Using text as a native speckle pattern in digital image correlation

Author(s):  
Weston D Craig ◽  
Fiona B Van Leeuwen ◽  
Steven R Jarrett ◽  
Robert S Hansen ◽  
Ryan B Berke

In certain applications, native surface patterns can be used in place of speckle patterns in digital image correlation (DIC). This paper explores the feasibility of using text as a native speckle pattern in DIC. Five text speckle patterns are tested in three different scenarios: a rigid body translation test, a rigid body rotation test, and an out of plane bending test. The patterns are benchmarked against a sixth, random speckle pattern applied using traditional DIC speckling methods. Rigid body translation tests are additionally performed on text patterns with varying font types and line spacings. In general, text patterns have good contrast, but low density as line spacing increases. Measurement uncertainty for the text patterns was comparable to measurement uncertainty in the random speckle pattern. Results from these tests show that while text patterns cannot be expected to perform better than a traditional DIC speckle pattern, text patterns can be effective speckle patterns in situations where already present on a specimen and applying a traditional speckle pattern is difficult.

Aerospace ◽  
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helena (Huiqing) Jin ◽  
Wei-Yang Lu ◽  
Jeff Chames ◽  
Nancy Yang

A new experimental technique was developed to characterize the mechanical properties of LIGA (an acronym from German words for lithography, electroplating, and molding) materials. An advanced imaging capability, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), with an integrated loading stage allows the acquisition of in situ microstructural images at the micro scale during loading. The load is measured directly from a load cell, and the displacement field is calculated from the SEM images based on the digital image correlation (DIC) technique. The DIC technique is a full-field deformation measurement technique which obtains displacement fields by comparing random speckle patterns on the specimen surface before and after deformation. The random speckle patterns are typically generated by applying a thin layer of material with high contrast to a specimen surface. Alternatively, DIC can also be applied using the microstructural features of a surface as texture patterns for correlation. DIC technique is ideally suited to characterize the deformation field of MEMS structures without the need to generate a random speckle pattern, which can be very challenging on the micro and nanoscale. In this paper, the technique is experimentally demonstrated on a LIGA specimen. The digital images showing LIGA surface features acquired during the loading can serve as random patterns for the DIC method. Therefore, full-field displacement and strain can be obtained directly on the specimen and the errors incurred by the testing system can be eliminated.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 3140
Author(s):  
Gang Liu ◽  
Mengzhu Li ◽  
Weiqing Zhang ◽  
Jiawei Gu

Digital image correlation (DIC) for displacement and strain measurement has flourished in recent years. There are integer pixel and subpixel matching steps to extract displacement from a series of images in the DIC approach, and identification accuracy mainly depends on the latter step. A subpixel displacement matching method, named the double-precision gradient-based algorithm (DPG), is proposed in this study. After, the integer pixel displacement is identified using the coarse-fine search algorithm. In order to improve the accuracy and anti-noise capability in the subpixel extraction step, the traditional gradient-based method is used to analyze the data on the speckle patterns using the computer, and the influence of noise is considered. These two nearest integer pixels in one direction are both utilized as an interpolation center. Then, two subpixel displacements are extracted by the five-point bicubic spline interpolation algorithm using these two interpolation centers. A novel combination coefficient considering contaminated noises is presented to merge these two subpixel displacements to obtain the final identification displacement. Results from a simulated speckle pattern and a painted beam bending test show that the accuracy of the proposed method can be improved by four times that of the traditional gradient-based method that reaches the same high accuracy as the Newton–Raphson method. The accuracy of the proposed method efficiently reaches at 92.67%, higher than the Newton-Raphon method, and it has better anti-noise performance and stability.


2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (02) ◽  
pp. 1540004 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARCO PALANCA ◽  
TOMMASO MARIA BRUGO ◽  
LUCA CRISTOFOLINI

Digital image correlation (DIC) is being introduced to the biomechanical field. However, as DIC relies on a number of major assumptions, it requires a careful optimization in order to obtain accurate and precise results. The first step was the preparation of the speckle pattern by an airbrush spray gun following a factorial design to explore the different settings: the different speckle patterns created were analyzed to achieve the optimal speckle size, with minimal dispersion of speckle sizes. A benchmark test, with an aluminum specimen prepared with the speckle pattern, was conducted in which the errors affecting the computed strain were measured in a zero-displacement, zero-strain condition. The software parameters (facet size, step, and local regression) were singularly analyzed in order to understand their behavior on the final output. Moreover, the hardware parameters (camera gain, exposure, lens distortion) were analyzed. The output showed that a careful optimization allowed the reducing the systematic and random errors, respectively, from 150 to 10 microstrain and from 600 to 110 microstrain. Finally, the acquired know-how was applied to a biological specimen (human vertebra).


