This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Patent Application DE 10 2010 024 784.7 filed Jun. 23, 2010, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to sensors for the inspection and sorting of bulk materials into different fractions. The invention also relates to a process for the inspection and sorting of bulk materials into different fractions.
The task of sorting bulk material streams into different fractions (size, weight, material properties, shape properties, surface properties) is performed by means of physical separation processes such as screens, cyclones, chutes, floating/sinking tanks, vibration conveyors, etc., in the classical process technology for processing bulk materials such as granular foods, minerals, crushed waste parts in recycling and the like. These techniques, which are designed in many different ways, are usually designed only for a certain task and cannot therefore be flexibly adapted to different bulk materials.
They also usually have limited suitability for recognizing pure surface properties such as color(s) and surface textures. Different material properties, for example, the type of plastic in case of crushed plastic containers, are recognized only indirectly based on differences in density. The traditional process technology based on bulk material streams is usually also incapable of performing sorting according to a plurality of material types present simultaneously in the plant and to measure a plurality of properties, for example, the color and shape of rice grains and to sort them accordingly into certain fractions.
It has been known since at least the 1980s that camera systems can be used for the optical, contactless detection of a bulk material stream, for the optical, simultaneous measurement of the individual particles of the bulk material stream from the rapid sequence of images by means of pattern recognition methods according to different criteria in full motion and for subsequently sorting out the particles of the bulk material stream into different fractions via pneumatic ejectors or fast-acting mechanical switches.
Particles of bulk material or components of bulk material are defined here, for example, as fibers, grains, flakes, metal chips, pieces, chips or chaff.
A review of the more recent state of the art from the viewpoint of users can be found in the document “J. Eberhardt, R. Massen: The Optical Screen: Multisensor image processing for sorting bulk materials. VDMA Infotag “Automatisierungstechnik fur Schüttgüter—Kernthematik im Maschinen-and Anlagenbau,” Sep. 10, 2008. VDMA Haus, Frankfurt/Main.”
Despite increasingly faster dot matrix or line scan cameras and more modern lighting systems, such as high-performance pulsed LED lines, there are still a number of unsolved or economically poorly solved problems in the “optical screen” technique, i.e., the inspection and sorting of particles of bulk material streams into fractions with preset properties by means of cameras and high-speed ejectors. We will hereinafter use the term bulk material stream “particle” for all parts that form the bulk material stream, for example, the individual rice grain, the individual cutlet, the individual mineral stone, etc. The most important obstacles to a wider use of the camera systems for sorting bulk material streams are today:
Usually, great widths of bulk material stream (500 mm to 5,000 mm) are detected optically with a few high-resolution line scan cameras from a great distance, which have an approximately telecentric view as a result. This is the only possibility for overcoming the problems of vignetting, achromatic distortions, and image angle-dependent image sharpness (cf., e.g., Sorting Plants of the Firm of Buhler-Sortex, www.buhlergroup.com, product line Sortex F).
These large constructions are very expensive especially because of the required mechanical stability of the optical components (orientation of the camera and lighting).
In the document Jia et al. “Detection of foreign materials in cotton using a multi-wavelength imaging method,” Meas. Sci. Technol. 16, pp. 1355-1362, Institute of Physics Publishing, 2005, the authors describe a laboratory set-up comprising a black-and-white camera, a holder for a sample of cotton fibers and various contaminants such as jute threads, plastic twines, as well as a lighting field with LED of a preset narrow-band emission spectrum. They show that in case of a combination of a number of images at a particular emission spectrum selected, the individual images can be composed into a brightness image, in which the contrast between cotton and the contaminants is markedly greater. This is compared to a usual broad-band white light illumination. However, no arrays or embodiments are made for a generally valid, cost-effective inspection and sorting of bulk material.
There is therefore a technical and economic need for cost-effective, camera-based inspection and sorting systems, which, having a compact design and using a large number of simultaneously operating, identical modules composed of inexpensive cameras and lighting means, optically detect the bulk material stream from a short distance and which can be adapted to greatly different materials and sorting tasks by changes limited to a few mechanical and optical components (modular generic bulk material stream sorting system).
According to the invention, this result is accomplished, summarized in a simplified manner, by the combination of a plurality of principles, some of which are known in themselves in the technology. Instead of from a great distance by means of high-resolution black-and-white and color cameras and complicated optical systems, the bulk material stream is detected from a short distance with a plurality of identical, inexpensive black-and-white cameras with simple optical systems, preferably with dot matrix image sensors read line by line over a few lines in the range of the wavelength ranges of approx. 380 nm to 1,000 nm covered by inexpensive CMOS and/or CCD image sensors. The distance of the camera is shorter than the width of the bulk material stream.
