TY - JOUR
T1 - CORROSION DETECTION FOR INDUSTRIAL OBJECTS
T2 - 2022 24th ISPRS Congress on Imaging Today, Foreseeing Tomorrow, Commission I
AU - Haitz, D.
AU - Jutzi, B.
AU - Hübner, P.
AU - Ulrich, M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 D. Haitz et al.
PY - 2022/5/30
Y1 - 2022/5/30
N2 - Corrosion is a form of damage that often appears on the surface of metal-made objects used in industrial applications. Those damages can be critical depending on the purpose of the used object. Optical-based testing systems provide a form of non-contact data acquisition, where the acquired data can then be used to analyse the surface of an object. In the field of industrial image processing, this is called surface inspection. We provide a testing setup consisting of a rotary table which rotates the object by 360 degrees, as well as industrial RGB cameras and laser triangulation sensors for the acquisition of 2D and 3D data as our multi-sensor system. These sensors acquire data while the object to be tested takes a full rotation. Further on, data augmentation is applied to prepare new data or enhance already acquired data. In order to evaluate the impact of a laser triangulation sensor for corrosion detection, one challenge is to at first fuse the data of both domains. After the data fusion process, 5 different channels can be utilized to create a 5D feature space. Besides the red, green and blue channels of the image (1-3), additional range data from the laser triangulation sensor is incorporated (4). As a fifth channel, said sensor provides additional intensity data (5). With a multi-channel image classification, a 5D feature space will lead to slightly superior results opposed to a 3D feature space, composed of only the RGB channels of the image.
AB - Corrosion is a form of damage that often appears on the surface of metal-made objects used in industrial applications. Those damages can be critical depending on the purpose of the used object. Optical-based testing systems provide a form of non-contact data acquisition, where the acquired data can then be used to analyse the surface of an object. In the field of industrial image processing, this is called surface inspection. We provide a testing setup consisting of a rotary table which rotates the object by 360 degrees, as well as industrial RGB cameras and laser triangulation sensors for the acquisition of 2D and 3D data as our multi-sensor system. These sensors acquire data while the object to be tested takes a full rotation. Further on, data augmentation is applied to prepare new data or enhance already acquired data. In order to evaluate the impact of a laser triangulation sensor for corrosion detection, one challenge is to at first fuse the data of both domains. After the data fusion process, 5 different channels can be utilized to create a 5D feature space. Besides the red, green and blue channels of the image (1-3), additional range data from the laser triangulation sensor is incorporated (4). As a fifth channel, said sensor provides additional intensity data (5). With a multi-channel image classification, a 5D feature space will lead to slightly superior results opposed to a 3D feature space, composed of only the RGB channels of the image.
KW - Classification
KW - Corrosion Detection
KW - Data Fusion
KW - Industrial Applications
KW - Multi-Sensor System
KW - Surface Inspection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85131918893&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIII-B1-2022-143-2022
DO - 10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIII-B1-2022-143-2022
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85131918893
SN - 1682-1750
VL - 43
SP - 143
EP - 150
JO - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives
JF - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives
IS - B1-2022
Y2 - 6 June 2022 through 11 June 2022
ER -