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Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement using optical methods Frank Chen Ford Motor Company Research & Vehicle Technology (M22, Room 2608C, AEC 20000 Rotunda Dr., P.O. Box 2053, Dearborn, Michigan 48121 E-mail: fchen1 @ford.com ‘Abstract. We first provide an overview of 3-D shape measurement us- ing various optical methods. Then we focus on structured light tech- hiques where various optical configurations, image acquisition tech. niques, data postprocessing and analysis methods and advantages and limitations are presented. Several industrial application examples aro presented. Important areas requiring further R&D are discussed. Finally, {2 comprehensive bibliography on 3-D shape measurement is included, although itis not intended to be exhaustive. © 2000 Secity of Photo-Optical! Insrumertation Engineers (SO091-2286(00]00101-%) Subject terms: three-dimensional shape measurement; coordinate measure Gordon M, Brown, FELLOW SPIE Optical Systems Engineering 1853 Timarron Way Naples, Florida 34109-3319 E-mail:’ GMBrownOSE@ aol.com ‘ent; optical methods; overview. Papor received July 12, 1 revised manuscript received Aug. 23, 1999; ‘accepted for pubiicalion Aug. 23, 1299, ‘Mumin Song Ford Motor Company Ford Research Laboratory (M3135, Room 2162, SRL 20000 Rotunda Dr., P.O. Box 2053 Dearborn, Michigan 48121 E-mail: msong1 @ford.com 11 Introduction In industry, there is a need for accurately measuring the 3D shapes of objects to speed up and ensure product de- velopment and manufacturing quality. A variety of appli tions of 3-D shape measurement include control for intel gent robots, obstacle detection for vehicle guidance, dimension measurement for die development, stamping panel geometry checking, and accurate stress/strain and vi- bration measurement. Moreover, automatic on line inspec- tion and recognition issues can be converted to the 3-D shape measurement of an object under inspection, for ex- ample, body pane! paint defect and dent inspection. Re- cently, with the evolution in computer technologies, coupled with the development of digital imaging devices, electro-optical components, laser and other light sources, 3-D shape measurement is now at the point that some tech~ niques have been successfully commercialized. For a small- scale depth or shape, micrometer or even nanometer mea- surements can be reached if a confocal microscope or other 3-D microscope is used. However, the key is the relative accuracy or one part out of the measurement depth. T ‘poses a real challenge for a large-scale shape measurement. For example, how accurate can a 0.5 m depth measurement be? Moreover, for a large-scale depth and shape measure- ‘ment, frequently, more cameras and camera positions are required to obtain several shapes from which the final large shape can be patched. This raises the issue of how to patch these shapes together in a highly accurate manner and per- form local and global coordinate transforms. This subse- quently generates another problem to be solved, namely, to 10 Opt. Eng. 29(1) 10-22 (January 2000) (0091-3286/20001515.00 ‘overcome lens distortion and aberrations. After the 3-D shape is obtained, this data must be compared with a com- puter aided engineering (CAE) model, ‘This paper provides an overview of 3-D shape measure- ‘ment using various optical methods, Then it focuses on structured light measurement systems for measuring rela- tively large scale and 360 deg shape. It then outlines vari- ‘ous detail aspects such as absolute phase measurement, structured light sources, image acquisition sensors, camera ‘model and calibration, followed by discussion of global and local coordinate translation methods. Point cloud patching and CAD data comparison are also discussed, Several ap- plications are described. Finally, future research trends such as real time computing, automating and optimizing sensor placement and the need for a common standard for the evaluation of optical coordinate measurement systems (OCMSS), etc., are presented, 2. Optical 3-D Measurement Techniques Various optical techniques have recently been developed for measuring 3-D shape from one position. A comprehen- sive overview for some of the techniques can be found in Ref. 1 241 Time/Light in Flight The time of flight method for measuring shape is based on the direct measurement of the time of flight of a laser or other light source pulse.” During measurement, an object. pulse is reflected back to the receiving sensor and a refer- ence pulse is passed through an optical fiber and received by the sensor. The time difference between the two pulses is converted to distance. A typical resolution for the time of (© 2000 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.Fe Chen, Brown, and Song: Overiow of three-dimensional shape measuroment flight method is around a millimeter. With subpicosecond pulses from a diode laser and high-resolution electronics, Submillimeter resolution is achievable. ‘The recently reported’ time correlated single photon counting method has a depth repeatability better than 30 yam at a stand off distance of 1 m. Another similar technique is called light- in-flight holography where either short temporal coherence light or very short light pulse is used to generate a motion image of a propagating optical wavefront.'* Combined with digital reconstruction and a Littrow setup, the depth resolution may reach® 6.5 um, 22 Laser Scanning Point laser triangulation employs the well-known triangu- lation relationship in optics. The typical measurement range is £5 to +250 mm, and accuracy is about 1 part in 10,000 ‘and measurement frequency of 40 kHz or higher.”* A ‘charged couple device (CCD), or a position sensitive detec- tor (PSD) is widely used to digitize the point laser image. For a PSD, the measurement accuracy is mainly dependent ‘on the accuracy of the image on the PSD. The beam spot reflection and stray light will also affect the measurement accuracy. Idesawa” developed some methods to improve the accuracy of the PSD by using a high accuracy Kaleido- scopic mirror tunnel position sensing technique (KM-PSM) ‘and a hybrid type of position sensitive detector (R-HPSD). CCD based sensors avoid the beam spot reflection and stray light effects and provides more accuracy because of the single pixel resolution. Another factor that affects the mea- surement accuracy is the difference in the surface charac- teristic of a measured object from the calibration surface. Usually calibration should be performed on similar surfaces to ensure the measurement accuracy. The recently devel- coped confocal technique can tolerate surface color change, transparency, difference, and inregularity without calibration.!