The overall size is greatly reduced by this principle and the requirements on the mechanical stability and accuracy of the design is likewise greatly reduced. This reduces the costs of the mechanical construction and makes it possible to use more compact built-in parts, so that the costs of integrating the sorting into a process line drop greatly as well.
Instead of the usual lighting with broad-band, highly stable white-light linear lighting means, the bulk material stream is lit by means of a set of a plurality of short, narrow-band semiconductor light sources, which are associated with every individual camera and operate predominantly synchronously with the line frequency of the camera, and these short light sources emit light each in a different wavelength range and can be easily replaced mechanically for adaptation to different sorting tasks and materials to be sorted.
Due to this principle, only short and hence inexpensive line lamps of a comparatively low power are needed, whose heat dissipation can be accomplished in a simple manner. Due to the limitation to narrow-band semiconductor light sources, the spectral constancy can be guaranteed and achieved in a markedly simpler manner in an industrial environment than in case of conventional broad-band fluorescent or halogen lamps, in which the radiometric constancy covers a broad range of wavelengths from approximately 380 nm to 1,000 nm.
The mean time between failures (MTBF) is approximately 500 times longer in case of a short line with, for example, only 20 LEDs arranged in a row than in case of a classical mode of operation with long LED lights with up to 10,000 individual LEDs. The maintenance costs for the principle according to the present invention are thus also considerably lower than in the state of the art, in which the failure of one of the 10,000 LEDs of a long linear light requires the removal, repair and mechanically accurate reinstallation of a large number of components.
The lighting sources (lighting units) can be replaced with other lighting sources with different wavelength ranges and/or different geometric radiation characteristics (optical axis, beam lobe description) and/or a different structuring of the course of light along the longitudinal axis of the linear light.
The lighting diagram over time of the N pulsed semiconductor light sources and/or the emitted light output of each of the N pulsed lighting means is set such that the radiometric contrast between the individual fractions and from the background is maximized in the generated 1- to N-channel line images.
The actuating signals of the lighting sources pulsed synchronously with the line cycle of the image sensors can be generated by means of an electronic means according to a variable synchronization diagram, which can be optimized for the discrimination of the fractions of the bulk material stream.
A few optimally positioned narrow-band wavelength ranges and the corresponding light powers for the narrow-band linear lighting means are determined by means of mechanical learning processes on the basis of typical samples of bulk material stream to be sorted during the phase of adaptation of the generic bulk material stream module such that a set of line images, which set bring about the best possible discrimination of the fractions of the bulk material stream from each other as well as from the background, is derived from the bulk material stream with a small number of typically 2 to 5 linear lighting means switched on one after another in the line cycle.
In another, preferred embodiment of the present invention, each module, comprising a camera and pulsed narrow-band linear lighting means, also comprises an associated array of fast-acting ejectors, which are mechanically connected to the module, preferably highly dynamic pneumatic valves, for sorting out the particles of the bulk material stream into the desired fractions, so that a module comprises a compact, integrated unit comprising a camera, n pulsed linear lighting means and a short strip with ejectors. Further each module may include a computer or processor for processing camera signals and a control for controlling the fast-acting ejectors or associated ejectors based on the processed camera signals.
This compact arrangement in one module of image detection, n narrow-band lighting means and associated ejectors has the significant advantage over the state of the art that a velocity profile of the particles, which differs at right angles to the bulk material stream, does not have to be individually compensated for each ejector if the ejectors are actuated accurately in time.
Because of the relatively narrow observation window of a module at right angles to the bulk material stream, it can be assumed that the mean velocity of all particles and hence all ejectors of one module can be actuated within this window with the same dead time between image recording and blow-out through the ejector.
An additional measurement of the velocity profile, as it is described, for example, in the document “The Optical Screen: Multisensor Image Processing for Sorting Bulk Materials,” thus becomes unnecessary.
In summary, such a highly modular design makes possible, because of the scale effect, a substantially more cost-effective design than the current large and special systems, and hence a better penetration of the process technology by the “optical screen” technology than has hitherto been possible.
