WO2003104776A1 - Procede et appareil permettant de determiner les proprietes de specimens de bois, notamment la longueur de grain - Google Patents
Procede et appareil permettant de determiner les proprietes de specimens de bois, notamment la longueur de grain Download PDFInfo
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- WO2003104776A1 WO2003104776A1 PCT/NZ2003/000112 NZ0300112W WO03104776A1 WO 2003104776 A1 WO2003104776 A1 WO 2003104776A1 NZ 0300112 W NZ0300112 W NZ 0300112W WO 03104776 A1 WO03104776 A1 WO 03104776A1
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N33/00—Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
- G01N33/46—Wood
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N21/00—Investigating or analysing materials by the use of optical means, i.e. using sub-millimetre waves, infrared, visible or ultraviolet light
- G01N21/17—Systems in which incident light is modified in accordance with the properties of the material investigated
- G01N21/47—Scattering, i.e. diffuse reflection
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N21/00—Investigating or analysing materials by the use of optical means, i.e. using sub-millimetre waves, infrared, visible or ultraviolet light
- G01N21/84—Systems specially adapted for particular applications
- G01N21/88—Investigating the presence of flaws or contamination
- G01N21/89—Investigating the presence of flaws or contamination in moving material, e.g. running paper or textiles
- G01N21/892—Investigating the presence of flaws or contamination in moving material, e.g. running paper or textiles characterised by the flaw, defect or object feature examined
- G01N21/898—Irregularities in textured or patterned surfaces, e.g. textiles, wood
- G01N21/8986—Wood
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N2201/00—Features of devices classified in G01N21/00
- G01N2201/08—Optical fibres; light guides
- G01N2201/0813—Arrangement of collimator tubes, glass or empty
Definitions
- the present invention relates to apparatus and methods for determining characteristics of wood specimens using optical techniques, and in particular determining grain length.
- Measuring timber quality, preferably in the green as-sawn state, and assessing basic wood properties that will cause problems, such as warp and twist, are of interest.
- juvenile wood is becoming a significant proportion of the world's wood supply, and it is well known in the industry that such wood is particularly prone to these distortions.
- Figure 1 shows, in schematic form, two wood fibres or tracheids, one long 10 and one short 11.
- the terms "grain”, “tracheid” and “fibre” can be used interchangeably.
- Tracheids are tubular in nature with a wall thickness of about 5 microns. The hollow centre may be dry or sap filled and is usually about 25 microns in diameter.
- Fibre length in softwoods is 2000-3000 microns. Fibres are locally parallel, and their direction is the grain direction visible on the surface of wood, for example a plank. Over an entire surface of a wood sample, however, the fibre direction may vary, for example due to knots or other defects in the wood.
- the mechanically significant component of a fibre wall consists of layers of molecular strands of cellulose, wound in a helical structure. These strands are termed "microf ⁇ brils
- the microfibril angle is the angle 13 that the microf ⁇ brils make with the longitudinal axis of the hollow fibre. It is known that long fibres are associated with a low MFA, while short fibres have a higher MFA. The stability of wood as it dries is the aggregate of the forces generated by the microscopic shape changes of its cellular structure. It is known that the fibres shrink most perpendicularly to the cellulose winding, as indicated by arrows 14 and 15. Thus, a short fibre with a high MFA, will suffer a high component of along-fibre (grain) shrinkage. In contrast, a long fibre has a low MFA and will be associated with low along-fibre shrinkage. If a sawn board contains a mixture of fibre types in different locations, the possibility of differential shrinkage and stress relief via warping is a distinct possibility.
- the latter is particularly prevalent in plantation wood in NZ, and is commonly seen as twisting in dried timber which contains the pith, the condition that captures the maximum influence of this particular defect.
- the scatter ellipse 20 created by shining a laser or other light source onto a wood surface, contains information on the tracheids under investigation.
- the orientation ( ⁇ ) 21 of the major axis 22 indicates the orientation (in the plane of the wood surface) of the tracheid with respect to the wood edge 23
- the length of the major axis 22 indicates (although is not necessary an exact measure of) the length of the tracheid
- the eccentricity (the ratio of major axis 22 length to minor axis 24 length) of the ellipse gives an indication of the uncertainty in the measured orientation of the major axis 22.
- the scatter parameters relate generally to all those tracheids.
- the scatter parameter will provide a reasonable indicative measure of any particular tracheid in the vicinity, as they will all have similar properties (such as length and orientation).
- the properties of the tracheids only vary considerably on a global scale.
- the method conventionally employed for collecting scatter data involves imaging the laser spot and its surroundings using a solid state camera, and then subjecting a frame of the image to analysis. Using an algorithm, a best fit ellipse is generated for the scatter pattern, based on light intensities of the scatter pattern that exceed a particular threshold value. Such analysis shows that the scatter shape is not truly an ellipse, and is only approximately symmetric in shape. Repeated images of the same scatter region, analysed for the best ellipse orientation at a constant illumination level, give standard deviations to below a degree, but there is usually a systematic variation in the apparent grain angle derived at different threshold levels.
