project aims to create different ways for organizations and institutions to adapt to the actual situation caused by COVID-19. This will allow work places to continue with their usual activities by promoting and following a contagion prevention procedure that will depend on the ratio square meters per person, maximizing the safe amount of people in an area and therefore minimizing the risk of infection by close contact exposure.
The device works with radio frequency systems, a tag with an integrated circuit and antenna that’ll be attached to an identification card. This tag will be read in every entrance and exit of different facilities, keeping a count of people inside an area and showing if the place is saturated to its maximum safe capacity or accessible. This device also intends to generate a temporary database that will always collect the latest 15 days (a span of time that matches the virus incubation period).
The problems we’re tackling are:
We’re a group of college students that have faced difficulties in adapting to online classes due to the coronavirus pandemic. Lately we've been wondering when we will be able to to return to 'ordinary' school. Recently, an announcement has been made by the institution's executives notifying new restrictions and regulations that are going to be applied to the next school year to maintain the integrity of all members attending the institution. Due to this, our team thought of the opportunity to take advantage of the NASA Covid challenge to provide a solution on social distancing not only to our school, but also to every sort of facilities / headquarters around the world; to have more useful information and implement the needed and required health measures.
To help the institution and its members to comply with the specified regulations regarding social distancing, we decided to develop a system and a protocol to observe people traffic in a specific zone within a certain headquarters or facilities. With this system we provide information of how many people are in a given area within a specified zone. Each device located on every zone will be calibrated according the zone’s characteristics (specifying area and maximum people there can be by complying the social distancing regulations); the software will be able to analyze different variables such as “number of people”, “ventilation”, “area size”, “traffic flow” to provide the data to every potential person entering the zone how safe it is to be there, and for them to analyze the possibility to stay on another zone that isn’t as overcrowded as the one the were originally planning to stay or to be at. The goal here, is to spread the people the most across the entire facility to avoid overcrowding and minimize the risk of infection.
To develop this device we took into consideration the quarantine-related policies in our country as well as the post-quarantine-policies that have led to many types of new social adaptations and activities. Since we are not used to this new isolation situations, we got inspired in the way astronauts are trained to live and work at space; how they adapt to a lifestyle where there is reduced or absent social contact. We researched and found out how astronauts in the ISS use RFID technology and we decided to apply these technology to practical solutions for practicing social distancing.
Astronauts in the ISS use RFID tags to solve inventory management issues; they identify and store information. Some of the reasons they use this technology are because they allow high volume production since they are easily printable, which is good for tagging their consumables, it easily integrates barcode system, it has a high performance with a very good read range, it helps stores data and they developed a user interface software for easily management and viewing of data.
But let’s get back to the chase: sometimes implementing these sort of systems can be very expensive, which is why we wanted to make it as cheap (and available for everyone) as possible.The main challenge wasn’t developing the system, but to make it open source and cheap as possible. That’s why we decided to develop the prototype (and part of the final product) with elements almost any tech or engineering enthusiast would have; like an arduino, some IDE languages installed on their PC’s, among others. The basic id scanner (reader board and arduino) is based on arduino and python language, and the database to work as well.
Here you can see an image of the reader prototype.
Therefore we decided to use this technology to help us identify users, store their data and develop a counting system and interface, that will allow us to keep a count of people in a closed area and notify individuals in a place by giving them people traffic data within the site; guaranteeing trustworthy information that will avoid oversaturation of people traffic within certain zones.
Device Hardware and Software:
Advantages of using RFID tags:
What we’re aiming for is to provide useful information to all members across the whole facility. This data will permit staff members such as security and health officers to analyze the situation and apply the required measure to keep up with sanitization standards.
We are also providing a web page with information regarding our solution:
access password : isonet
Bacon, J. B. (2011, enero 1). Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) in Space. Recuperado 31 de mayo de 2020, dehttps://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20110014827.pdf
ABR. (2020, mayo 14). Location Tracking For the Future. Recuperado 31 de mayo de 2020, de https://www.abr.com/passive-rfid-tags-vs-active-rfid-tags/
Equipo de Marketing. (2016, junio 2). ¿Qué son las etiquetas RFID? Recuperado 31 de mayo de 2020, de https://tec-mex.com.mx/que-son-las-etiquetas-rfid/
https://www.abr.com/author/marketing/. (2020, febrero 8). 08 Feb Advantages of RFID vs Barcodes. Recuperado 31 de mayo de 2020, de https://www.abr.com/advantages-of-rfid-vs-barcodes/