® 23 Moiré ‘The moiré method can be divided into, shadow and the ‘more practical projection techniques."'"? The key to the ‘moiré technique is two gratings, one is a master grating and. the other is a reference grating, from which contour fringes ccan be generated and resolved by a CCD camera. Increased. resolution is realized since the gratings themselves do not need to be resolved by the CCD camera. However, if the reference grating is computer generated, as in the logic- ‘moiré method,!*" the master grating must be resolved by the camera. The penalties for the high resolution are the implementation complexity and the need for a high power light source as compared with a structured light technique. To (1) overcome environmental perturbations, (2) increase image acquisition speed, and (3) utilize phase shift methods to analyze the fringe pattern, snap shot or multiple image rmoiré systems have been developed. Two or more moiré fringe patterns with different’ phase shifts are simulta- neously acquired using molt-camera or image-spliting methods.!"-® Reference 20 provides a comparison of some high speed moiré contouring methods with particular stress ‘on sources of noise and system error functions. The typical ‘measurement range of the phase shifting moiré method is from 1 mm to 0.5 m with the resolution at 1/10 to 1/100 of a fringe. Some novel applications and related references ccan be found in Refs. 21-30. 2.4 Laser Speckle Pattem Sectioning ‘The 3D Fourier transform relationship between optical wavelength (frequency) space and the distance (range) space is used to measure the shape of an object." Laser radar 3D. imaging, also known as speckle pattern sampling,**~*” is achieved by utilizing the principle that the optical field in the detection plane corresponds to a 2-D slice of the object's 3-D Fourier transform. The other 2-D slices of the object's 3-D transform are acquired by chang- ing the wavelength of the laser. A speckle pattern is mea~ sured using a CCD array at each different laser wavelength, and the individual frames are added up to generate a 3-D data array. A 3-D Fourier transform is applied on this data array to obtain the 3-D shape of an object. When a refer- tence plane method is used, this technique is similar to two-wavelength or multiwavelength speckle interferom- etry. The measurement range can be from a micrometer to ‘a few meters, The accuracy is depended on the measure- ment range. With the current laser technology, 1- to 10-m resolutions is attained in the measurement range of 10 mm and 0.5 am measurement uncertainty is achievable (see HoloMapper in the commercial system list presented in ‘Table 1). The advantages of this technique are (1) the high flexibility of the measurement range and (2) phase shifting as in conventional interferometry may not be required. The limitation of this technique is that for relatively large scale shape measurement, it takes more time to acquire the im- ages with the different wavelengths. 25 Interferometry ‘The idea behind interferometric shape measurement is that the fringes are formed by variation of the sensitivity matrix that relates the geometric shape of an object to the me sured optical phases. The matrix contains three variables, ‘wavelength, refractive index, and illumination and observ tion directions, from which three methods, two or multiple wavelength,” refractive index change," and illumi- nation direction variationtwo sources®”-*! are derived. The resolution of the two-wavelength method depends on the equivalent wavelength (A) and the phase resolution of A/200, For example, two lines of an argon-laser (0.5145 and 0.4880 zm) will generate an equivalent wavelength 9.4746 jum and a resolution of 0.047 yam. ‘Another range measurement technique with high accu- racy is double heterodyne interferometry using a frequency shift. Recent research shows it achieves a remarkable 0.1 mm resolution with 100 m range.” Interferometric methods have the advantage of being mono-state without the shad- ing problem of triangulation techniques. Combined with phase shifting analysis, interferometric methods and hetero- yne techniques can have accuracies of 1/100 and 1/1000 of a fringe, respectively. With dedicated optical configura- tion design, accuracy can reach 1/10,000 of a fringe.** The other “methods such as shearography,"*®* diffraction grating?” digital wavefront reconstruction and. wave- Tength scanning,” and conoscopic holography" are also ‘under development. Both shearography and conoscopic ho- ‘Optical Engineering, Vol. 29 No. 1, January 2000 11(Chen, Brown, and Son (Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement... Table 1 Somo Full Field Shape Measurement Commercial Systems Based on Leading Edge Tech- ologios ‘System Principia ‘Accuracy Dependent an Volume ‘los Systom ‘Structured ight photogrammoty; ‘About 50 ua (26) on a relatively large volume Caputure 3D, Costa Mesa, 360-deg view/patching GA 92626, 1-714-546-7278 CometOptoTrak System 4000 Grand Fiver Avenue, Sute 101, Nov, Mi 48375, mmikeb@ sieinbichler com ‘Optiga/CogarTens Systom USS. 815-697-1026 401 System 1, 149 Sidney Strect, Cambridge, MA 02139, 617-354-3690, HoloMapper Systern ERIM Intorational, In, 41975 Groen Road, Ann Arbor, Mi 48105, 318-904-0287 '360-deg viewipatching one view!no patching one viewino patching Structured light +optical tracking: ‘Random dot pattern+ photogrammetry *tilinear tensor, 360-deg view/patching Structured light + eal time computing: Lasor radar/mutipe wavelength; ‘About 50 ua (2) on a relatively large volume ‘About 20 10 100 wm (20) on a relatively large volume ‘About 10-* on a medium volume Uncertainty 0.5 un on a medium volume lography can be common paths and are collinear systems that are relatively immune to mechanical disturbances. 2.6 Photogrammetry Typical photogrammetry employs the stereo technique to measure 3-D shape, although other methods such as defo- cus, shading and scaling can also be used, Photogrammetry is mainly used for feature type 3-D dimension measure- ‘ment. It must usually have some bright markers such as retroreflective painted dots on the surface of a measured object. In general, photogrammetric 3-D reconstruction is established on the bundle adjustment principle in which the ‘geometric mode! of the central perspective and the orienta- tion of the bundles of light rays in a photogrammetric rela- tionship is developed analytically and implemented by a least squares procedure.