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Automated Optical Inspection

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This article was originally published at Basler's website. It is reprinted here with the permission of Basler.

Optical Measurement Systems inspect objects and detect a variety of different characteristics. With its large selection of area scan and line scan cameras, Basler has the right model for any camera inspection task.

Optical inspection plays a role in the various fields of application for industrial machine vision. Whatever their specific area of use and requirements they face, all machine vision cameras have one shared mission: optical inspection. That means finding and identifying characteristics that serve as the basis for analyses and produce conclusions that can be used for ongoing processing.

Complex inspection tasks for measurement and error detection

Based on the identified characteristics, AOI systems can undertake optical measurements as dictated by the problem at hand and identify any deviations from the standards. Industrial machine vision is perpetually focused on so-called grayscale value deviation. The grayscale value indicates the brightness of a pixel, independent of color. Depending on how this grayscale deviation is configured, it is possible to:

  • sort objects (foods, merchandise)
  • detect errors (scratches, entrapment)
  • measure sizes (packets, O rings)
  • inspect surfaces (films, glass) or
  • inspect circuit boards (for correct position of the solder points)

Individual opportunities – flexible use

Automated optical inspection can be established at various spots in the production process to fit specific needs: Directly within production or as part of packaging, with 100% control or via trial-and-error testing. The use of powerful cameras with high frame rates allows for inspections to be run without disrupting the production workflow.

Necessary components

Optical inspection systems are structured into a variety of layers. The machine vision camera is only one of several components. Sufficient lighting — artificial or natural — as well as a trigger for signaling, such as a light barrier or encoder, to activate the camera are also essential hardware components.

Analysis software is required for further processing of the collected image data. This can either be integrated directly into the camera or positioned downstream outside the camera, with the data passed via a suitable interface to a connected computer.

Take only the good…

If the analysis of an image identifies a characteristic or deviation from the standard, then this flawed object must be correspondingly sorted out. The underlying camera data are available for documentation purposes. The automated optical inspection has fulfilled its tasks.

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