Next generation asset trackers monitor the condition of fragile cargoes

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Supply chain and logistics systems are duty-bound to safely deliver valuable cargoes to their final destinations, but this is often no mean feat. Freight getting damaged in transit is all too common, with poor handling, incorrect packaging, exposure to adverse environmental conditions, and most frequently impact the main culprits, says Alf Helge Omre, business development manager Asset Tracking, Nordic Semiconductor.

When that cargo happens to be as fragile, and as precious, as a box of trays filled with glass vials storing thousands of COVID-19 vaccine doses it’s fair to say a failed journey could cost not only a lot of money, but human lives as well.

To protect the world’s health against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, tens of billions of delicate vaccine doses will need to be frozen and transported to every corner of the globe. This mammoth task to immunise populations is now underway.

According to Scientific American magazine, U.S. companies Pfizer and Moderna are ramping up production and distribution of their messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine products; 1.3 billion doses of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine and 500 million to 1 billion doses of Moderna COVID-19 vaccine are set to be distributed in 2021.

Yet that’s only the beginning; the logistics challenge in moving vaccines far and wide is made much harder because they don’t travel well. In addition to their fragility, vaccines also need to be stored and shipped at low temperatures (-20˚C for Moderna’s mRNA vaccine and -70˚C for the equivalent Pfizer vaccine). If either vaccine is exposed to elevated temperatures at any part of the supply chain, even if quickly refrozen, they become ineffective.

Relying on wireless technologies

The critical rollout of COVID-19 vaccines to many developed countries is providing a valuable stress test for the world’s logistics systems. Logistics companies are increasingly turning to advanced wireless asset tracking solutions; this new generation of products incorporates sensors to ensure fragile cargoes not only arrive when needed but are well looked after throughout the trip. For example, the companies tasked with shipping the Pfizer are wireless temperature monitors and GPS locators as part of the vaccine-shipping package.

Tracking and monitoring products based on Bluetooth LE offer a good solution for overseeing COVID-19 vaccine cold chains (as well as many other industrial asset tracking applications). Bluetooth LE wireless devices equipped with thermocouples and accelerometers can be placed in cold boxes and refrigerated containers to monitor and record temperatures and impacts. And because the sensors are relatively inexpensive, a monitoring device can be dedicated to each box.

Bluetooth LE tech’s smartphone interoperability offers sensor configuration and monitoring from a mobile app. Impact and temperature excursions can be flagged and, for audit purposes, the data recorded during the delivery’s entire trip from drug maker to healthcare provider can be downloaded to the smartphone (or other gateway device) and from there to the Cloud.

For example, Shinyei Technology’s TempView GT002-T-DF temperature logging unit uses Nordic Bluetooth LE technology to improve the reliability of vaccine transportation and logistics by monitoring and reporting vaccine temperature during storage and distribution. The solution is being used in Japan for the rollout of the Moderna vaccine.

But Bluetooth LE vaccine tracking does have limitations. For one, data can’t be sent to the Cloud without an interim gateway device. That problem can be overcome by instead using cellular IoT. Available in two versions LTE-M (which is suited to assets on the move) and NB-IoT (for applications that demand the longest battery life) the wireless technology leverage mature infrastructure to enable direct Cloud connectivity and feature long battery life, kilometre range, reliability, high quality of service (QoS), scalability and security.

Cellular IoT and Bluetooth LE are not interoperable, so cellular IoT monitoring solutions often include a complementary Bluetooth LE SoC to communicate with the cargo’s local monitoring network and which then passes on the information to the cellular IoT device via a wired connection. Cellular IoT products tend to be relatively more expensive and use more battery power when operating than Bluetooth LE sensors, so a common strategy is to use one cellular device as a gateway to the Cloud for multiple sensors.

Prototyping platforms point the way

Designing a cargo monitoring product that combines short range and cellular IoT wireless technologies is a tough engineering task. But help comes in the form of rapid prototyping platforms such as Nordic Semiconductor’s Nordic Thingy:91.

The Thingy:91 combines Nordic’s ultra-compact cellular IoT solution, the nRF9160 low power SiP with GPS and integrated multimode LTE-M/NB-IoT modem, with the nRF52840 high-end Bluetooth LE SoC. The product’s cellular IoT communication can be interleaved elegantly with GPS positioning acquisition making it perfect for precision location and monitoring of valuable cargoes. The Thingy:91 includes sensors to gather data about movement, temperature, humidity, air quality, air pressure, color and light intensity information that can be easily downloaded for local or remote analysis.

Another example of a reference design for wireless asset tracking solutions is Ericsson’s ARDESCO (Approved Reference Design for Ericsson and Sigma Connectivity), co-developed with Sigma Connectivity, which employs Nordic’s nRF9160 and nRF52840 to provide cellular IoT and Bluetooth LE connectivity for a wide range of indoor and outdoor IoT designs.

By combining wireless technologies, next-generation asset trackers will not only be able to precisely track the location of valuable assets but also monitor fragile cargoes like vaccines and other valuable shipments for their entire journey. That give those cargoes a much greater chance of arriving at the end of their long journeys unscathed.

The author is Alf Helge Omre, business development manager Asset Tracking, Nordic Semiconductor.

Comment on this article below or via Twitter: @IoTNow_OR @jcIoTnow

RECENT ARTICLES

Workz debuts unrestricted IoT device management

Posted on: May 3, 2024

Workz, a cloud-based eSIM vendor, has launched its new remote device management solution designed for the Internet of Things (IoT) industry. The platform eliminates the restrictions associated with traditional technologies

Read more

Itron improves Temetra platform for water utilities in Australia and New Zealand

Posted on: May 2, 2024

Itron expands the capabilities of its Temetra platform in Australia and New Zealand to include NB-IoT communications, enabling digital transformation for water utilities. Temetra’s comprehensive offering includes metre data processing,

Read more
FEATURED IoT STORIES

What is IoT? A Beginner’s Guide

Posted on: April 5, 2023

What is IoT? IoT, or the Internet of Things, refers to the connection of everyday objects, or “things,” to the internet, allowing them to collect, transmit, and share data. This

Read more

The IoT Adoption Boom – Everything You Need to Know

Posted on: September 28, 2022

In an age when we seem to go through technology boom after technology boom, it’s hard to imagine one sticking out. However, IoT adoption, or the Internet of Things adoption,

Read more

9 IoT applications that will change everything

Posted on: September 1, 2021

Whether you are a future-minded CEO, tech-driven CEO or IT leader, you’ve come across the term IoT before. It’s often used alongside superlatives regarding how it will revolutionize the way

Read more

Which IoT Platform 2021? IoT Now Enterprise Buyers’ Guide

Posted on: August 30, 2021

There are several different parts in a complete IoT solution, all of which must work together to get the result needed, write IoT Now Enterprise Buyers’ Guide – Which IoT

Read more

CAT-M1 vs NB-IoT – examining the real differences

Posted on: June 21, 2021

As industry players look to provide the next generation of IoT connectivity, two different standards have emerged under release 13 of 3GPP – CAT-M1 and NB-IoT.

Read more

IoT and home automation: What does the future hold?

Posted on: June 10, 2020

Once a dream, home automation using iot is slowly but steadily becoming a part of daily lives around the world. In fact, it is believed that the global market for

Read more

5 challenges still facing the Internet of Things

Posted on: June 3, 2020

The Internet of Things (IoT) has quickly become a huge part of how people live, communicate and do business. All around the world, web-enabled devices are turning our world into

Read more