114 research outputs found

    Enhancing with deconvolution the metrological performance of the grid method for in-plane strain measurement

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    International audienceThis article is motivated by a problem from experimental solid mechanics. The grid method permits to estimate in-plane displacement and strain components in a deformed material. A regular grid is deposited on the surface of the material, and images are taken before and after deformation. Windowed Fourier analysis then gives an estimate of the surface displacement and strain components. We show that the estimates obtained by this technique are approximately the convolution of the actual values with the analysis window. We also characterize how the noise in the grid image impairs the displacement and strain maps. Finally, the metrological performance of the grid method is enhanced with deconvolution algorithms. This work is potentially of interest in optical interferometry, since grids are particular fringe patterns

    Effect of Sensor Noise on the Resolution and Spatial Resolution of Displacement and Strain Maps Estimated with the Grid Method

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    International audienceThis paper deals with noise propagation from camera sensor to displacement and strain maps when the grid method is employed to estimate these quantities. It is shown that closed-form equations can be employed to predict the link between metrological characteristics such as resolution and spatial resolution in displacement and strain maps on the one hand and various quantities characterising grid images such as brightness, contrast and standard deviation of noise on the other hand. Various numerical simulations confirm first the relevance of this approach in the case of an idealised camera sensor impaired by a homoscedastic Gaussian white noise. Actual CCD or CMOS sensors exhibit, however, a heteroscedastic noise. A pre-processing step is therefore proposed to first stabilise noise variance prior to employing the predictive equations, which provide the resolution in strain and displacement maps due to sensor noise. This step is based on both a modelling of sensor noise and the use of the generalised Anscombe transform to stabilise noise variance. Applying this procedure in the case of a translation test confirms that it is possible to model correctly noise propagation from sensor to displacement and strain maps, and thus also to predict the actual link between resolution, spatial resolution and standard deviation of noise in grid images

    Towards deconvolution to enhance the grid method for in-plane strain measurement

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    International audienceThe grid method is one of the techniques available to measure in-plane displacement and strain components on a deformed material. A periodic grid is first transferred on the specimen surface, and images of the grid are compared before and after deformation. Windowed Fourier analysis-based techniques permit to estimate the in-plane displacement and strain maps. The aim of this article is to give a precise analysis of this estimation process. It is shown that the retrieved displacement and strain maps are actually a tight approximation of the convolution of the actual displacements and strains with the analysis window. The effect of digital image noise on the retrieved quantities is also characterized and it is proved that the resulting noise can be approximated by a stationary spatially correlated noise. These results are of utmost importance to enhance the metrological performance of the grid method, as shown in a separate article

    On noise reduction in strain maps obtained with the grid method by averaging images affected by vibrations

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    International audienceAny image-based contactless measurement system has a limited resolution because of sensor noise. If the sensor is rigorously static with respect to the imaged object, a possibility is to reduce noise by averaging images acquired at different times. This paper discusses images of a pseudo-periodic grid used in experimental solid mechanics to give estimations of in-plane displacement and strain components of a deformed flat specimen. Because of the magnification factor which is employed, the grid images are often affected by residual vibrations, thereby invalidating the assumption that the sensor is static. The averaged grid image is thus a biased estimator of the unknown noise-free image. In spite of this, we prove that the retrieved displacement and strain components still benefit from noise reduction by time-averaging. A theoretical model is discussed, and experiments on real and synthetic data sets are provided

    Sensor Noise Modeling by Stacking Pseudo-Periodic Grid Images Affected by Vibrations

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    International audienceThis letter addresses the problem of noise estimation in raw images from digital sensors. Assuming that a series of images of a static scene are available, a possibility is to characterize the noise at a given pixel by considering the random fluctuations of the gray level across the images. However, mechanical vibrations, even tiny ones, affect the experimental setup, making this approach ineffective. The contribution of this letter is twofold. It is shown that noise estimation in the presence of vibrations is actually biased. Focusing on images of a pseudo-periodic grid, an algorithm to discard their effect is also given. An application to the generalized Anscombe transform is discussed

    Optical Coherence Tomography and Its Non-medical Applications

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    Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a promising non-invasive non-contact 3D imaging technique that can be used to evaluate and inspect material surfaces, multilayer polymer films, fiber coils, and coatings. OCT can be used for the examination of cultural heritage objects and 3D imaging of microstructures. With subsurface 3D fingerprint imaging capability, OCT could be a valuable tool for enhancing security in biometric applications. OCT can also be used for the evaluation of fastener flushness for improving aerodynamic performance of high-speed aircraft. More and more OCT non-medical applications are emerging. In this book, we present some recent advancements in OCT technology and non-medical applications

