The present invention relates in general to an infrared video camera system for use in thermographic inspection of equipment and for generating reports based thereon. In particular, the present invention provides a method and apparatus for storing a plurality of thermal images relating to a thermographic survey and for associating a barcode generated data field with a thermal image.
Recent infrared (IR) video camera systems employing IR sensitive elements, e.g., a cooled or uncooled Charged Coupled Device (CCD) focal plane array, pyroelectric detector or the like, have been employed in infrared thermography systems for performing thermographic inspections or surveys of large numbers of elements. Thermographic images of an element may then be compared with a control image or other previously recorded thermographic image of the same scene or element. Such systems may be employed, e.g., in industrial facilities for plant maintenance, or the like, in which failures of electromechanical equipment, process equipment or other devices may be predicted based on abnormalities or “thermal events” detected in a live or recorded thermal image of the device being surveyed. Such thermographic surveys may also be employed in agricultural, medical, veterinary medical, law enforcement and military applications. In such applications, a thermographer may prepare a thermographic survey comprising a list of devices, objects or infrared scenes, called elements, to be recorded or surveyed. Each element is then periodically recorded using a thermographic video camera to record thermal video images of the elements of the survey. Thereafter, each video image of an element of the survey may be reviewed for comparison with a previously recorded control image of the element. By comparing the survey image with the control image, a thermal abnormality or thermal event may be detected. Such a thermal event may indicate a pending failure of the element. One such thermographic inspection system is disclosed by Piety et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 5,386,117.
Piety et al. disclose a mobile thermography system comprising an infrared camera, an ordinary visible image video camera, a personal computer, (PC), including an internal digital memory and a disk drive for digital data storage, a video recorder for recording analog video data, an LCD touch screen display device, a pen digitizer, various power storage devices, a system controller for operating various software which may be used to control and communicate between the various system elements, as well as, various other measuring devices, all mounted onto a mobile unit for ease of movement through a facility to be surveyed. Piety et al. also disclose a fixed base station computer including a digital data processor, for operating various digital data processing programs and including a video display and a printer for viewing video images, a memory, a disk drive, for digital data storage, an analog video recorder and analog video image processing equipment. In this case the mobile unit may be connected via communication ports with the base station computer at the beginning and end of each survey so that digital and or analog images, as well as, image identifying data may be communicated from the base unit to the mobile unit or from the mobile unit to the base unit as required.
According to Piety et al. software running on the base station computer is used to set up a framework of the thermographic survey. Such information as an element identifying name or control image, the type of element being surveyed, how to survey the element, fault types to look for, templates, notes, forms and the like are uploaded from the base station computer to the mobile unit prior to starting a survey to prompt the thermographic surveyor through the survey element by element and to record all information needed to generate a final report in the event a fault is discovered. After data collection is completed, the mobile unit is again connected to the base station computer and the collected survey images as well as other data which may have been entered by an operator during the survey are downloaded from the mobile unit to the base station computer for analysis and report generation.
One problem with this approach is that the thermographic surveyor is prompted through the thermographic survey in the predetermined order according to a survey route which is established by the original thermographic survey framework set up at the base station computer. In cases where the surveyor may wish to change the order or the route of the survey, the prompt information must be scrolled through in order to find the identifying information associated with a desired survey element. Since the survey may include many hundreds of images, this presents a problem to the surveyor when the order of the survey is changed. Another problem with the prior art approach is that many of the survey elements may be nearly identical, e.g. an electrical switch panel may contain tens or hundreds of substantially identical switches to be surveyed. In this case, an operator may confuse one switch with another. Even the element identifying information stored by the mobile unit may be confusing since element names and element control images may be very similar. For these reasons, an operator could easily loose the sequence of the survey thereby falsely identifying subsequent recordings.
A further disadvantage associated with the prior art is that occasionally a re-survey may be required to confirm or reevaluate a thermal event for one or a portion of the elements of the survey. By the prior art methods, a surveyor would be forced to scroll through the entire survey to reach the data associated with the element or elements to be resurveyed.
The present invention obviates the disadvantages associated with the use of a route based or predetermined videographic survey sequence or with the need to sequentially scroll through survey element data stored on a video camera used for a video survey or data collection with a video camera system by providing a barcode label associated with an element to be surveyed and a barcode scanner associated with the video camera system and by storing identifying information associated with each element of the survey in an a electronic memory associated with the video camera system.