2019 ◽  
Vol 809 ◽  
pp. 575-580
Author(s):  
Marco Korkisch ◽  
Markus G.R. Sause

Digital Image Correlation (DIC) has become more and more important in the field of material characterization and research, especially for strongly anisotropic fiber reinforced materials. Its big advantage over the conventional methods like strain gauges or point based video-extensometers is the full field strain and displacement measurement and the ability to analyze three-dimensional displacements. Although theoretically, the concept of the DIC as a pure image-based method allows it to work on every imaginable scale, its main field of application is in the range, where the region of interest (ROI) has a size between 10 −2 m to 10 −1 m. In this case, imaging is accomplished with the use of high-resolution black and white digital cameras. This work is focused on a smaller scale with ROI sizes between 10 −4 m to 10 −3 m, where a digital microscope is used to create the images. The innovative idea behind this work is using the natural surface structure of a polished carbon fiber reinforced Polyamide-6 sample, produced by automated fiber placement, as a statistical pattern instead of the usual speckle pattern applied to the area to be investigated. This way the stress and strain distributionin different regions of the investigated sample area can be evaluated and displayed, while the sample is exposed to an increasing mechanical load in form of a three-point bending test. The resulting strain and displacement fields are compared to finite element modeling of the ROI. To provide an accurate model, the image of the sample is first segmented into fiber, matrix and voids using “Trainable Weka Segmentation” and the resulting phases mapped with the corresponding material properties. To compute the resulting strains in the sample, the measured displacements from the DIC on the edges of the ROI were used as boundary conditions for the simulation. Simulation and experimental results clearly point out the inhomogeneity of the strain field in these samples. Due to the presence of fiber rovings and the presence of voids, local strain values exceed the global average by up to 4 %.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 4184
Author(s):  
Camelia Cerbu ◽  
Stefania Ursache ◽  
Marius Florin Botis ◽  
Anton Hadăr

As hybrid carbon-aramid composites become widely used in various industries, it has become imperative to mechanically characterize them using accurate methods of measuring the entire deformation field such as the digital image correlation (DIC) method. The accuracy of the numerical simulation of carbon-aramid composite structures depends on the accuracy of the elastic constants. Therefore, the goal of this research is to model and simulate the mechanical behaviour of the composite based on epoxy resin reinforced with carbon-aramid woven fabric by considering the mechanical properties investigated by tensile test combined with DIC and the bending test. The curves of the transverse strains related to the longitudinal strains were investigated using DIC in order to determine the Poisson’s ratios in the case of tensile tests applied in warp or weft directions of the reinforcement fabric. The impact strength determined by Charpy tests is also reported. The other main objective is to use the analytical models to compute the tensile and flexural moduli of elasticity for the fictitious orthotropic materials which behave similarly to the carbon-aramid composite investigated. The simulations regarding the behaviour of the carbon-aramid composite in tensile and bending tests were validated by the experimental results, since the maximum errors recorded between experimental and theoretical results were 0.19% and 0.15% for the equivalent tensile modulus and for the equivalent flexural modulus, respectively.


2020 ◽  
Vol 62 (10) ◽  
pp. 1003-1009
Author(s):  
Yantao Sun ◽  
Jia Huang ◽  
Duoqi Shi ◽  
Shengliang Zhang ◽  
Zhizhong Fu ◽  
...  

Abstract Comprehensive characterization mechanical properties of aerogels and their composites are important for engineering design. In particular, some aerogel composites were reported to have varied tension and compression moduli. But conducting tension tests is difficult for the reason that low strength and brittleness will lead to unexpected failure in the non-test area. A method is presented for measuring both the tension and compression moduli of a ceramic-fiber reinforced SiO2 aerogel composite by bending via digital image correlation. First, the relationship between bending behavior and the tension/compression moduli was introduced for bimodular materials. Then a bending test was conducted to predict tension and the compression moduli of the ceramicfiber- reinforced SiO2 aerogel composite via digital image correlation. In addition, uniaxial tension and compression tests of the aerogel composites were carried out, respectively for measuring tension and compression moduli. The tension and compression moduli measured were numerically similar to results obtained from uniaxial tests with a difference of less than 14 %.


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