The present application describes the present invention based on a simple and especially clear example of the inspection and sorting of crushed wood waste from the renovation of buildings for obtaining chips of high quality for manufacturing high-quality wood fiber boards. The sorting task is carried in a simplified manner so as to obtain two fractions:
This application is meant only as an explanatory example rather than a limiting application. The express goal of the present invention is rather to keep the number of elements of an optical sorting system, which remain identical, as high as possible thanks to a highly modular design of the hardware and software even in case of application to different material streams and different sorting tasks and thus to make retrofitting possible as cost-effectively as possible. The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and specific objects attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
In the drawings:
a is a side view showing a general design according to the state of the art of an optical inspection and sorting system for sorting particles of a bulk material stream into two fractions;
b is a top view showing the same general design as
a is a side view showing a general design according to the present invention;
b is a top view showing the general design of an optical inspection and sorting system according to the present invention;
a is an explanatory view showing an example of the separation of types of particles of interest through one of a combination of optical effects, which are brought about by the different types of lighting;
b is an explanatory view showing an example of the separation of types of particles of interest through another of a combination of optical effects, which are brought about by the different types of lighting;
c is an explanatory view showing an example of the separation of types of particles of interest through another of a combination of optical effects, which are brought about by the different types of lighting;
Referring to the drawings in particular,
b additionally shows, for better understanding, the design from
In a side view,
The expansion of such a sorting of the bulk material stream into a plurality of fractions by the use of a plurality of cameras, the observation of the bulk material stream from the front side and from the rear side, the special design of the feeding and separation of the particles as well as of the separating elements represent the state of the art and are documented, e.g., in the document cited first (“The Optical Screen: Multisensor Image Processing for Sorting Bulk Materials”).
For better understanding,
Because of the known weaknesses of wide-angle imaging optical systems, such as lack of sharpness at the margin of the image, great chromatic distortions towards the margin of the image, partial mutual hiding of the particles at the margins of the image, etc., it becomes necessary due to the imaging of a bulk material stream, which often reaches a width of up to 5 m, onto only one or a few line scan cameras arranged next to each other to have a great distance between the camera and the object (approximately telecentric parallel imaging) and, associated herewith, a large overall size of the entire feeding, lighting and image recording system. However, as is known to the person skilled in the art of optics, the costs increase exponentially with increasing overall size of the optical system.
a shows a multisensor array system 500 according to the invention. The system 500 is based on a plurality of integrated camera and lighting modules 100. Each camera and lighting module 100 comprises a line scan inspection camera 200 and a lighting means 400. Advantageously, each integrated camera and lighting module 100 may also includes a processor and control module 600. The processor and control module 600 has an image computer 601 including an image processor for processing camera signals and a control unit 602 generating control signals to control one or more pneumatic ejectors 500. The processor and control module 600 also advantageously includes an electronic means 603 for generating actuating signals of the lighting sources pulsed synchronously with the line cycle of the image sensors. These actuating signals are generated by means of the electronic means 603 according to a variable synchronization diagram, which can be optimized for the discrimination of the fractions of the bulk material stream. The electronic means 603 comprises lighting actuating means. Pattern recognition methods as well as the lighting arrangements and the operation of the electronic means as the lighting actuating means are determined and optimized for the inspection and sorting task set in a preparatory learning phase on the basis of samples of the bulk material stream by means of methods of mechanical learning and pattern recognition.
The modules are positioned such that the bulk material stream of particles 10 is detected from a short distance D. The distance D is short compared to the width of the stream of bulk material (D is a distance less than the width of the bulk stream of particles 10).
b shows, in a top view, the general design according to the present invention of an optical inspection and sorting system or multisensor array system 500 for sorting particles of a bulk material stream into two fractions. The multisensor array system 500 comprises a feeding of the particles 10, which are separated from one another. With the deployment of a plurality of integrated camera and lighting modules 100, a large number of line scan inspection cameras 200 are arranged closely adjacent to one another, which each observe only a small section of the bulk material stream in the incident light of a short linear lighting means 400 associated with the camera 200. An array of ejectors 50, for example, a pneumatic ejector row 50, which has individual ejectors arranged closely adjacent to one another and which deflect, actuated by the image computer (processor) of module 600, certain particles from the natural flight path 12 and bring them into the container 70 of fraction B, whereas fraction A lands in container 80 along flight path 12. The plurality of integrated camera and lighting modules 100 are arranged adjacent to each other with each camera 200 having an image width that is smaller than the width of the bulk material stream.
The LED lights are briefly actuated in a pulsed manner in the line cycle of the sensor, so that this image line detects, consecutively in time, closely adjacent linear details of the bulk material stream, lit each time with the specific lighting means 42, 43 or 44 (time multiplex).
a,
a shows healthy, uncoated soft wood 13, which appears as a sequence of blurred dots 32 in case of lighting with a structured linear lighting means 31 formed by bright dots based on the halo effect (cf., e.g., EP 1 729 115 A2 which is incorporated herein by reference). The dot pattern from structured linear lighting means 31 remains sharp in case of a painted surface 14.
In
These optical effects described, for example, for discriminating the “soft wood,” “painted wood” and “rotted wood” fractions shall be considered to be an example only. The literature on wood inspection knows numerous other optical effects, which are suitable for use as optical characteristics for separating fractions. It is not the task of the present invention to describe a catalog of such features but to explain the basic inventive idea of the array and the process for a cost-effective optical screen.
