Project

# Title Team Members TA Documents Sponsor
46 Inventory Tracker
Alex Buchheit
Sara Alabbadi
Sooha Ryu
Jason Zhang design_document2.pdf
design_document1.pdf
final_paper1.pdf
presentation1.pptx
presentation2.pptx
presentation3.pptx
proposal1.pdf
proposal2.pdf
video
## Team Members

Sooha Ryu (soohar2)

Sara Alabbadi (saraa6)

Alex Buchheit (alexwb2)

## Problem

I work as a lab assistant and one of my responsibilities is to restock various supplies in the lab. I have to manually enter supplies into an excel spreadsheet when they are used so the lab supervisor knows when to purchase more. This takes a lot of time and because we do it manually we have many discrepancies in inventory. It would be easier to not have to manually take inventory and have a system that could do that.

## Solution

Our proposed solution is an inventory tracking system. This system would use either RFID or computer vision to check out and return supplies. The user that is checking them out would be assigned a PIN number or scan their iCard to check out supplies. This information would be connected to a website and display that shows each supply being used and what user is using it.

Along with that, supplies stored in drawers or cabinets could be accessed by the user through the PIN or iCard scan. The system would also determine if the drawer had been opened by an unauthorized person and send an alert to the web database.

## Solution Components

## Smart Drawer

The supply drawer could be held shut by a magnet and a current carrying wire to create a magnetic field to hold it shut. Once it is determined through RFID that the correct user wants access to the drawer, power will no longer be sent through the wire, allowing the user to safely open the drawer. A sensor will be attached to the drawer to determine if it is opened. If it is opened and current is still flowing through the wire, this will alert the system that it has been opened by force by an unauthorized person.

Possible Proximity Sensor: HC-SR04
Datasheet:
https://cdn.sparkfun.com/datasheets/Sensors/Proximity/HCSR04.pdf

## User Access Control

iCard will be read by an RFID system to “unlock” the drawer they have access to. The user information will be stored in the database to keep track of inventory.

Possible Microcontrollers: ATMEGA328P-AUR, STM32F401RBT6, STM32F103C8T6TR, ATMEGA32U4-AUR, ESP32
Datasheets:
https://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/ATmega48A-PA-88A-PA-168A-PA-328-P-DS-DS40002061B.pdf

https://www.st.com/content/ccc/resource/technical/document/datasheet/9e/50/b1/5a/5f/ae/4d/c1/DM00086815.pdf/files/DM00086815.pdf/jcr:content/translations/en.DM00086815.pdf

https://www.st.com/resource/en/datasheet/stm32f103cb.pdf

http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/Atmel-7766-8-bit-AVR-ATmega16U4-32U4_Summary.pdf

https://cdn.sparkfun.com/datasheets/IoT/esp32_datasheet_en.pdf


## Inventory Tracking

A system to keep track of all items in the drawers using either RFID. All the items in the drawers will have a tag/chip attached to them, so once someone checks it out or returns it, the system will be able to know the items and keep track of the inventory. The data will be updated as inventory changes with information of the user from the user access control.

Possible RFID Reader: RFID READER R/W 13.56 MHZ MOD, RFID Reader ID-12LA

Datasheet: https://mm.digikey.com/Volume0/opasdata/d220001/medias/docus/5656/DLP-RFID2%28D%29-V2.pdf
https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/9/3/0/5/2/DS-11827-RFID_Reader_ID-12LA__125_kHz_.pdf?_gl=1*1eqzthn*_ga*NDYyODY1MjM3LjE3MDY3NDE1NjA.*_ga_T369JS7J9N*MTcwNjc0MTU2MC4xLjEuMTcwNjc0MTcwOC4zNy4wLjA.