*? Extensive research has been done to improve the accuracy of photogrammetry.®-®" Recent advances make it achieve high accuracy as one part in 100,000 or even one part in 1,000,000. 2.7 Laser Tracking System ‘A laser tracker uses an interferometer to measure distances, and two high accuracy angle encoders to determine vertical and horizontal angles. The laser tracker SMART 310, de- veloped at the National Bureau of Standards, was improved at API (Automated Precision Inc.) to deliver I-4m range resolution and 0.7-arcsee angular resolution. The laser tracker isa scanning system and usually is used to track the positions of optical sensors or robots. The Leica LTD 500 system can provide an absolute distance measurement with accuracy about +50 jam and angle encoders that permit accuracy of 5 parts in a million within a 35-m radius mea- surement volume. 2.8 Structured Light The structured light method, also categorized as active tri- angulation, includes both projected coded light and sinu- soidal fringe techniques. Depth information of the object is encoded into a deformed fringe pattern recorded by an im- ‘age acquisition sensor.”"-“*Although related to projection 12 Optical Engineering, Vol 39 No. 1, January 2000 ‘moiré techniques, shape is directly decoded from the de- formed fringes recorded from the surface of a diffuse object instead of using a reference grating to create moiré fringes. ‘Two other related techniques use projected random pattems and a trilinear tensor.’ When a LCD/digital mirror de- vice (DMD) based and optimized shape measurement sys- tem is used, the measurement accuracy may be achieved” at one part in 20,000. The structured Tight method has the following merits: (1) easy implementation; (2) phase shift- ing, fringe density and direction change ‘can be realized with no moving parts if a computer controlled LCD/DMD is used; and (3) fast full field measurement. Because of these advantages, the coordinate measurement and machine vision industries have started to commercialize the struc- tured light method (see Table 1) and some encouraging applications can be found in Refs. 80-82. However, 10 ‘make this method even more accepted in industry some issues have to be addressed, including the shading problem, which is inherent to all triangulation techniques. The 360- 2g multiple view data registration and defocus with pro: jected gratings or dots show promise for a solution" ‘The following sections touch these areas, For small objects using a microscope, lateral and depth resolutions of 1 and 0.1 jum, respectively, can be achieved.°**" Using confocal microscope for shape measurement can be found in Ref. 88, 3 General Approach to Measure 360-deg Shape of an Object The global coordinate system is set up and local coordi- nates systems are registered during measurement. A struc- tured light imaging system is placed at an appropriate po- sition to measure 3-D shape from one view, and the absolute phase value at each object point is calculated. These phase values and a geometric-optic model of the measurement system determine the local 3-D coordinates of the object points. Three ways are usually used to mea sure 360-deg shape, the object rotation method.” the camera/imaging system transport technique, and the fixed aging system with multiple cameras approach, For cam- cra transport, which is usually for measuring large objects, ’ tCChen, Brown, and Song: Overiow of three-dimensional shape measurement jobal and local coordinate systems. the measurement is repeated at different views to cover the measured object. All the local 3-D coordinates are trans- formed into the global coordinate system and patched to- gether using a least squares fit method. The measured final 3-D coordinates of the object can be compared with CAD ‘master data in a computer using various methods in which the differentiation comparison technique and least square fit are often used. 4 Global and Local Coordinates Translation For a 360-deg 3-D measurement of an object, an optical sensor must be positioned at different locations around the object. The point clouds obtained at each position must be input or transformed into global coordinates from each lo- cal coordinate so that these point clouds can be patched together to generate the finial data set. To accomplish this, each sensor coordinate system location and orientation ‘must be known or measured, Any error in measuring and calculating the sensor location and orientation will cause a ‘propagation error in the global coordinates, which will pre- ent a high overall accuracy of the final measurement, ‘There are several approaches to determine the relationship between the global and local coordinate. system:"-”* (1) aecurate mechanical location and orientation of the sensor (local coordinate system), (2) optical tracking of the loca- tion and orientation of the sensor using active or passive targets attached to the sensor, and (3) photogrammetry of markers accurately fixed in the object field and hybrid methods. Fig. 1 is a diagram showing these approaches. For the mechanical approach 1, the sensor is attached on ‘a mechanical positioning system of high accuracy. The lo- cation and orientation of the sensor are derived from the system coordinate and angle information. The advantage of the mechanical system is that it is robust and has high ac- curacy. However, the cost for accuracy in mechanical de- vices, overcoming environmental perturbation, and mainte- nance of the equipment is very high. For the optical approach 2, the local coordinate system is calculated from the measured global position of reference targets (active or passive, with the known local coordi- ‘Sensor planning dfagram showing several approaches to detotmine the relationship between nates) on the frame of the optical sensor using an optical tracker system, The advantage is portability and compact: ness. However, the sensor targets must be visible and this limits the flexibility. Moreover, the floor vibration effect must be considered. If a high accuracy tracking system is ed, such as laser tracking system, the cost is also rela- tively high, Both mechanical and optical methods are prone to angular error. ‘The photogrammetry approach 3 can provide high accu- racy local coordinate system location and orientation from ‘measurement of the global coordinates of makers accu- rately fixed in the object field. The accuracy can be as high 1s one part in a million.