Generally, the present invention provides an integrated video camera system for capturing a video image of an element. The camera system includes a digital data processor and a memory module in communication with the digital data processor for storing program steps and for storing digital data in data fields provided on the memory module. According to the present invention, a barcode including a bar pattern representative of an identifying name of the element is associated with the element and a barcode scanner, in communication with the digital data processor, is used to scan the barcode. The barcode scanner generates an electrical signal in response to scanning the barcode and the electrical signal is interpreted by the digital data processor to associate the identifying name of the element with an appropriate data field provided on the memory module. When a video image of the element is captured, the video image of the element is stored onto the memory module with the identifying name of the element associated therewith. The memory module may also include a first data field having the identifying name of the element stored therein and a second data field associated with the first data field for storing a video image of the element.
In order for an operator to view a video image of an element, the integrated video camera system may further comprise a video display device in communication with the digital data processor for viewing the video image of the element and for viewing the identifying name of the element. A keypad in communication with the digital data processor may also be included for providing an operator interface to the video camera system so that the operator may give commands to the camera, e.g. for scrolling between video images, or the like. The memory module may be formed by having an internal memory associated with the video camera system, e.g. a read only memory, (ROM), for storing the program steps and a separate removable memory module, e.g. a PCMCIA card installed in a PCMCIA slot on the video camera system, for storing the digital data relating to the element in data fields provided on the removable portion of the memory module.
The integrated video camera system may also be used for capturing a plurality video images of a plurality of elements included in a videographic survey. In this case, each of the plurality of elements has a unique identifying name and the memory module includes a plurality of data fields relating to each of the plurality of elements such that a separate data field is provided for storing each of the identifying names of the plurality of elements. In this case a barcode is provided associated with each of the plurality of elements such that upon scanning one of the bar-codes the electrical signal generated by the barcode scanner is interpreted by the digital data processor to associate the identifying name of the element associated with the barcode with an appropriate data field provided on the memory module. A video image of the element associated with the barcode is stored onto the memory module with the identifying name scanned from the one barcode associated therewith. In addition, upon scanning a barcode, the identifying name of the element associated with the barcode is determined by the data processor and a display screen having data fields relating to the element associated with the barcode may be displayed on the video display device.
Also according to the present invention there is provided a method for capturing a video image of an element with a video camera system which includes a digital data processor for executing program steps, a memory module in communication with the digital data processor for storing the program steps and for storing digital data in data fields and a barcode scanner in communication with the digital data processor. The method comprises the steps of, associating a barcode comprising a bar pattern representative of an identifying name of an element with the element, scanning the barcode with the barcode scanner thereby generating an electrical signal in response to scanning the barcode and interpreting the electrical signal according to the program steps to associate the identifying name of the element scanned from the bar pattern with an appropriate data field provided on the memory module. The method further includes the steps of capturing a video image of the element and storing the video image of the element onto the memory module in an image data field having the identifying name of the element associated therewith. The method may further include the steps of establishing a plurality of digital data fields on the memory module for storing digital data associated with the element, storing the identifying name of the element in one of the plurality of data fields and associating the identifying name of the element with all of the other of the plurality of digital data fields.
An operator may retrieve the image data field and the identifying name data field of the element from the memory and display a video image of the element and the identifying name of the element on a video display device associated with the video camera system. In some cases the video camera system may determine a plurality of parameters relating to the step of capturing the video image of the element and store the plurality of parameters in the plurality of data fields established on the memory module and associated with the identifying name of the element.
The method may also include the steps of storing the program steps in an internal memory associated with the video camera system while the step of storing the video image of the element on the memory module stores the video image onto a removable memory module, e.g. a PCMCIA card which is removable from the video camera system.
The method may also be used for capturing a plurality of video images of a plurality of elements included in a videographic survey in which case the steps include, associating a plurality of bar-codes with the plurality elements, each of the plurality of bar-codes having a bar pattern representative of the identifying name of the element associated with the barcode, scanning a first barcode associated with a first of the plurality of elements with the barcode scanner thereby generating an electrical signal in response to scanning the first barcode; and, interpreting the electrical signal to determine the identifying name scanned from the bar pattern of the first barcode to associate the identifying name of the first element with an appropriate data field on the memory module. As above, the method includes capturing a video image of the first element and storing the video image of the first element onto the memory module in an image data field having the identifying name of the first element associated therewith. In this case, further steps include establishing a plurality of digital data fields on the memory module for storing digital data associated with each of the plurality of elements of the survey, storing the identifying name of each of the plurality of elements of the survey in separate data fields of the plurality of data fields and associating the identifying name of each of the plurality of elements of the survey with a portion of the plurality of digital data fields such that each of the plurality of elements includes a plurality of data fields associated with the identifying name of the element. The method further includes the steps of retrieving the image data field having the identifying name of the first element associated therewith and displaying the video image of the first element and the identifying name of the first element on a video display device associated with the video camera system.
