Asset tracking: Enabling real-time supply chain visibility | Avnet Silica

Display portlet menu

Asset tracking: Enabling real-time supply chain visibility | Avnet Silica

Display portlet menu

Asset tracking: Optimising your capital assets and enabling real-time supply chain visibility

Jamie Peterson
Hand picking various assets on the touch screen

Asset tracking must be one of the best internet of things (IoT) applications created this decade. The ability to track the location of goods, personnel, or capital machinery in real-time is of significant benefit to any business. Asset tracking has brought previously impossible levels of visibility to global supply chains, streamlining processes, and providing minute-by-minute location data, so customers know exactly where their shipments are. Companies can use IoT-based asset tracking to track any physical item, from people to urgent medical supplies, capital-intensive construction machinery to empty shipping crates. They can be followed within buildings or virtually anywhere on planet Earth.

With such a diversity of potential asset classes to track, there are several vital factors engineering teams should review before designing an embedded wireless asset-tracking solution.

Coverage: What is the likely range you need to track an asset? Is it indoors, within a country, across a geographical region, or worldwide? This topic helps shape the type of wireless communication methods selected. If indoors, is it necessary to pin the asset to an individual room, just a floor, or simply ensure it is in a defined building?

Power source: How will the tracker be powered? In most use cases, a tracker needs to be entirely self-supporting, so a battery is the most likely power source. Is it possible to recharge the tracker's battery using a solar panel or other ambient energy sources, or is the asset capable of supplying sufficient power for the required duration? This is probably the most critical criterion from the hardware design perspective, typically requiring ultra-low power wireless ICs.

Monitoring parameters: How often the tracker needs to send its location and how much other data is required significantly influences the power consumption profile of the unit. When a wireless link is established, it makes sense to send any additional information. The type of asset will determine what is desirable or essential. For example, an accurate temperature record is paramount for chilled or frozen foods or medical supplies. Knowledge of extreme physical shock and excessive vibration for delicate assets could indicate a damaged consignment before delivery. With this information, customers can request a replacement shipment to minimise delays. Sending the tracker's battery voltage is also desirable.

Physical constraints: Knowing how and where the tracker will typically be attached to the asset is vital. Placing a tracker externally will require mechanically robust construction, but inside a shipping container restricts wireless communication and receiving GPS/GNSS signals.

Wireless communication: Suitable wireless protocols include Bluetooth Low Energy, Bluetooth Mesh, UWB, Cellular (LTE, NBIoT, DECT NR+), and LPWAN (LoRA, Sigfox). Each has specific attributes that suit the variety of use cases of asset trackers. Cellular methods are typically used for globally deployed trackers and offer the ability to fall back, for example, from 4G to 3G or 2G. Passive label trackers, used on pallet-based consignments, may use NFC and RFID.

Geo-location: Trackers deployed globally typically use GPS/GNSS to provide precise location data, but cellular networks also can yield an approximate location using base station coordinates and cell triangulation. For indoor tracking, UWB and Bluetooth methods offer viable tracking options.

The global asset tracking market is forecast to reach $36 bn by 2025, and according to research company Gartner, 65 % of companies will require indoor tracking capabilities to improve their operational efficiency and mitigate loss.

To find out more about designing asset tracking solutions and how asset tracking can benefit your business join Avnet Silica's Asset Tracking webinar.

 

Register Now

About Author

Jamie Peterson
Mike Hartmann

Mike Hartmann is a Supplier Business Development Manager at Avnet Silica....

Asset tracking: Enabling real-time supply chain visibility | Avnet Silica

Display portlet menu

Sign up for the Avnet Silica Newsletter!

Stay up-to-date with latest news on products, training opportunities and more!

Take a DEEP look into the future!

Get the latest market trends and in-depth trainings on our Digital Event Experience Portal!

Technical support

Online Support Service

Our European team of expert engineers is dedicated to helping you solve your technical challenges. Get support for a specific product, get technical advice or find alternatives for a specific product.

Person sitting in front of computer with headset

Asset tracking: Enabling real-time supply chain visibility | Avnet Silica

Display portlet menu
Related Articles
SPE & TSN
Ethernet evolution: The rise of SPE and TSN in automotive and industrial applications
By Harvey Wilson   -   September 14, 2023
IT professionals quickly recognized the benefits of networking computers and peripherals as the burgeoning computer industry established itself in the 1980s. However, making it a reality was another matter...
air conditioning system
AI takes on growing role in HVAC system efficiencies
July 24, 2023
In most countries, buildings account for about 40% of the total energy consumed. HVAC and lighting consume around half that amount. Fortunately, AI is already delivering improved energy efficiency in these systems.

Asset tracking: Enabling real-time supply chain visibility | Avnet Silica

Display portlet menu
Related Events
City at night
How to Quickly Connect STM32U5 Discovery Kit to the Cloud
Date: January 25, 2024
Location: online, on-demand
City at night
Connecting the Future: Matter and Wirepas Unleashed
Date: November 7, 2023
Location: online, on-demand