® Conservatively, accuracy can be ‘as one part in 100,000. However, the key limitation for this ‘method is that registration markers must be placed on or ‘around the object. This increases the measurement time and automation complexity. 5 Structured Light Sources, Image Sensors, ‘Camera Model and Calibration ‘The light source is important for the overall accuracy of a 3+ shape measurement system. Important parameters in- ‘lude uniformity, weight, intensity profile and speckle/dot size. The projection of a Ronchi grating slide provides high resolution with bright images and is currently used in some ‘commercial systems. However, to calculate absolute dis- tance, multiple grating slides are needed to apply the phase shift method and to vary the grating frequency. This in turn results in slow speed and relatively large space for storing diferent gratings. Around 1991 to 1993, liquid crystal pro- jectors (LCDs) using incoherent light’! were used in Which each pixel can be addressed by a computer image generating system. The advantage of this type projection is the high speed for phase shifting and variable grating fre- quency. The disadvantage is that LCDs require powerful light sources, resulting in cooling concems and increased ‘weight, Moreover, the resolution is low compared with the film slide based light projection. To overcome the bright- ross concer of the LCD, the reflective LCD, the gas plasma display (GPD) and the DMD have been Optical Engineering, Vol. 39 No. 1, January 2000 19.Chen, Brown, and Song: Overview of three-cimensional shape measurement. developed.!"*"% In addition, the gaps between DMP mir- rors are smaller than those pixels between the LCD so that the DMD images are relatively sharper. A detailed error analysis and optimization of a shape measurement system using a LCD/DMD type fringe projector can be found in Ref. 106. The LCD, GPD and DMD have RGB color by which simultaneously acquisition of three images or three phase shifted images can be used, and this makes the phase shift technique immune to environmental perturbation.!” ‘The color advantage may also be used for ebsolute phase determination." Other light sources are the two point source laser, interferometer using a Mach-Zhender configuration," fiber optics." birefringence crystal!" an acoustic optical modulator"! (AOM) and Lasiis's non- Gaussian strctured light projector using a special designed prism that can generate"? 99 lines with interbeam angle at 0.149 deg In optical 3-D shape measurement, image acquisition is a key factor for accuracy. Currently, images are acquired using @ CCD or a charge injection device (CID) sensor. ‘There are full frame, frame transfer and interline transfer sensors. The major concerns regarding these sensors are the speed, resolution, dynamic range, and accuracy. Up 10 5kX5k pixel CCD sensors are commercially available such as DALSA TA-D9-5120, Ford Aerospace 4kX4k, Kodak Model 16.81 (4kx4k), Loral CCD481. to name a few. Usu- ally, the high resolution sensor is a full frame CCD that oes not have storage and requires a shutter to enable im- age transfer and results in relatively slow speed. Combined ‘micro and macroscanning techniques, the image reso- lution can be as high as 20k20k, which is equivalent to the resolution of a 20X20 cm area photograph with 100 lines/mm. The CID sensor differs from CCD sensor in that it does not bloom through overexposure, and can be read ‘out selectively since each pixel is individually addressed. A high accuracy CCD sensor or a video camera requires high radiometric and geometric accuracy, including both intrinsic parameters such as lens distortion and extrinsic Parameters such as the coordinate location and orientation of the camera. A. detailed discussion regarding characteriza tion and calibration of radiometric and geometric feature of a CCD sensor can be found in Ref. 118. The relative accu- racy of I part in 1000 can be achieved using on site auto- matic calibration during measurement. More accurate cali- bration, such as 10°* to 10° accuracy, may be achieved using a formal off line calibration procedure with a more complex and nonlinear camera model. A high accuracy camera model is necessary to characterize the lens aberra- tion and to comet the captured image for the distortions caused by the aberration." The calibration of an opti- cal measurement system can be further divided into an geo- ‘metric parameter technique, as described earlier, and geo- ‘metric transformation approach. The geometric parameter technique requires the known parameters of the optical setup including the projector and image sensor. On. the other hand, the geometric transformation approach'2®-!33 ddoes not require knowledge of the parameters of the image system, in which Ref. 131 presents the recently developed projection or image ray tracing technique and Ref. 132 pro- vides the known position of the object or camera variation approach. Once the imaging system is moved or the mea- sured object size/depth is changed, the calibration proce- 14 Optical Engineering, Vol. 99 No. 1, January 2000 dure may need to be performed again. This, however, may pose some limitation for this method, Reference 134 devel- ‘oped a self-calibration approach that may reduce the com- plexity of calibration procedure and increases accuracy. 6 Absolute Phase Value Measurement and Discontinuity Ambiguity Overcome JIn general, using phase shifted structured light to measure the 3-D shape of the object renders only relative phase Values, Phase shifting determines the fractional ordet of fringes at any pixel. These fractional orders are connected together using their adjacent integer orders, which isthe so called unwrapping process. However, when the phase dif- ference between the adjacent pixels i larger than 27, such as occurs at a discontinuity or steep change of shape, the integer fringe order becomes ambiguous, Recently, several methods have, been developed 0 overcome discontinuities." The basic idea is that changing the ‘measurement systems sensitivity results in fringe or pro- ‘jected structured strip density changes, This means that the integer order of the fringes sweep through the discontinu- ity. can be viewed in both spatial and temporal domains and results in various different methods. As mentioned in Ref, 144, the key to overcoming discontinuity is to deter- mine the integer “fringe"” order duting unwrapping pro- cess. These methods, such as two wavelength or parameter change, are used in interferometry to determine absolute fringe fractional and integer orders.'