Seite - 120 - in Proceedings of the OAGM&ARW Joint Workshop - Vision, Automation and Robotics
Bild der Seite - 120 -
Text der Seite - 120 -
An Image Analysis System for Selective Recovery of Non-ferrousMetal
Malte Jaschik1, Alfred Rinnhofer2, Martina Uray3 and Gerhard Jakob4
Abstract—To increase the recycling rate for non-ferrous
metal, a high speed sorting line with a high throughput rate
of up to 1ton per hour was built. The system comprises
an Image Analysis System to detect shredder particles and
calculate their position on the belt as well as several 2D
and 3D shape features. ElectroMagnetic Tensor Spectroscopy
(EMTS) or Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS)
characterize each particle based on its metal components.
Tests were conducted under hard conditions in an industrial
environment. For a full covered 400mm x 100mm belt area
the ImageAnalysis Systemneeds less than 24.5ms at a feature
calculation accuracy up to 95%. The developed system can
easily be adapted to other scenarios.
I. INTRODUCTION
The requirements of the sorting line described in this
work are to detect and classify non-ferrous metal particles.
The load speed of the sorting line is given by 1ton/hour. A
vibrating feeding system is used to load the belt (width of
400mm) and for fragment separation. Due to the limitation
of the vibrating feeding system, about 28g/s of particles can
be loaded with a belt speed of 2m/s. The subsystems need
an accuracy of 0.5mm/px in length and width. Therefore, a
line rate of 4kHz is required. Fig. 1 shows a schematic of the
components and Fig. 2 a sample image of such a particle.
The system is developed to work even under heavy industrial
conditions (like dust, vibrations of machines, etc.).
Fig. 1. Schematic of the developed sorting line.
The developed sorting line consists of two independent
subsystems (detector and classifier). An Image Analysis
System identifies every single particle on the conveyor and
calculates its exact position on the belt as well as 2D and
Joanneum Research Forschungsgesellschaft mbH
DIGITAL - Institute for Information and Communication Technologies
1malte.jaschik@joanneum.at
2alfred.rinnhofer@joanneum.at
3martina.uray@joanneum.at
4gerhard.jakob@joanneum.at 3D shape features. The analysis and classification of the
material of the particles is provided by EMTS or LIBS. The
EMTS measures the electrical conductivity while the LIBS
characterizes the chemical composition. To achieve optimum
results of the classification systems, it is essential that the
position and specified shape features of every single particle
is derived to utmost precision by the Image Analysis System.
Therefore, all subsystemsaresynchronisedbyan incremental
encoder.
II. DISCRIPTION OF SUB SYSTEMS
A. Image Analysis System for position and shape calculation
The Image Analysis System is based on laser triangulation
and comprises a line laser, an Automation Technology C4-
1280-GigE 3D camera and a computer for calculation. Using
subpixel algorithms a height resolution, defined by the opti-
cal resolution and the angle between laser plane and camera,
of 0.15mm can be achieved. Due to the belt movement the
laser line migrates along the surface of the fragments. The
camera acquires a 2D image of each laser line and calculates
a 3D profile that is sent to the computer via GigE. The
analysis algorithm stores the 3D profile and builds an image,
called subframe (currently consisting of 200 3D profiles), a
small part is illustrated in Fig. 3. The camera can acquire
a grayscale image (Fig. 2) as well, but it is not used in the
current application.
Fig. 2. Grey-value image of one
metal particle Fig. 3. 3D image of one metal
particle (same as Fig. 2)
To remove noise due to non-flatness of the conveyor a
background model is calculated and subtracted from the
image (for each 3D profile). By binarizing the subframe
with an experimentally determined height threshold areas of
interest are selected. If the size of an area is big enough,
it defines a particle hypothesis and features are calculated.
Features reach from simple positions to more complex ones,
like feret diameters or maximum cross-sectional area (overall
25 different features in 2D and 3D respectively).
120
Proceedings of the OAGM&ARW Joint Workshop
Vision, Automation and Robotics
- Titel
- Proceedings of the OAGM&ARW Joint Workshop
- Untertitel
- Vision, Automation and Robotics
- Autoren
- Peter M. Roth
- Markus Vincze
- Wilfried Kubinger
- Andreas Müller
- Bernhard Blaschitz
- Svorad Stolc
- Verlag
- Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-85125-524-9
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 188
- Schlagwörter
- Tagungsband
- Kategorien
- International
- Tagungsbände