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Registro Completo |
Biblioteca(s): |
Embrapa Agricultura Digital. |
Data corrente: |
08/06/2022 |
Data da última atualização: |
08/06/2022 |
Tipo da produção científica: |
Artigo em Periódico Indexado |
Autoria: |
QUINO, J.; MAJA, J. M.; ROBBINS, J.; OWEN JUNIOR, J.; CHAPPELL, M.; CAMARGO NETO, J.; FERNANDEZ, T. |
Afiliação: |
JANNETTE QUINO, EDISTO RESEARCH AND EDUCATION CENTER; JOE MARI MAJA, CLEMSON UNIVERSITY; JAMES ROBBINS, UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS; JAMES OWEN JUNIOR, USDA-ARS APPLICATION TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH UNIT; MATTHEW CHAPPELL, VIRGINIA TECH; JOAO CAMARGO NETO, CNPTIA; THOMAS FERNANDEZ, MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY. |
Título: |
The relationship between drone speed and the number of flights in RFID tag reading for plant inventory. |
Ano de publicação: |
2022 |
Fonte/Imprenta: |
Drones, v. 6, n. 1, p. 1-12, 2022. |
DOI: |
https:// doi.org/10.3390/drones6010002 |
Idioma: |
Inglês |
Notas: |
Na publicação: Joao Neto Camargo. |
Conteúdo: |
Abstract:Accurate inventory allows for more precise forecasting, including profit projections, easiermonitoring, shorter outages, and fewer delivery interruptions. Moreover, the long hours of physicallabor involved over such a broad area and the effect of inefficiencies could lead to less accurateinventory. Unreliable data and predictions, unannounced stoppages in operations, production delaysand delivery, and a considerable loss of profit can all arise from inaccurate inventory. This paperextends our previous work with drones and RFID by evaluating: the number of flights needed toread all tags deployed in the field, the number of scans per pass, and the optimum drone speed forreading tags. The drone flight plan was divided into eight passes from southwest to northwest andback at a horizontal speed of 2.2, 1.7, and 1.1 m per second (m/s) at a vertically fixed altitude. Theresults showed that speed did not affect the number of new tags scanned (p-value > 0.05). Resultsshowed that 90% of the tags were scanned in less than four trips (eight passes) at 1.7 m/s. Based onthese results, the system can be used for large-scale nursery inventory and other industries that useRFID tags in outdoor environments. We presented two novel measurements on evaluating RFIDreader efficiency by measuring how fast the reader can read and the shortest distance traveled by theRFID reader over tag. |
Palavras-Chave: |
Drones; Forecast; Inventory; Número de voos; Previsão; RFID; Speed; Velocidade do drone. |
Thesagro: |
Inventário. |
Thesaurus Nal: |
Labor. |
Categoria do assunto: |
-- |
URL: |
https://ainfo.cnptia.embrapa.br/digital/bitstream/doc/1143868/1/AP-Relationship-between-drone-2022.pdf
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Marc: |
LEADER 02329naa a2200337 a 4500 001 2143868 005 2022-06-08 008 2022 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 024 7 $ahttps:// doi.org/10.3390/drones6010002$2DOI 100 1 $aQUINO, J. 245 $aThe relationship between drone speed and the number of flights in RFID tag reading for plant inventory.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2022 500 $aNa publicação: Joao Neto Camargo. 520 $aAbstract:Accurate inventory allows for more precise forecasting, including profit projections, easiermonitoring, shorter outages, and fewer delivery interruptions. Moreover, the long hours of physicallabor involved over such a broad area and the effect of inefficiencies could lead to less accurateinventory. Unreliable data and predictions, unannounced stoppages in operations, production delaysand delivery, and a considerable loss of profit can all arise from inaccurate inventory. This paperextends our previous work with drones and RFID by evaluating: the number of flights needed toread all tags deployed in the field, the number of scans per pass, and the optimum drone speed forreading tags. The drone flight plan was divided into eight passes from southwest to northwest andback at a horizontal speed of 2.2, 1.7, and 1.1 m per second (m/s) at a vertically fixed altitude. Theresults showed that speed did not affect the number of new tags scanned (p-value > 0.05). Resultsshowed that 90% of the tags were scanned in less than four trips (eight passes) at 1.7 m/s. Based onthese results, the system can be used for large-scale nursery inventory and other industries that useRFID tags in outdoor environments. We presented two novel measurements on evaluating RFIDreader efficiency by measuring how fast the reader can read and the shortest distance traveled by theRFID reader over tag. 650 $aLabor 650 $aInventário 653 $aDrones 653 $aForecast 653 $aInventory 653 $aNúmero de voos 653 $aPrevisão 653 $aRFID 653 $aSpeed 653 $aVelocidade do drone 700 1 $aMAJA, J. M. 700 1 $aROBBINS, J. 700 1 $aOWEN JUNIOR, J. 700 1 $aCHAPPELL, M. 700 1 $aCAMARGO NETO, J. 700 1 $aFERNANDEZ, T. 773 $tDrones$gv. 6, n. 1, p. 1-12, 2022.
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Embrapa Agricultura Digital (CNPTIA) |
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1. | | QUINO, J.; MAJA, J. M.; ROBBINS, J.; OWEN JUNIOR, J.; CHAPPELL, M.; CAMARGO NETO, J.; FERNANDEZ, T. The relationship between drone speed and the number of flights in RFID tag reading for plant inventory. Drones, v. 6, n. 1, p. 1-12, 2022. Na publicação: Joao Neto Camargo.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: B - 5 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Agricultura Digital. |
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