®! In plane rotation of the grating and varying the grating frequency (e.., fringe projection with two point variable spacing) are use ful techniques. Triangulation and stereography can also be employed to determine absolute phase values and over- come discontinuity, although there are limitations since all pixel points may not be covered without changing viewing direction. Some direct phase calculation, such as phase de~ Fivative methods without phase unwrapping, may still need continuous condition." However, the same problem can Also be solved by phase locked loop technique." 7 image Data Patching and CAD Data Comparison After processing the 360-deg local images, the local point cloud patches must be merged together to obtain a final slobal point cloud the object. The accuracy of a measure- ment system is also determined by the matching accuracy. There is extensive research on the matching methods and algorithms in photogrammetry, which can generally be cat- eporized as area based matching, feature based matching and other methods such as centroid method."°™"”? The area based matching takes advantage of correlation coefficient ‘maximization and least squares minimization, while feature based matching exploits all algorithms extracting features of points, lines, areas. Area based matching usually em. ploys pixel intensity as a constrain, while feature based matching uses a geometric constraint. All of these methods require subpixel accuracy to achieve overall accuracy. Un- 4det_ optimized, condition, 0.02 pixel accuracy can be achieved," and in general 0.05 pixel accuracy should be obtained." There is a discussion of subpixel accuracy versus geometric accuracy where geomeiric accuracy iS ‘more promising.”°| ' ' + $ | > For CAD data comparison, the differentiation and least mean squares methods are mainly used. The measured point cloud data are subtracted from CAD data to obtain Gifferences as an error indicator. The comparison to the ‘appropriate CAD model can be used to obtain the best fit of registration between the two. Model matching can start with a selection of a subset of point cloud data. The mea- sured point data in this subset are matched to the CAD data bby making the normal vector collinear to the normal vector of the local CAD surface. The distances in the normal di- rection between the CAD surface and measured point cloud are fed into a least squares error function. The best fit is achieved optimizing the least squares error function.!”""" Before the measured data can be compared to CAD master data, it must be converted into standard CAD representations."®°-™ This is usually done by first splitting the measured data into major geometric entities and modeling these entities in the nonuniform rational B-spline surface form; this has the advantage of describing the quadric in addition to free form surface using a com- ‘mon mathematical solution. 8 Sensor Planning Large-scale surface inspection often requites either mul- tiple stationary sensors or relocation of a single sensor for completing a 3-D information. A multsensor system has an advantage in high-volume inspection of similar products, but usually lacks flexibility. To improve the flexibility, various portable sensor systems and automated eye-on- hand systems are produced. However, no matter what kinds of sensor systems will be used, the first and most critical problem that should be solved is how the sensor(s) can be placed to successfully view the 3-D object without missing fequired information. Given information about the environ- ‘ment (e.g. the observed objects and the available sensors) ‘and information about the mission (Le., detection of certain ‘object features, object recognition, scene reconstruction, object. manipulation, and accurate, dense enough point ‘louds), strategies should be developed to determine sensor ers that achieve the mission with a certain degree of Satisfaction. Generally solving such a problem is catego- rized as a sensor planaing problem. Considerable effort on general techniques has been made in sensor planning. We ean collect them into the four categories 8.1 Generate and Test By using this method,!**"*S sensor configurations are gen- ‘erated first, then evaluated using performance functions and ‘mission constraints, To avoid an exhausting search process, the domain of sensor configuration is discretized by tessel- lating a viewing sphere surrounding the object under obser- vation. This is a time-consuming technique without guaran- teeing an optimal result. 8.2 Synthesis Approach ‘This approach'®*' is built on an analytical relation be~ tween mission constraints and sensor parameters. It has a beautiful and promising theoretical framework that can de- termine the sensor configurations for certain cases. The drawback of this approach is that the analytical relations sometimes are missing, especially when constraints are complex. Cchen, Brown, and Song: Overview of thrae-dimensional shape measurement. . & Point Cloud Scan Data Fig. 2 Measured point cloud data of a component. 8&3 Sensor Simulation System ‘This system'??-" brings objects, sensors and light sources into a unified viral environment. It then uses the generate and-test approach to find desired sensor configurations. The Simulation systems are useful in the sense that operators ccan actively evolve the process and ensure the results. 8.4 Expert System Approach Rule-based expert systems!*™? are utilized to bridge re- ality and expert knowledge of viewing and illumination ‘The recommended sensor configurations are the output of the expert system from reality checking, In general, the more complete knowledge we have, the “wiser the advice wwe can get. 8.5. Sensor Planning Examples In fact, these sensor planning techniques have a strong ap- plication background. Their goal is aggressively set to im- prove machine intelligence and reduce human-intensive op- trations that cause the Jong development cycle time, high cost, and complexity in modern industry. Several examples fare (1) an intelligent sensor planning system was concep- tually defined to be applied in the application of automated dimensional measurements by using CAD models of mea- sured parts; (2) an inspection system that is able to de~ termine appropriate and flexible action in new situations since on-line sensor planning techniques were adopted;”" and (3) the techniques were applied to a robot vision sys- tem 0 that the orientation and position of vision sensors and a light source can be automatically determined.” 