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UK funding (138 879 £) : Mise sur le marché des étiquettes d’identification par radiofréquence (RFID) environnementales Ukri01/04/2020 UK Research and Innovation, Royaume Uni
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Mise sur le marché des étiquettes d’identification par radiofréquence (RFID) environnementales
| Abstract | The Innovation Fellow will analyse the development and deployment of environmentally friendly RFID tags and nanobarcodes in large-scale consumer retailing in the UK and the USA. RFID tags are already used in a number of business sectors to provide a tracking system identifying items through the supply chain. The total RFID market was estimated to be worth US$11.0 Billion in 2018, and is expected to increase to US$13.4 Billion by 2022. The potential employment effects of this technology have not been extensively investigated. RFID tags significantly reduce inventory count time from hundreds to a handful of hours with implications for staffing needs in different parts of the supply chain. The innovative contribution of the research is to examine the learning process from product development to implementation and its impact on labour productivity and decisions for managers about their labour requirements. The Innovation Fellow, based at the ESRC funded Digital Futures at Work Research Centre (Digit), will work in close collaboration with a Sussex based company, Advanced Material Development (AMD) (www.advmat.co.uk). AMD are developing these tags with the Material Physics Group at the University of Sussex led by Professor Alan Dalton and supported by Professor Peter Krüger's Quantum Systems and Devices group. These groups are part of the Sussex Programme in Quantum Research (SPQR) and the Data Intensive Science Centre in the Department of Physics and Astronomy. Since 2016, the Materials Physics Group have developed a platform technology based on graphene (and related material) inks which can be used for a variety of applications as functional materials. A novel quantum magnetic microscope pioneered by the Quantum Systems and Devices group provides crucial characterisation of conductivity and current flow in these materials and devices based on them. In 2017 a new company called Advanced Materials Development (AMD) was founded, based on Sussex IP, to commercialise these inks and develop a range of applications in further partnership with end users. Sustained industry engagement with key strategic partners in the consumer, automotive, and chemical sectors, including government organisations, is leading to a wider awareness and adoption of this novel environmentally friendly technology. Research questions: contributing to creating a zero-waste business and employment effects Of particular interest, the inks have been developed as coatings for replacement of metals in RFID systems for a leading UK retailer (M&S) and US RFID leader (Avery Denison) - a development that could have far-reaching environmental benefits and very large markets. This has been driven by the launch of Marks & Spencer new roadmap for its Plan A sustainability programme, which includes targets to reduce emissions by 80% and turn the company into a zero-waste business. The developed antennas are competitive with the incumbent technology in both performance and cost; AMD are currently negotiating to supply graphene-based antenna for early 2020. The problem being examined by the Innovation Fellow will be to understand how these RFID tags can contribute to creating a zero-waste business and its implications for the organisation of work. This problem will be examined around three core questions: 1. How does the company AMD commercialise the innovative environmentally friendly patents being developed by the Material Physics Group at Sussex? 2. What obstacles and opportunities do large-scale retailers face in seeking to adopt and implement new environmentally friendly technologies? 3. What are the consequences of these technologies for the organisation of employment in retail? A mixed methods Participatory Action Research (PAR) approach will be used to address these questions. The PAR approach aims to enable action learning and is based on the premise that research participants should be actively involved in the research process. |
| Category | Fellowship |
| Reference | ES/V002414/1 |
| Status | Closed |
| Funded period start | 01/04/2020 |
| Funded period end | 31/03/2021 |
| Funded value | £138 879,00 |
| Source | https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=ES%2FV002414%2F1 |
Participating Organisations
| University of Sussex | |
| Advanced Material Development | |
| Walmart | |
| Walmart |
Cette annonce se réfère à une date antérieure et ne reflète pas nécessairement l’état actuel. L’état actuel est présenté à la page suivante : University OF Sussex, Brighton, Royaume Uni.
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