Contact Image Sensor (CIS) imaging
Web- and sheet- based products such as security labels are frequently inspected using line scan cameras to acquire the image. Although these cameras produce extremely high resolution images, they require a lens to project the image onto the sensor. This means that there can be angular variations in the way that the sensor pixels ‘see’ the sample along the length of the camera. This can be particularly important when imaging holograms, since by their very nature, any slight change in orientation changes their appearance. The new Mitsubishi Electric KD series of Contact Image Sensors (CIS), however produces an image with virtually no distortion since the long sensor line maps the object on a one-to-one scale. Image formation in the CIS is achieved via a double-row lens array, using gradient index rod-lenses, matched to a colour tri-linear CMOS sensor. Each individual rod-lens captures an image of a very small region of the target. Thanks to some overlap in the individual images, a clear, sharp, combined image is produced along the narrow line of the sensor with a resolution of 600 dpi. Two sets of integral white LED lighting can be varied in intensity and controlled independently. The lighting is homogenous, with no shading along the length of the sensor, meaning defects can be detected even at the edge of the scan. The arrangement produces a quasi-telecentric image at each pixel, giving remarkable image uniformity. This is illustrated by the high consistency in the array of hologram images shown in Figure 2. Image data output is provided via standard industrial CameraLink interfaces. The CIS products are available in three different lengths, offering scan widths of 309, 617 and 926 mm.
CVB Flex Inspect software
The difficulty of the traditional ‘golden template’ comparison method is that if there is any variation in the fidelity of each sample, subtracting the image from the golden template will produce a difference. Rather than using a single golden template, CVB Flex Inspect uses the latest in machine learning research to build a complex appearance model of good examples on-the-fly during a training phase. During this process, the tool is presented with a range of acceptable samples and learns the variability. Users have the ability to view the modes of variation of the template model to gain an understanding of the level of product deformation. Once in inspection mode, a synthetic template is created from the template model for each inspection within the limits of acceptable variation and is applied to the inspected sample to give a difference image just like a traditional golden template approach. As new variations are identified as samples are inspected, they can either be incorporated into the template model, or the sample rejected. CVB Flex Inspect is designed to make use of Intel multi-core CPUs with two or more independent central processing units. The software operates on sub images, or pixel blocks, within each of the images presented to it. Each of these pixel blocks can be processed independently according to the number of core CPUs in the system.
CVB Flex Inspect is one of the many versatile imaging tools contained within Common Vision Blox (CVB), STEMMER IMAGING’s hardware-independent imaging toolkit. Developed for CVB by Vision Experts Ltd, Flex Inspect’s unique approach to pattern matching can be just as easily applied to images from line scan and area scan cameras. STEMMER IMAGING is Mitsubishi Electric’s strategic partner for the distribution of CIS in Europe. As Europe’s largest independent supplier of vision technology and services to industrial and scientific OEMs, system integrators and reseller markets, STEMMER IMAGING can offer advice on the best combination of components to solve specific imaging problems.