9 Demonstration Examples 9.1 Panel Spring Back Investigation During component development cycle, there is a try-out phase that requires measurement of the shape of a compo- nent or the die to make the component. The following is a demonstration of using a 3-D optical measurement setup 10 ‘measure a component and compare it to the master CAD data to evaluate the spring back effect. Figure 2 shows the point cloud data of a component. Figure 3 shows the cor- responding CAD data, Figure 4 shows the comparison be~ tween the measured data and CAD data, in which the two sets of data are compared using the least squares fit. Optical Engineering, Vol. 39 No. 1, January 2000 15CChen, Brown, and Song: Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement Part CAD Data Fig. 3 Corresponding CAD data of a component 9.2. Vehicle Shape Measurement For rapid prototyping or benchmarking, often the vehicle body shape must be measured. The following example uses the structured light method combined with photogrammetry to measure a car body shape. Some coded targets were placed on the vehicle body to enable local to global coor- inate transformation. Then structured light was projected on the vehicle surface combined with phase shifting and absolute phase measurement technique using fringe fre- ‘quency change to determine the local coordinate pixel by pixel at one view direction. Two hundred and forty view Girections were used to cover the whole vehicle surface (it is a real vehicle). The 240 point clouds then were patched together using a least mean squares method. The point cloud data were extracted using 1 out of 8 pixels. The shaded measured data is shown in Fig. 5 and the point cloud data is shown in Fig. 6 9.3 Vibration 8D For accurate analysis of vibration or strain, the geometric, information of the tested structure must be known. Using the two-wavelength shape measurement method, the vibra- tion amplitude, phase and geometric information of a tested structure can be measured using a single compact electronic speckle pattern interferometry (ESPI) setup.” Figures 7(a) and 7(b) show the four vibration states of a corrugated plate clamped along its boundaries and subjected to harmonic ‘excitation at 550 Hz. State 1 in Fig. 7(a) depicts the original a Comparison Results Fig. 4 Comparison of the measured data and CAD data of a com- ponent. 16 Optical Enginoering, Vol, 39 No. 1, January 2000 Fig. 5 Shaded measured data of a vehicle. corrugated plate geometric shape and the rest are vibrating. states at distinct times. From Fig. 7 one can clearly see the shape effect on vibration, 94 Paint Defects ‘The geometry measurement technique can also be applied to measure paint defects of a body panel of a vehicle, al- though itis a challenge to detect small laws in large areas. ‘A methodology fas been developed, as shown in the flow chart in Fig. 8 (and in the optical setup in Fig. 9), in which structured light generated from a monitor is reflected from the tested panel and digitized into a computer image pro- cessing system. Then the digital Fourier transform method is used to extract the global shape of the panel by selecting the structured tight frequency. The defect geometry coupled with the global shape of the panel is caleulated by selecting half-spatial frequencies. The detect geometry is finally ob- tained by subtracting the preceding two results, as shown in Fig. 10, where Fig. 10(a) shows the panel with projected structured light, and Fig, 10(b) shows the final measure- ment result. One can see that without the calculation, one can only observe the large defects by enhanced fringe ‘modulation. The measurement area is about 0.25%0.25 m and the minimum defect size is about 500mm. Some other application examples can be found, ein Refs. 205 and 206. Fig. 6 Measured point oud data of a vehicle,‘Chen, Brown, and Song: Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement. . Fig. 7 (a) Vibeation sate 1 depicts the orginal corrugated pate goo- ‘metic shape and (o)-(6) vibration states (D) 2, (c) 3, and (d) 4 show tho offect of the underlying shape. 10 Conclusion and Future Research Trend Although the principles of triangulation, structured light, ‘and interferometry have been in existence for decades, itis ‘only with the recent availability of advanced and low cost, ‘computers, electro-optical elements, and lasers that such techniques have reached the breakthrough point to be com- mercialized, and ever increasingly to be applied in industry. To make it even more acceptable in industry and to strive to achieve 10°* to 10° accuracy,”'™ some challenges remain to be addressed. The following may suggest some future trends. 10.1. Real Time Computing Real time 3-D shape measurement is an ongoing request in industry to drive down product cost and increase produc- tivity and quality. The major impact will be in digital de- ign, digital and physical manufacturing, and fast prototyp- ing that streamline and integrate product design and manufacture. Real time 3-D shape measurement is the key for successfully implementing 3-D coordinate display and Digiize Fourier Trans [Power Trans L PeccrhisrOrr |] elect all Spee faverse Fourier vee Fourier ae Sa Spat The Two Phases To Obtain The Result Fig. 8 Diagram showing structured light gonerated from a moritor ‘and reflected from the test panel and cigiized into a computer im- ‘age processing system. sect ih ody NN ra L_] ane | Computer Fig. 9 Optical setup showing structured light generated from a monitor rellected from the panel and digitized into a computer image processing system. measurement, manufacturing control, and on fine quality inspection. An encouraging example of this is jigless as- sembly based on the real time, simultaneous measurement fof different but related components. Described by Hobrought” “real time" is to assign a Z-value or depth for every pixel within a 17-ms cycle, which corresponds to the integration time of a CCD sensor. Recently, over 100 measured points every 40 ms was achicved using photogrammetry" and there isa report on the real 3:D shape measurement system” The key for real time is a high computational speed that can meet on line manufac- turing needs. 