laser line scan
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Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 81
Author(s):  
Francesco Sillani ◽  
Ramis Schiegg ◽  
Manfred Schmid ◽  
Eric MacDonald ◽  
Konrad Wegener

Powder bed fusion of polymers is becoming increasingly adopted by a variety of industries to tailor the strength, weight and functionality of end-use products. To meet the high standards of the modern manufacturing industry, parts built with powder bed fusion require consistent properties and to be free of defects, which is intrinsically connected to the quality of the powder bed prior to melting. The hypothesis of this work is that the roughness of the top surface of an unmelted powder bed can serve as a proxy for the powder bed density, which is known to correlate with final part density. In this study, a laser line scan profilometer is integrated onto the recoater arm of a custom powder test bench, which is able to automatically create layers of powder. A diverse group of polymers was investigated including polyamide 12 (PA12), polyamide 11 (PA11), polypropylene (PP), and a thermoplastic elastomer (TPU) under different recoating speed in order to increase the variance of the dataset. Data analytics were employed to compare roughness to measured powder bed density and a statically significant correlation was established between them.


Author(s):  
Sebastian Meister ◽  
Mahdieu A. M. Wermes ◽  
Jan Stüve ◽  
Roger M. Groves

AbstractThe aerospace industry has established the Automated Fiber Placement process as a common technique for manufacturing fibre reinforced components. In this process multiple composite tows are placed simultaneously onto a tool. Currently in such processes manual testing requires often up to 50% of the manufacturing duration. Moreover, the accuracy of quality assurance varies significantly with the inspector in charge. Thus, inspection automation provides an effective way to increase efficiency. However, to achieve a proper inspection performance, the segmentation of layup defects need to be examined. In order to improve such defect detection systems, this paper performs a comprehensive ranking of segmentation techniques. Thus, 29 statistical, spectral and structural algorithms from related work were evaluated based on nine substantial criteria as assessed from literature and process requirements. For reasons of determinism and easy technology transferability without the need of much training data, the development of new Machine Learning algorithms is not part of this paper. Afterwards, seven of the most auspicious algorithms were studied experimentally. Therefore, laser line scan sensor depth maps from fibre placement defects were utilised. Furthermore noisy images were generated and applied for testing algorithm robustness. The test data contained five defect categories with 50 samples per class. It was concluded that Adaptive Thresholding and Cell Wise Standard Deviation Thresholding work best yielding detection accuracies mostly $$> 97$$ > 97 %. Noteworthy is that influenced input data can affect the detection results. Feasible algorithms with sensible parameter settings were able to perform reliable defect segmentation for layed material.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Mcclintock ◽  
Douglas R. Bruce ◽  
Richard G. Schwartz ◽  
Timothy M. Carroll ◽  
Michael J. Dayton ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 100 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Papatheodorou ◽  
M. Geraga ◽  
A. Chalari ◽  
D. Christodoulou ◽  
M. Iatrou ◽  
...  

Modern underwater remote sensing technology introduces many advantages that extend the range of conventional diving work providing the means to survey in a detailed and systematic fashion large seafloor area. There are two general approaches regarding the application of these techniques in underwater archaeology; they are being increasingly used to identify, locate and map (i) ancient and historical shipwrecks lying on the seafloor or partly buried in it and (ii) the coastal palaeogeogra-phy and thus submerged sites of archaeological interest (submerged ancient cities, settlements, ports and man-made structures). The underwater remote sensing techniques most commonly applied to underwater archaeology employ: (i) single and multi-beam echosounders (ii) side scan sonar (acousting imaging), (iii) laser line scan (optical imaging) (iv) subbottom profiler, (v) marine magne-tometer and (vi) undersea vehicles. The objectives of this paper are twofold: (i) to present the results of remote sensing surveys that carried out at sites of archaeological and historical interest, in Greece (Dokos Island, ancient harbour of Kyllene and Navarino Bay whereas a historical naval Battle took place) and in Eastern Mediterranean Sea (Alexandria Egypt and Mazotos shipwreck Cyprus), and (ii) to prove the applicability of remote sensing techniques in underwater archaeology showing that a combination of these can be a very effective tool.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W. Lee ◽  
Justin K. Nash ◽  
Brandon M. Cochenour ◽  
Linda J. Mullen

2013 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 566-580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bing Ouyang ◽  
Fraser Dalgleish ◽  
Anni Vuorenkoski ◽  
Walter Britton ◽  
Brian Ramos ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 478-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yeyin Shi ◽  
Ning Wang ◽  
Randal K. Taylor ◽  
William R. Raun ◽  
James A. Hardin

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