03.29.16
A specialist consortium creating a world class UK manufacturing supply chain will enable the widespread adoption of packaging incorporating NFC-based technology.
The three-year project is titled SCOPE, a £10 million ($14 million) project building manufacturing capability, capacity and skills required to commercialize and position the UK as a world leader in the production of smart products with printed sensors – a fast growing billion dollar global market.
The Internet of Things describes a world in which everyday physical objects are able to communicate and exchange data with other connected devices through wireless technologies such as RFID and NFC. NFC is an emerging technology which constitutes an NFC chip, embedded or applied onto an object such as product packaging and then activated by interaction with an NFC reader or a smartphone.
Data can be gathered and transferred between the two devices when held in close proximity. The production of NFC tags using printable electronics means in the future NFC tags will be able to be produced in a high volume, low cost manner with conformable geometries.
Printed NFC will be able to be used for a host of applications such as providing product differentiation on fast moving consumer goods, tracking or indicating the authenticity of a product in logistics, anti-tampering controls that also provides data management information. For these products to reach the retailer, technology innovation is needed to develop the supply chain.
The aim of SCOPE is to develop new processes, equipment and applications to enable the high-volume manufacturing (billions or even trillions) of printed electronic components that incorporate NFC. A key emphasis is to apply highly automated and high speed integration techniques to meet target costs of <1cent per NFC tag.
The consortium comprises of 14 partners across the UK’s packaging supply chain, including world-class end-users in Unilever, Hasbro, Crown Packaging alongside Tier-1 product supply-chain companies Andrews & Wykeham and Mercian Labels. Additionally the consortium unites complementary technical expertise in the production of flexible integrated circuits (PragmatIC), the automation of processes (Optek), ferrite materials (University of Kent), electronics design (Silvaco), polymer substrates (Innovia), inks (Invotec and Centre for Process Innovation (CPI)), NFC know-how (NFS) and systems integration (CPI and PragmatIC).
The project covers multiple application sectors such as fast-moving consumer goods, beverage, games and security and provides a platform to develop second-generation opportunities within other key UK sectors including healthcare, food, energy, built-environment, defence and transport. Currently initial concepts are being developed around low-cost, high volume, printed logic for integration into labels for smart packaging and product branding on fast moving consumable goods
“So far, the consortium has made excellent progress and has worked closely to produce a range of NFC product concepts that integrate logic circuits produced on flexible substrates,” said Mike Clausen, program manager at CPI, which is heading the SCOPE project. “Going forward, the next steps are to upscale the manufacturing process to ensure that these novel NFC applications are produced at the cost and speeds that industry demands. To do this, we are currently developing the capability to scale up these production processes to produce market trial samples of up to 50,000 to 100,000 tags.”
“The NFC-based applications targeted by the project are an ideal use case for the form factor and cost advantages of PragmatIC’s flexible integrated circuits,” Scott White, CEO at PragmatIC, added.
The three-year project is titled SCOPE, a £10 million ($14 million) project building manufacturing capability, capacity and skills required to commercialize and position the UK as a world leader in the production of smart products with printed sensors – a fast growing billion dollar global market.
The Internet of Things describes a world in which everyday physical objects are able to communicate and exchange data with other connected devices through wireless technologies such as RFID and NFC. NFC is an emerging technology which constitutes an NFC chip, embedded or applied onto an object such as product packaging and then activated by interaction with an NFC reader or a smartphone.
Data can be gathered and transferred between the two devices when held in close proximity. The production of NFC tags using printable electronics means in the future NFC tags will be able to be produced in a high volume, low cost manner with conformable geometries.
Printed NFC will be able to be used for a host of applications such as providing product differentiation on fast moving consumer goods, tracking or indicating the authenticity of a product in logistics, anti-tampering controls that also provides data management information. For these products to reach the retailer, technology innovation is needed to develop the supply chain.
The aim of SCOPE is to develop new processes, equipment and applications to enable the high-volume manufacturing (billions or even trillions) of printed electronic components that incorporate NFC. A key emphasis is to apply highly automated and high speed integration techniques to meet target costs of <1cent per NFC tag.
The consortium comprises of 14 partners across the UK’s packaging supply chain, including world-class end-users in Unilever, Hasbro, Crown Packaging alongside Tier-1 product supply-chain companies Andrews & Wykeham and Mercian Labels. Additionally the consortium unites complementary technical expertise in the production of flexible integrated circuits (PragmatIC), the automation of processes (Optek), ferrite materials (University of Kent), electronics design (Silvaco), polymer substrates (Innovia), inks (Invotec and Centre for Process Innovation (CPI)), NFC know-how (NFS) and systems integration (CPI and PragmatIC).
The project covers multiple application sectors such as fast-moving consumer goods, beverage, games and security and provides a platform to develop second-generation opportunities within other key UK sectors including healthcare, food, energy, built-environment, defence and transport. Currently initial concepts are being developed around low-cost, high volume, printed logic for integration into labels for smart packaging and product branding on fast moving consumable goods
“So far, the consortium has made excellent progress and has worked closely to produce a range of NFC product concepts that integrate logic circuits produced on flexible substrates,” said Mike Clausen, program manager at CPI, which is heading the SCOPE project. “Going forward, the next steps are to upscale the manufacturing process to ensure that these novel NFC applications are produced at the cost and speeds that industry demands. To do this, we are currently developing the capability to scale up these production processes to produce market trial samples of up to 50,000 to 100,000 tags.”
“The NFC-based applications targeted by the project are an ideal use case for the form factor and cost advantages of PragmatIC’s flexible integrated circuits,” Scott White, CEO at PragmatIC, added.