According to the present invention, there is also included a method for performing a videographic survey of a plurality of elements. The steps include preparing a videographic survey database on a base computer such that the videographic survey database includes a plurality of data fields for storing data associated with each of the plurality of elements. The database includes one data field for storing an identifying name for each of the plurality of elements and a data field for storing a video image of each of the plurality of elements and the data fields for storing the identifying name are each associated with an appropriate data field for storing a video image of each elements of the survey.
The base computer also includes a program for generating each of the identifying names in a barcode format. After establishing the database on the base computer the method includes the steps of transferring the data fields to a memory module associated with a video camera system and associating a plurality of bar-codes, one barcode with each of the plurality of elements. The base computer may also include a barcode label printer associated therewith for printing barcode patterns onto labels for associating a label with each of the plurality of elements of the survey.
Each of the plurality of bar-codes includes a bar pattern representative of the identifying name of the element associated with the barcode. According to the method, an operator scans a first of the plurality of bar-codes with a barcode scanner in communication with the video camera system to determine the identifying name of the element associated with the first barcode. The digital data processor associated with the camera system interprets the barcode signal to determine the identifying name of the element and then selects the appropriate data field of the database for storing a video image of the element associated with the first barcode. An operator may then capture a video image of the element associated with the first barcode with the video camera system and the digital data processor stores the video image of the element in the appropriate data field of the database associated with the identifying name of the element.
To complete the video survey, the method further includes the steps of scanning the remaining of the plurality of bar-codes with the barcode scanner, selecting the appropriate data field of the database for storing a video image of the remaining of the plurality of elements associated with the remaining of the plurality of bar-codes and capturing a video image of each of the remaining of the plurality of elements of the videographic survey and storing the video image of each of the remaining of the plurality of elements of the survey in the appropriate data field of the database such that the identifying name of the remaining of the plurality of elements is associated with the video image of remaining of the plurality of elements.
In the final steps of the method, the data fields stored on the memory module of the video camera system are transferred back to the base computer which may be used to analyze the videographic survey data using programs stored on the base computer or to store an archive of the videographic survey data onto a memory associated with the base computer using programs stored on the base computer. In addition, an operator may choose to scan less than the remaining of the plurality of bar-codes with the barcode scanner.
The features of the present invention will best be understood from a detailed description of the invention and a preferred embodiment thereof selected for the purposes of illustration and shown in the accompanying drawing in which:
Referring now specifically to
The camera 10 also includes a removable memory module 30 such as a PCMCIA memory card which installs into a memory module port 32 for communicating with the camera 10. Other removable or non-removable memory modules may also be used such as a disk drive, tape drive, or other magnetic memory component, or a recordable compact disk memory, CD, or other optical memory device, or other suitable internal or external electronic digital data storage devices or analog memory devices, such as a video cassette recorder, may be provided to store thermal images captured by the infrared camera 10.
The camera 10 also includes an imaging lens assembly 34 for relaying an image of a scene onto an imaging sensor for capturing an electronic image of the scene. The imaging lens assembly 34 may be interchangeable with other imaging lens assemblies having different optical properties, e.g. field of view or magnification. The lens assembly 34 may also include an optical filter, (not shown), for filtering out unwanted wavelengths emitted by the scene. The camera 10 may also include one or more input/output, (I/O), ports 26 for connecting other devices to the camera 10 such as a base computer, (PC), a portable computer or laptop, a printer, fax, or other communication device, an optical or thermal measurement instrument, diagnostic equipment, additional data storage devices, other display or data entry devices, an audio microphone, audio headphones or any other device which may aid the thermographer in capturing survey data.
Depicted schematically in
The analog output of the infrared sensor assembly 36 is converted into digital image data by an analog to digital, (A/D), converter 38. Thereafter, the digital image data produced by the A/D converter is directed into an equalization processor 40, which applies a pixel to pixel correction to the digital image data in a manner known in the art. The corrected digital image data is subsequently stored in a frame buffer 42. This same corrected digital image data may also be stored on the removable memory module 30. The digital image data is output from the frame buffer 42, mapped by a mapper 44 and scaled by a scaler 46, as necessary for displaying the corrected digital image of the scene, again in a manner known in the art, onto display device 16 of the infrared camera system 10. In addition, the corrected digital thermal image data and other information (see below) displayed on the display device 16 may be stored in the memory module 30 or in another storage device associated with the infrared camera 10 for immediate viewing, for later analysis or for archival purposes.