10.2 Direct Shape Measurement from a Specular Surface without Paint ‘There is an urgent need but little research activity in the area of using optical techniques to measure the 3-D shape of an object with specular surface such as a die surface. ‘There are some efforts to develop techniques in this area. References 210 and 211 proposed a technique using four lights to measure specular features. Reference 212 em- ployed a simplified version of the Torrance-Sparrow reflec- tance model to retrieve object curvature; this method relied ‘on prior knowledge of surface reflectance. References 213 and 214 suggested using multiple (127) point sources to detect specular shape. Reference 215 developed a photom- etry sampling technique employing a matrix of extended sources to determine the specular shape. References 216— 220 used diffusive TV screen as structured light source; however, since the diffusive screen has to be placed close to the measurement surface, the illuminated area is limited. References 218-220 proposed a retroreflective screen UM Fig. 10 (a) Panel with projected structured ight and (b) defects in ‘the final measurement result. pit ae Optical Engineering, Vol. 39 No. 1, January 2000 17CChen, Brown, and Song: Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement Fig. 3 Corresponding CAD data of a component 9.2 Vehicle Shape Measurement For rapid prototyping or benchmarking, often the vebi body shape must be measured. The following example uses the structured light method combined with photogrammetry to measure a car body shape, Some coded targets were placed on the vehicle body to enable local to global coor- dinate transformation. Then structured light was projected on the vehicle surface combined with phase shifting and absolute phase measurement technique using fringe fre- uency change to determine the local coordinate pixel by pixel at one view direction. Two hundred and forty view directions were used to cover the whole vehicle surface (it is a real vehicle). The 240 point clouds then were patched together using a least mean squares method. The point cloud data were extracted using 1 out of 8 pixels. The shaded measured data is shown in Fig, $ and the point cloud data is shown in Fig. 6. 9.3. Vibration 3D For accurate analysis of vibration or strain, the geometric information of the tested structure must be known. Using the two-wavelength shape measurement method, the vibra- ‘ion amplitude, phase and geometric information of a tested. structure ean be measured using a single compact electronic speckle pattem interferometry (ESP1) setup.” Figures 7(a) and 7(b) show the four vibration states of a corrugated plate clamped along its boundaries and subjected to harmonic excitation at 550 Hz. State 1 in Fig. 7(a) depicts the original Comparison Results Fig. 4 Comparison ofthe measured data and CAD data of a com- ponent. 16 Optical Engineering, Vol. 39 No. 1, January 2000 Fig. § Shaded measured data of a vehicle corrugated plate geometric shape and the rest are vibrating states at distinct times. From Fig. 7 one can clearly see the shape effect on vibration. 9.4 Paint Defects ‘The geometry measurement technique can also be applied to measure paint defects of a body panel of a vehicle, al- though it is a challenge to detect small flaws in large areas, ‘A methodology has been developed, as shown in the flow chart in Fig. 8 (and in the optical setup in Fig. 9), in which structured light generated from a monitor is reflected from the tested panel and digitized into a computer image pro- cessing system. Then the digital Fourier transform method js used t0 extract the global shape of the panel by selecting the structured light frequency. The defect geometry coupled, with the global shape of the panel is calculated by selecting, half-spatial frequencies. The detect geometry is finally ob- tained by subtracting the preceding two results, as shown in Fig. 10, where Fig. 10(a) shows the panel with projected structured light, and Fig. 10(b) shows the final measure- ‘ment result. One can see that without the calculation, one can only observe the large defects by enhanced fringe ‘modulation, The measurement area is about 0.250.25 m and the minimum defect size is abour™ 500 mm. Some other application examples can be found, e.g., in Refs. 205, and 206. Fig, 6 Measured point cloud data ofa vehiclechen, Brown, and Song: Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement. @ @ Fig. 7 (2) Vibration state 1 depicts the orginal corugated plate geo- eve shape and (b)-(d) vibration states (b) 2, () 3, and (6) 4 show the effect ofthe underlying shape. 10 Conclusion and Future Research Trend Although the principles of triangulation, structured light, land interferometry have been in existence for decades, itis only with the recent availability of advanced and low cost computers, electro-optical elements, and lasers that such techniques have reached the breakthrough point to be com- mercialized, and ever increasingly to be applied in industry ‘To make it even more acceptable in industry and to st to achieve 10-* to 105 accuracy,”'* some challenges remain to be addressed. The following may suggest some future trends. 10.1. Real Time Computing Real time 3-D shape measurement is an ongoing request in industry to drive down product cost and increase produc tivity and quality. The major impact will be in digital de- sign, digital and physical manufacturing, and fast prototyp- ing ‘that streamline and integrate product design and manufacture. Real time 3-D shape measurement is the key for successfully implementing 3-D coordinate display and Diaitize Fae Tow [Fourier Trams . cleo Fst Ow Te Fal Spee r i inverse Fourier [pesRare = h == Phase bia The Two Piases To Obtain The Rest Fig. 8 Diagram showing structured light generated from @ monitor ‘and reflected from the fest panel and digitized into a computer i- age processing system. ne Light Screen janet) camera Fig. 9 Optical setup showing structured light generated from a Freritor reflected from the panel and digtized into a computer image processing system. measurement, manufacturing control, and on line quality inspection. An encouraging example of this is jigless as~ sembly based on the real time, simultaneous measurement of different, but related components. Described by Hobrought” “real time" is to assign a Z-value or depth for every pixel within a 17-ms cycle, which corresponds to the integration time of a CCD sensor. Recently, over 100 measured points every 40 ms was achieved using photogrammetry" and there is a report on the real time 3-D shape measurement system.” The key for real time is ‘high computational speed that can meet on line manufac: turing needs. 