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PHOTONICS INTERVIEW
Dr. Dirk Berndt , Fraunhofer IFF
The vision of zero fault production

Fraunhofer IFF develops complex measuring arrangements as well as methods and algorithms to evaluate measurement data for innovative and individual metrology and testing systems for its customers. For example, a geometric 100% component test can be carried out using sensors with "OptoInspect 3D", a technology developed by the institute. Dr. Dirk Berndt is Head of the Measuring and Testing Technology Business Unit.

1. The requirements for material surfaces are constantly increasing in the industry. In addition, many production processes take place in the micro or even nano ranges. Does this also lead to an increased demand for optical 3D measurement technologies?
 

Dr. Dirk Berndt: This is correct, and it is also reflected in the growing number of device providers. Consider, for example, the established optical measurement methods of focus variation, white light interferometry, or conoscopic holography. But future requirements will also be the integration of these optical measurement technologies into the production flow to record surface features quickly and reliably for every component and to allow one to intervene and adapt the process controls. Only then will we come a lot closer to the vision of zero fault production.
 
2. Does the increasing complexity and variety of products not also mean that many different measuring methods are needed? Or to put it another way: do you need many different "measurement devices" within one production line or are there devices that perform several functions?

Dr. Dirk Berndt: Very demanding functional components have very complex geometric features, which have extremely different tolerances due to their future use. At the same time, features with wide tolerances generally have a larger lateral expansion of several centimeters while narrow-tolerance features have a lateral expansion of a few millimeters.

Multi-sensor solutions are needed to fulfill complex measuring requirements from a state of the art aspect. For macro to micro features, we can use, for example, triangulation-based measuring methods and for micro to nano features white light interferometry is a suitable method. Geometric features within cast components are also becoming increasingly interesting; computer tomography can be used in the area. All the methods have to determine the respective features within a defined component coordinate system, which requires the methods to be linked (known as registration) as well as data fusion. A lot of research still has to be carried out in this area.
 
3. What types of features are measured in production processes?
 
Dr. Dirk Berndt: A lot of different features. In current production processes optical coordinate measurement machines are used to carry out random measurements. In addition, triangulation-based methods, such as laser light sectioning, stripe projection, and photogrammetry offer a lot of application potential for process and machine-integrated solutions. These are used to test car and railcar wheels, railcar wheel sets, profiles, car body components in automotive production, stressed-skin fuselages in the aviation industry etc. for dimensional, shape and geometric tolerances.
 
4. The software issue usually also raises the question about standardized interfaces.
 
Dr. Dirk Berndt: Although it may not seem obvious to users, standardization has come a long way. Almost all optical and digital measuring devices use modern camera systems with standardized interfaces for connection with PC systems. More relevant for users is the issue as to how the measuring systems can access default values and in which way the measurement results are documented and archived.

For the standardized provision of default values, the developments in CAD systems from being a pure 2-D drawing program to a 3-D volume modeler are a real benefit for us. Increasingly, industrial end users are able to provide 3-D models from which the automated default values can be derived. But even here, there is a lot of work to do before we have a standardized measurement program that understands all the measuring devices from different manufacturers.

The situation regarding documentation and archiving of the measurement results looks a lot rosier. Here, we have standardized data interfaces to statistical quality analysis programs, archiving in databases and export to spreadsheets.
 
5. Shorter lead times and cost savings are the most commonly used buzz words in production technology. Both inconceivable without automation. How "automated" is optical measurement technology?
 

Dr. Dirk Berndt: In principle, the technologies of optical, dimensional 3-D metrology offer the advantage that they can operate a fully automatic measuring system and can be integrated into the production flow, thus allowing every single component in the production cycle to be measured. Even complex sensor solutions integrated into milling centers are possible. However, this inline metrology requires specific solutions – adapted to suit the individual task – that cannot be configured from standard sensors. To manage these challenges, the Fraunhofer IFF in Magdeburg has developed tools that allow the development, implementation and start-up of sensor systems adapted to suit specific tasks. Many of these systems have already been implemented.

6. What are the latest trends in industrial optical measuring technology? What direction is it taking?

 
Dr. Dirk Berndt: It must be possible to integrate optical 3-D measuring systems inline so that process irregularities can be detected at an early stage. This needs interdisciplinary cooperation between machine and system manufacturers and optical production metrology experts. For robust and reliable practical use, the 3-D measuring systems must be able to adapt to changes in ambient conditions – such as temperature, vibration or the optical features of the objects to be measured.

It must be possible to reconfigure solutions in optical, dimensional 3D production metrology that use optical 3D sensors easily so that they can be adapted to suit more flexible production systems in the future – as lot sizes in production become smaller. This will need suitable, user friendly processes and tools to be developed that guarantee measuring capability at all times. Future-oriented solutions will require the geometric data that is recorded to be processed fully automatically and very quickly.
 

Thank you for the interview.


More information
http://www.iff.fraunhofer.de



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