A microprocessor 48 controls the operation of the infrared camera 10 and the display device 16 in response to programmed instructions stored in an internal digital memory 50, e.g. a read only memory, (ROM), or programmable or flash memory or the like, and in response to operator commands input via the keypad 14. The microprocessor 48 may also process programmed instructions for displaying text and other graphic symbols onto the display device 16 such that text data fields may be displayed simultaneously with a video image or exclusively text and graphic images may be displayed on the display device 16. Such programmed instructions as well as data associated with survey elements may reside on the memory 50 or the memory module 30 or on another interconnected memory device such that the microprocessor 48 interacts with a memory and with keypad 14 to receive input instructions from an operator, receive data and/or programming instructions from the memory 30 or 50 and drive the display device 16 such that video images, text data fields and other graphical images are displayed to the operator.
Camera display screen views are illustrated in
As illustrated in
Since a thermographic survey may include many more than 16 survey elements, once a first set of 16 thumbnails images has been scrolled through, a new set of the next 16 thumbnail images 324 is automatically loaded into the thumbnail display screen 320. In this case, a reference image, a visible image or no image but just the information panel 328 associated with each element of the survey may have been loaded onto the memory module 30 such that between 10 and 300 images are typically stored on the camera system 10 during a survey. Furthermore the operator may be required to identify 10 to 300 survey elements, match each survey element with a thumbnail images stored on the camera 10 and capture a new thermal image of the survey element. Since the thumbnail images are small and since many survey elements may look similar, an operator could easily associate a wrong thumbnail image with the survey element.
The camera 10 further includes a barcode scanning device, referred to generally by reference numeral 52 and connected to the camera 10 via one of the I/O ports 26 by a connecting wire 56. Such a barcode scanning device 52, shown in
The barcode scanner 52 also includes a light sensitive detector or sensor 60 for providing an electrical signal in response to illumination falling thereon. Connecting wire 56 may also provide a voltage and or biasing current to the sensor 60 and communicates an electrical signal generated by the sensor 60 to the microprocessor 48 for analysis. A lens 62 may also be provided for focusing light from the illuminating light 58 onto a barcode label 64 and for collecting light reflected by the barcode label 64 and directing the reflected light from the barcode label onto the sensor 60. A barcode 66 recorded onto the barcode label 64 may include a plurality of bar patterns each representing an alpha-numeric character, or the like, as is well known.
Such a barcode label 64 which includes a barcode 66 may be attached to the survey element or otherwise associated with the survey elements. In this case, the barcode 66 represents a unique element identifying name such as the same name displayed in the display field 310 of the display screen 300 and 302.
In this way, an operator may scan a barcode 66 printed on a barcode label 64, which is attached to or otherwise associated with a survey element to be surveyed or recorded, by passing the hand held barcode scanner 52 over the barcode 66. As the barcode 66 is scanned, a series of electrical signals generated by the sensor 60 are communicated to the microprocessor 48 which interprets the electrical signals as alphanumeric characters using a barcode interpreting instruction set stored in the memory 50 and processed by the microprocessor 48. In this way, a unique survey element name, number or other alpha-numeric identifying feature is read from a barcode label 64 and communicated to the microprocessor 48. The microprocessor 48 may then search through the survey data stored on the memory module 30, or other interconnected memory device, to match the element identifying name of the barcode label with a particular survey data set and directly display the selected survey data in the manner shown in FIG. 3A.
This method speeds up the survey since an operator does not need to scroll through images or image data to find the appropriate survey element and it reduces errors which may occur when a wrong data set is associated with a survey element. Moreover, the method of the present invention allows survey elements to be surveyed in any order without causing undue delay or errors.
The camera system 10 may be used to capture video images, store the images onto the memory module 30, recall the images and view the images on the display device 16. Furthermore, thermographic survey data, including images, relating to a survey element may be loaded and stored on the memory module 30 so that an operator may also view previously recorded infrared or visible wavelength images of a survey element on the display device 16 by scrolling through images using the keypad 14 to input commands.
Furthermore, data and images relating to a survey element includes a unique identifying name which is stored as a data field 310 with the survey element data. The camera 10 may be used to scan a barcode label 66 associated with the survey element to recall the appropriate survey element data set by matching the name on the barcode label with the unique identifying name associated with the survey element data.
In another aspect of a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a master database program may be stored and operated on a base computer 80, shown in
The computer 80 preferably also includes a PCMCIA memory card slot 98 for receiving the memory card 30 therein, after removal from the camera 10, and a PCMCIA memory driver 100 for interfacing between the processor 82 and the memory module 30. Note that other memory slots and memory drivers may also be employed without deviating from the intended scope of the present invention. The base computer 80 may also include a barcode scanner 52 attached to the I/O port 92 and interfacing with the processor 82 so that bar-codes may also be scanned and stored in the memory 84. In addition, the base computer 80 includes a barcode printer 102 attached to the I/O port 92 and interfacing with the processor 82 so that bar-codes 66 may be printed onto a barcode label 64.