10.2. Direct Shape Measurement from a Specular Surface without Paint ‘There is an urgent need but litle research activity in the area of using optical techniques to measure the 3-D shape ‘of an object with specular surface such as a die surface. There are some efforts to develop techniques in this area. References 210 and 211 proposed a technique using four Tights to measure specular features. Reference 212 em- ployed a simplified version of the Torrance-Sparrow reflec tance model to retrieve object curvature; this method relied (on prior knowledge of surface reflectance. References 213 and 214 suggested using multiple (127) point sources to detect specular shape. Reference 215 developed @ photom- etry sampling technique employing a matrix of extended sources to determine the specular shape. References 216— 220 used diffusive TV screen as structured light source; however, since the diffusive screen has to be placed close to the measurement surface, the illuminated area is limited, References 218-220 proposed a retroreflective sere Ws Fig. 10 (a) Panol wih projected structured light and (b) detects in the final measurement result Optical Engineering, Vol. 39 No. 1, January 2000 17Chen, Brown, and Song: Overview of three-dimensional shape measurement Table 2 Terminology. ‘Accuracy The closeness ofthe agreement between the resul of a measurement and the valuo ofthe ‘quantity subject o measurement, that i the ‘measurand (Ret. 223). Uncertainty The astimated possible deviation ofthe result ‘of measurement from its actual value (Ref. 224). Error The result of a measurement minus the valuo of tho measured (Ret. 223) Precision The closeness of agreement batween independent test results obtained under stipulated conattions (Ret. 223) Repeatabilly The closonoss of the agreement between the results of successive measurements ofthe seme ‘measurand cartied out under the same conditions ‘of moasurement (Ret. 223) Reproducibity The closeness of the agreement between the results of measurements of the same measurand ‘carried out under changed conditions of ‘measurement (Ret, 223) Resolution A measure of the smallest portion ofthe signal ‘that can be observed (Ret. 224). Sensitivity The smallest detectable change in a measurement ‘Tho ultimate sensiviy of a measuring instument ‘depends both on its resolution and the lowast ‘measurement rango (Ref. 224). ‘coupled with projection of structured light by which a large area may be visualized. However, the retroreflective screen ‘must be rigid, controlled or calibrated without deformation. ‘or movement during the measurement. References 221 and 222 developed a coaxial linear distance sensor for measur- ing specular shape of a die surface; however, itis based on point scanning, which is not fast enough for the industrial application of measuring large die surface. The current technique for measuring die surfaces requires painting the surface with powder, which slows measurement speed and reduces measurement accuracy. 10.3 Shading Problem There is a lack of research activity for overcoming the shading problem inherent in tiangulation methods although some other methods*** besides interferometric and laser radar show some progress. These methods use a defocus technique similar othe confoal microscope prinjple and the newly developed diffraction grating technique.” 10.4 Standard Methodology to Evaluate Optical ‘Shape Measurement System ‘An international standard must be established to evaluate ‘optical shape measurement systems. Important parts ofthis standard should include (1) standard sample parts. with known dimensions, surface finishes, and materials; (2) ‘math assumptions and error characterization; (3) measute- ‘ment speed and volume capability; (4) repeatability and reproducibility procedures; (5) calibration procedures and © reliability evaluation, Standard specification/terminology is needed to define precision/repeatability and accuracy (see Table 2). Often precision and accuracy are misused with each other. An- other example is what should be used, accuracy, error of < 18 Optical Engineering, Vol. 39 No. 4, Janvary 2000 uncertainty. Accuracy and uncertainty are more accurate and meaningful than error. However, accuracy is more commonly used both in academia and industry. Many co- ordinate measurement manufacturers specify a range accu- racy of +/— x micrometer. Some manufacturers try to specify measurement accuracy as 1¢, ot 2a, of 30. The ISOMR 1938-1973 standard employs a 20 band? 10.8 Large Measurement Range with High Accuracy Most shape measuring systems trade off measurement ac- ccuraey for measurement range. However, there is an indus tial need for systems that have a large measurement range and high accuracy. Further research must be done in this area, although there is an encouraging report in which the shape of a 4m wide area of a brick wall was measured using fringe projection 10.6 Measurement System Calibration and Optimization and Sensor Planning System calibration and optimization are key factors to stretch the measurement accuracy” and to achieve 10~* to 10°* accuracy." Reference 79 shows how to use the same. system but with optimization to achieve one order higher accuracy and Ref. 134 demonstrates how to use the novel self-calibration to accomplish mathematically estimated ap- proximately 10° accuracy. Sensor planing will help to ful- fil these goals. Reference 134 also provides a way to elimi- nate markers using photogrammetry, which is one step further to make 3-D optical methods be more practical in industry. Acknowledgments The authors would like to express thanks to T. Cook, B. Bowman, C. Xi, E. Liasi, P. Harwood, and J. Rankin for providing test setup, data registration and processing, and test results, and T. Allen for valuable discui References 1. HLJ. Teas, “Opti! mewology of engineering suraces—scope and wend.” in Opie! Measurement Techniques td Applicaton PK Kasogi, Bd, Artech Howse, Boston (1937) 2.1 Moving, Ht Allsto,V. Kolvonen, and ®. Mila ‘sion spe for antoratic model based shape Jers Bx. 10, 351989) 3. 1S Mass, G8 Baller, A.C. 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