Thus, the invention provides a highly modular and flexible camera and lighting system for the especially cost-effective inspection and sorting of numerous different types of bulk material streams with a uniform modular, generic system concept. The special and clear example of the sorting of wood particles within the framework of recycling waste wood and the production of high-quality particles, from which boards that are nearly as new can be produced, which example represents the principles of the process and of the array for carrying out the process according to the present invention in an especially simple and clear manner, is suitable for this.
b shows in a top view, the general design of an optical inspection and sorting system designed according to the inventive idea for sorting, for example, two fractions of particles. The system includes a feed means 11 for the particles 10, which are separated from one another. The plurality of modules 100 are adjacent to each other to provide a large number of line scan inspection cameras 200, which are arranged next to each other and which always observe only a small section of the bulk material stream in the incident light of a short linear lighting means 400 associated with such camera 200. An array of, for example, pneumatic ejectors 50 are arranged closely adjacent to one another in a line and are actuated by the image computer (processor and control) 600. The ejectors deflect certain selected particles from the natural path 12 and bring the particles into container 70 of fraction B, whereas fraction A lands in container 80 along the path 12.
It can be easily recognized from
The lit scene is imaged with an imaging optical system 21 onto, for example, a line of an inexpensive dot matrix image sensor 200 or onto a line sensor of a line scan camera 200, these sensors 200 being monochromatic image sensors. The LED lights of the lighting units are actuated briefly in a pulsed manner in the line cycle of the sensor, so that this image line detects, one after another in time, closely adjacent linear details of the bulk material stream 10, always lit with the specific pulsed lighting means 42, 43 or 44 (time multiplex).
This schematic process outline shown in
Despite the extensively identical mechanical design of the camera and lighting module 100, this arrangement according to the present invention leads to a highly modular generic sorting system, i.e., a system that can be adapted to a plurality of different tasks of bulk material stream inspection and sorting by making only a few simple changes.
a,
The wood grain appears under narrow-band lighting in the blue range as a locally periodic, low-frequency texture rich in contrast (curve on the left-hand side of
It is known to the person skilled in the art of pattern recognition, especially mechanical learning, that an optimal selection of all radiometric, geometric and time-related properties of the camera and lighting module can be systematically determined for a given sorting task on the basis of a sufficient number of “good” and “bad” samples of a bulk material stream to be sorted.
As to the question of which specific optical effects generated by the lighting are most suitable, for which material stream and for which specific sorting tasks, this may be considered based on known information. Reference can be made to the literature of pattern recognition and of mechanical learning.
Another feature of the invention is that the emitted lighting intensity is not changed by varying the amplitude of the lighting, but by a fine change of the duration of the lighting pulse in the exemplary lighting window of the line sensor. Due to the integration of the photodetectors over time (especially pronounced in the CCD technique), a longer lighting time at a given amplitude is equivalent to a shorter lighting time at a correspondingly higher amplitude.
The necessary difference of the lighting intensities can be determined by tests but it may also be derived systematically by their being set, for example, corresponding to the main components of the eigenvectors of the N-dimensional signal space, which is defined by the two lighting unit 43 and 44.
The significance of an optically fitting background has been known for a long time. For the optical sorting of rice grains, the background is traditionally formed by colored cardboard, whose color corresponds to the “GOOD” rice grain. The “GOOD” fraction is thus optically masked. This process is not flexible and requires a considerable mechanical intervention in case of a changeover from one product to another.
It is described in DE 20 2006 016 604 U1 that the background is formed for a bulk material stream system with color cameras by a LED lighting system, which can be set in terms of color and brightness to the color and brightness of a fraction and which thus makes this fraction invisible. This background is static, i.e., it does not change with the reading cycle of the color camera.
Contrary to this known state of the art, the concept according to the present invention is directed to the observation of bulk material streams with monochromatic image sensors and pulsed, narrow-band lighting units as well as synchronously pulsed background lights associated therewith. It is thus possible to generate the optimal optical background purely electronically for each incident light source in a short time in the rapid succession of the line cycle and thus to highlight especially the shape of the fractions to be sorted out with a strong contrast in the line image of all types of lighting used.
However, the idea according to the present invention also describes, in particular, a “generic” process, i.e., a process and an arrangement which can be changed over to entirely different material streams and sorting tasks with only a few, simple mechanical optical changes.
The mechanical optical changes are therefore limited essentially to the design of the lighting (other wavelengths, only directed).
The idea proper of the present invention is that the novel combination of arrangements and processes for the optical sorting of bulk material streams, which are known in themselves, leads to a generic, highly modular, robust system, which is very inexpensive due to the reduced overall size, contrary to the current, very large and expensive systems, which can be maintained in a stable condition with difficulty only in a harsh industrial environment and are highly specialized to a single task or to only a small number of tasks.
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the application of the principles of the invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 024 784.7 | Jun 2010 | DE | national |