The base computer 80 includes a number of programs stored in the memory 84 or in the storage device 86 and operating to control the computer system 80 and to interface with the camera 10, the keyboard 90, the display device 88, the barcode scanner 52, the barcode printer 102 and any other device which may be interconnected therewith through the I/O ports 92 or otherwise. These programs may include an operating system, e.g. Windows 95 or NT, MAC OS, UNIX, or the like, as well as application programs and interface drivers. In addition a standard or customized database application program specifically configured for storing and organizing thermographic survey data is also preferably installed on the base computer 80 and operated by the processor 82.
The database program may include a number of data display layouts, e.g. 200 and 300 illustrated in
The display layouts 200 and 300 shown in
Each element record 210 includes many data fields associated with a particular survey element and stored in the memory 84. The data fields which may be video clips, still video images, alphanumeric or graphical fields, audio fields or fields which perform special functions such as calculations, automatic data entry or image processing are displayed on a display layout 200 or 300 in record windows, referred to generally by reference numeral 212. In
An element identifying field 222 is provided, on each display layout 200 and 300, which uniquely identifies a survey element. The element identifying field 222 may comprise an alphanumeric name or title of the survey element which may also be used to name the survey element record 210 so that the survey element is easily identified. In particular, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the element identifying field 222 is converted to a barcode using a barcode alpha-numeric conversion program, e.g. CODE 39, which is well known. In this case the application program CODE 39 is loaded onto the base computer 80 such that if an element identifying field 222 is created or modified, a barcode 66 may be created by the CODE 39 program and saved in a separate database field. CODE 39 is a barcode application used in many industrial applications which converts a small subset of the ASCII characters set to a barcode symbol. In this case the upper case letters A through Z, the numbers 0 through 9 and the symbols *$/+% plus a space may be converted to a barcode symbol. If an operator chooses an element identifying name or if an older element identifying name includes lower case letters or other symbols not supported by CODE 39, the characters will be bar-coded by CODE 39 as follows.
Promote all lower case letters to upper case.
Replace all characters that are not supported by CODE 39 with a period (.).
Replace all spaces with a period (.).
In addition, the * character is usually inserted at the beginning and end of a barcode. These steps may be done automatically by the barcode converting program or another program or by an operator or by an automatic entry feature of the database program. Consequently, a survey element named “Scrubber #7” would be converted to “*SCRUBBER . . . 7*” by CODE 39 prior to storing the converted element name in the barcode label field which will be used as the element identifying barcode 66.
The barcode 66 may also be printed onto a label 64, e.g. having an adhesive backing, by the barcode printer 102. The thermographer may then take a barcode label 64 to the survey element in the field and attach the label 66 to the survey element or onto an associated name plate or onto a surface near the survey element. Since the barcode 66 uniquely identifies the survey element, the barcode scanner 52 attached to the camera 10 may be used to scan the barcode label associated with the survey element such that the survey element is uniquely identified to the camera processor 48. The camera processor 48 may then upload only the data needed for recording an image of the uniquely identified survey element from the memory module 30. In addition, the survey element image recorded by the camera 10 will be uniquely associated with the element identifying name of the barcode 66 scanned by the barcode scanner 52.
Thus the integrated infrared camera 10 of the present invention provides a mobile thermographic survey device capable of easy portability from one thermographic survey element to another without the need for a mobile cart or other cumbersome equipment. Moreover, the barcode label 64 associated with each survey element provides an identifying feature which when scanned by the bar code scanner 52 uniquely identifies the survey element to the video camera system so that a video image of the survey element will be stored in an appropriate memory field of the survey database.
It will also be recognized by those skilled in the art that, while the invention has been described above in terms of preferred embodiments, it is not limited thereto. Various features and aspects of the above described invention may be used individually or jointly. Further, although the invention has been described in the context of its implementation in a particular environment, and for particular applications, e.g. an infrared sensor assembly and an infrared video camera system, those skilled in the art will recognize that its usefulness is not limited thereto and that the present invention can be beneficially utilized in any number of environments and implementations including but not limited to video surveying and or archiving of art objects or other collectibles, for tracking video images of real estate properties, capital equipment, patient medical images or the like or in any other video image storage requirement wherein video images of elements are periodically updated. Accordingly, the claims set forth below should be construed in view of the full breadth and spirit of the invention as disclosed herein.
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