Possible RFID Chip: RF37S114HTFJB, UHF RFID Tags - Adhesive

Datasheet:
https://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/rf37s114.pdf?HQS=dis-dk-null-digikeymode-dsf-pf-null-wwe&ts=1706682267886&ref_url=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.ti.com%252Fgeneral%252Fdocs%252Fsuppproductinfo.tsp%253FdistId%253D10%2526gotoUrl%253Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.ti.com%252Flit%252Fgpn%252Frf37s114

https://www.sparkfun.com/rfid


## Web Database

The database will be updated every time a user checks out or returns an item. It will also keep the records of when and who checked out what and what’s been returned. The database will also have how many items are in stock and display it with the checkout/return records. An alert message will be displayed if anyone forcefully opens the drawer.

Possible Bluetooth Module: ESP32-S3-WROOM-1-N16
Datasheet:
https://www.espressif.com/sites/default/files/documentation/esp32-s3-wroom-1_wroom-1u_datasheet_en.pdf


## Stretch Goal

If time allows, for keeping track of inventory, we could incorporate computer vision technology instead of an RFID. For using computer vision, we plan to have weight sensors on the drawers to check if there’s been any change of inventory. If there is, the camera would be activated and the user will show the item to the camera and once it recognizes what it is, it will record it to the database and the user will be able to close the drawer. For returning, once the user scans their iCard, they will be able to open the drawers and return the items. Knowing the items that’s been checked out by the user and the change in weight in the drawer, the system will figure out the returned item and record it to the database.

# Criteria For Success

Drawers can be locked and unlocked depending on the user access

System is able to recognize items checked out and returned

The system will display the current amount of items in stock

The system should display items checked out and the users that have checked them out

It should allow supervisors to change the number in stock if they restock supplies

Web database is updated regularly with correct user information

Correctly alerts database if drawer opened by force

Recovery-Monitoring Knee Brace

Dong Hyun Lee, Jong Yoon Lee, Dennis Ryu

Featured Project

Problem:

Thanks to modern technology, it is easy to encounter a wide variety of wearable fitness devices such as Fitbit and Apple Watch in the market. Such devices are designed for average consumers who wish to track their lifestyle by counting steps or measuring heartbeats. However, it is rare to find a product for the actual patients who require both the real-time monitoring of a wearable device and the hard protection of a brace.

Personally, one of our teammates ruptured his front knee ACL and received reconstruction surgery a few years ago. After ACL surgery, it is common to wear a knee brace for about two to three months for protection from outside impacts, fast recovery, and restriction of movement. For a patient who is situated in rehabilitation after surgery, knee protection is an imperative recovery stage, but is often overlooked. One cannot deny that such a brace is also cumbersome to put on in the first place.

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Solution:

Our group aims to make a wearable device for people who require a knee brace by adding a health monitoring system onto an existing knee brace. The fundamental purpose is to protect the knee, but by adding a monitoring system we want to provide data and a platform for both doctor and patients so they can easily check the current status/progress of the injury.

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Audience:

1) Average person with leg problems

2) Athletes with leg injuries

3) Elderly people with discomforts

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Equipment:

Temperature sensors : perhaps in the form of electrodes, they will be used to measure the temperature of the swelling of the knee, which will indicate if recovery is going smoothly.

Pressure sensors : they will be calibrated such that a certain threshold of force must be applied by the brace to the leg. A snug fit is required for the brace to fulfill its job.

EMG circuit : we plan on constructing an EMG circuit based on op-amps, resistors, and capacitors. This will be the circuit that is intended for doctors, as it will detect muscle movement.

Development board: our main board will transmit the data from each of the sensors to a mobile interface via. Bluetooth. The user will be notified when the pressure sensors are not tight enough. For our purposes, the battery on the development will suffice, and we will not need additional dry cells.

The data will be transmitted to a mobile system, where it would also remind the user to wear the brace if taken off. To make sure the brace has a secure enough fit, pressure sensors will be calibrated to determine accordingly. We want to emphasize the hardware circuits that will be supplemented onto the leg brace.

We want to emphasize on the hardware circuit portion this brace contains. We have tested the temperature and pressure resistors on a breadboard by soldering them to resistors, and confirmed they work as intended by checking with a multimeter.

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