    Laser-generated, plane-wave, broadband ultrasound sources for metrology

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    The accurate quantification of ultrasound fields generated by diagnostic and therapeutic transducers is critical for patient safety. This requires hydrophones calibrated to a traceable national measurement standard over the full range of frequencies used. At present, the upper calibration frequency range available to the user community is limited to a frequency of 60 MHz. However, there is often content at frequencies higher than this, e.g., through nonlinear propagation of high-amplitude pulses or tone-bursts for therapeutic applications, and the increasing use of higher frequencies in diagnostic imaging. To reduce the uncertainties and extend the calibrations to higher frequencies, a source of high-pressure, plane-wave and broadband ultrasound fields is required. This is not possible with current piezoelectric transducer technology, therefore laser-generated ultrasound is investigated as an alternative. This consists of an ultrasound wave generated by the pulsed laser excitation of a thin, planar, layer of light absorbing carbon-polymer nanocomposite materials. The work described in this thesis can be divided into three parts. The first part consisted of the fabrication of various nanocomposites in order to study the effect of different polymer types, composite thickness, laser fluence, and concentration of carbon nanotubes, on the ultrasound generated, as well as their stability. This included an investigation into the nonlinear propagation of MPa range laser-generated ultrasound, and the effect of the bandlimited hydrophone response, using a numerical wave solver (k-Wave). In the second part, the effects on the signal of acoustically reflective and matched backings (the substrates onto which the nanocomposite was coated) were studied. It was found experimentally that the backing material can significantly affect the pressure amplitude when the duration of the laser pulse is longer than the acoustic transit time across the thin nanocomposite layer. An analytical model was developed to describe how the signal generated depends on the backing material, absorbing layer thickness, and laser pulse duration. The model agreed well with measurements performed with a variable pulse duration fibre-laser. Finally, in the third part, a laser-generated, plane-wave, broadband ultrasound source device superficially resembling a standard piezoelectric piston source was designed, fabricated, and tested. The source produced quasi-unipolar pressure-pulse of 9 MPa peak-positive pressure with a bandwidth of 100 MHz, and the ultrasound beam is sufficiently planar to reduce uncertainties due to diffraction to negligible levels for hydrophones up to 0.6 mm in diameter

    Shaping the future by engineering: 58th IWK, Ilmenau Scientific Colloquium, Technische Universität Ilmenau, 8 - 12 September 2014 ; programme

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    Druckausgabe erschienen im Universitätsverlag Ilmenau: Shaping the future by engineering : 58th IWK, Ilmenau Scientific Colloquium, Technische Universität Ilmenau, 8 - 12 September 2014 ; programme / Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technische Universität Ilmenau. [Hrsg.: Peter Scharff. Red.: Andrea Schneider] Ilmenau : Univ.-Verl. Ilmenau, 2014. - 155 S. ISBN 978-3-86360-085-

    New quantitative phase imaging modalities on standard microscope platforms

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    Three new reconstruction methods for quantitative phase imaging, including two interrelated two-dimensional methods, called multifilter phase imaging with partially coherent light and phase optical transfer function recovery, which lead to a third three-dimensional method, called tomographic deconvolution phase microscopy, were developed in response to a growing need among biomedical end users for solutions which can be integrated on standard microscope platforms. The performance of these new methods were evaluated using modelling and simulation as well as experimentation with known test cases. In addition to the development of new methods, existing methods for quantitative phase imaging were applied to characterize the effects of manufacturing, cleaving, and fusion splicing in large-mode-area erbium- and ytterbium-doped optical fibers.Ph.D

    Nuclear Power - Control, Reliability and Human Factors

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    Advances in reactor designs, materials and human-machine interfaces guarantee safety and reliability of emerging reactor technologies, eliminating possibilities for high-consequence human errors as those which have occurred in the past. New instrumentation and control technologies based in digital systems, novel sensors and measurement approaches facilitate safety, reliability and economic competitiveness of nuclear power options. Autonomous operation scenarios are becoming increasingly popular to consider for small modular systems. This book belongs to a series of books on nuclear power published by InTech. It consists of four major sections and contains twenty-one chapters on topics from key subject areas pertinent to instrumentation and control, operation reliability, system aging and human-machine interfaces. The book targets a broad potential readership group - students, researchers and specialists in the field - who are interested in learning about nuclear power
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