Viaxl: A Solution of a Low-Cost Real-Time Visual Accelerometer Based on Laser Speckle Optical Flow Detection
<p>A group of adjacent speckle images (100 × 96 pixels) obtained by Viaxl and an optical flow diagram. (<b>a</b>) First frame; (<b>b</b>) second frame; (<b>c</b>) displacement between two adjacent frames (<b>a</b>,<b>b</b>), which was calculated by the acceleration calculation algorithm we propose.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>The workflow of Viaxl.</p> "> Figure 3
<p>Diagram of fast image capture and storage process.</p> "> Figure 4
<p>Results of post-processing: (<b>a</b>) Cumulative displacement of object motion calculated by Viaxl; (<b>b</b>) comparison of acceleration calculation with and without post-processing.</p> "> Figure 5
<p>Hardware system and experiment scenarios of Viaxl: (<b>a</b>) Block diagram of Viaxl system; (<b>b</b>) system diagram of Viaxl hardware prototype; (<b>c</b>) experiment scenarios.</p> "> Figure 6
<p>Accuracy of Viaxl’s results: (<b>a</b>) Comparison between the setting value of the platform and Viaxl’s result at 20 Hz; (<b>b</b>) spectra of 10–100 Hz Viaxl measurements; (<b>c</b>) comparison of power spectral density under different measurement frequencies (the abscissa is the difference between the actual vibration frequency and the measured vibration frequency).</p> "> Figure 7
<p>Nonlinearity verification of Viaxl at 20 Hz: (<b>a</b>) Time domain signal; (<b>b</b>) spectrum of 10–100 Hz Viaxl measurement.</p> "> Figure 8
<p>Power spectral density under 0–60 mm defocus lengths.</p> "> Figure 9
<p>Minimum detectable vibration amplitude verification of Viaxl: (<b>a</b>) Single-axis high precision manual rotating platform; (<b>b</b>) experiment results.</p> "> Figure 10
<p>10,000 iterations of Viaxl elapsed time.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (a)
- Non-contact measurement, no additional mass, no effect on the properties of the measured structure.
- (b)
- Supports measurement of multiple points at the same time.
- (c)
- Supports measurement of difficult positions and tiny structures.
- (d)
- Not affected by the material properties and state of the tested structure.
- (e)
- Supports remote measurement.
- (f)
- It is low-cost and easy to apply.
2. System Prototype
2.1. Acceleration Calculation Algorithm Based on Speckle Optical Flow Detection
2.2. Viaxl Prototype
2.2.1. Fast Image Capture and Storage
2.2.2. Acceleration Calculation Based on the Viaxl Algorithm
2.2.3. Post-Processing
3. Experiment Results
3.1. Hardware System
3.2. Experiment Results
3.2.1. 10–100 Hz Acceleration Measurement Experiment
3.2.2. Nonlinearity of Acceleration Measurement
3.2.3. Defocus Effect of Viaxl
3.2.4. Minimum Detectable Amplitude
3.2.5. Real-Time Performance and Maximum Bandwidth of Detectable Vibration Frequency
4. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Li, Z.; Yang, W.; Xiong, X.; Wang, Z.; Zou, X. Viaxl: A Solution of a Low-Cost Real-Time Visual Accelerometer Based on Laser Speckle Optical Flow Detection. Sensors 2020, 20, 7033. https://doi.org/10.3390/s20247033
Li Z, Yang W, Xiong X, Wang Z, Zou X. Viaxl: A Solution of a Low-Cost Real-Time Visual Accelerometer Based on Laser Speckle Optical Flow Detection. Sensors. 2020; 20(24):7033. https://doi.org/10.3390/s20247033
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Zhitian, Wuhao Yang, Xingyin Xiong, Zheng Wang, and Xudong Zou. 2020. "Viaxl: A Solution of a Low-Cost Real-Time Visual Accelerometer Based on Laser Speckle Optical Flow Detection" Sensors 20, no. 24: 7033. https://doi.org/10.3390/s20247033
APA StyleLi, Z., Yang, W., Xiong, X., Wang, Z., & Zou, X. (2020). Viaxl: A Solution of a Low-Cost Real-Time Visual Accelerometer Based on Laser Speckle Optical Flow Detection. Sensors, 20(24), 7033. https://doi.org/10.3390/s20247033