- Fig 2b shows the orientation derived for approximately the same location on a piece of dry wood, for two lasers; a gas laser whose spot was focused down into a small and very regular spot, and a diode laser, the beam of which, though focused, is rather elliptical.
- the light levels on the axis are quasi logarithmic, and the scale therefore covers around three decades.
- defining an orientation is a compromise between choosing a low light level, where the scatter extends furthest and the ellipse defined by a given light level has its greatest eccentricity, (which aids the measurement of its orientation, but at the cost of increased noise), and the use of higher light levels where the wood scatter path is shorter, but the ellipse becomes more circular and its orientation more difficult to establish.
- the very uniform spot from the gas laser probably is a small advantage, but even that seems to show a systematic shift of almost a degree between light levels of 50 and those of 150 units.
- excessive effort on algorithms capable of repeatably extracting an angle at a particular location and intensity may lead to unwarranted confidence that the grain orientation has been precisely measured, largely because the real intensity contours are irregular to some degree and are not simply noisy ellipses.
- the invention relates to various methods and associated apparatus for obtaining characteristics of scatter ellipses generated on a wood specimen, and then inferring characteristics of the tracheids or fibres in the wood specimen from the scatter ellipse characteristics. A map of tracheid characteristics can be obtained for the specimen.
- the invention further relates to various methods and associated apparatus that obtain and utilise maps of characteristics of fibres in a wood specimen, to infer properties of the wood itself.
- the present invention may be said to consist in a method of obtaining a measure of fibre length of a wood specimen including the steps of: a) shining a light beam on at least one point of the surface of the specimen to create a light scatter pattern on a portion of the surface, b) obtaining at least one measure of light mtensity attenuation of the scatter pattern in at least one direction, and c) determining a measure of fibre length from the measure of light intensity attenuation.
- the present invention may be said to consist in a method of obtaining a measure of fibre length of a wood specimen including the steps of: a) shining a light beam on at least one point of the surface of the specimen to create a light scatter pattern on a portion of the surface, b) obtaining measures of light intensity attenuation of the scatter pattern in two substantially perpendicular directions, and c) determining the ratio between the measures of intensity attenuation in the two directions.
- the present invention may be said to consist in an apparatus for obtaining a measure of grain length of a wood specimen including: a light source to produce a light scatter pattern on the specimen surface, an intensity detector array arranged to obtain measures of the light intensity of the scatter pattern in at least one direction, a processor connected to the detector to receive the light intensity measures and determine a measure of light attenuation in the at least one direction, and further determine a measure of fibre length from the measure of light attenuation.
- the present invention may be said to consist in an apparatus for obtaining a measure of grain length of a wood specimen including: a light source to produce a light scatter pattern on the specimen surface, an intensity detector array arranged to obtain measures of the light intensity of the scatter pattern in two substantially perpendicular directions, a processor connected to the detector to receive the light intensity measures and determine measures of light attenuation in the two directions, and further determine the ratio between the measures of intensity attenuation in the two directions.
- Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of a long and short tracheid in a wood specimen
- Figure 2a is a schematic diagram of a tracheid scatter pattern
- Figure 2b is a plot of apparent grain angle as a function of brightness level obtained using apparatus with a diode and a gas laser respectively
- Figure 3 is a schematic diagram of an apparatus for creating and analysing tracheid scatter
- Figure 4a is a plot of logarithmic intensity attenuation of the scatter from a laser along and perpendicular to the grain
- Figure 4b is a plot of approximately log-linear intensity attenuation along major and minor axes of a scatter ellipse, over modest intensity changes
- Figures 5 a and 5b are schematic diagrams illustrating a preferred embodiment of the invention for creating and analysing tracheid scatter
- Figure 6a is a plot of scatter ellipses calculated at four intensity levels on a wet sawn sample
- Figure 6b is a plot of brightness as a function of azimuth at four different radii.
- Figures 7a and 7b show a sample of knotted wood and grain direction respectively,
- Figures 7c and 7d show a grayscale image of a cut log showing systematic brightness eccentricity changes between pith and bark
- Figure 8 is a plot showing the correlation between major axis scatter length, brightness eccentricity and MoE of dry wood
- Figure 9 is a plot showing the comparison of scatter ellipses at two intensities on three wood samples before and after drying
- Figure 10 is a plot showing the increase in major axis scatter length from pith to bark across a rough-sawn wet cant
- Figure 11 is a schematic diagram of a plank prone to the type of warp called crook. DETAIL DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
- Microscope pictures have been taken by the applicant of laser light injected into the surface of p. radiata wood and then transmitted up to several millimeters in the along-grain direction. These indicate that in both late and early wood, most light near the point where the light is incident is travelling in the lumens of the tracheids, while with increasing distance most light is propagated in the tracheid walls with the latter acting as waveguides. Whether there is a continuous loss of energy from a tracheid along its length, or whether there is scattering at the end of a tracheid where light must scatter into the next tracheid, the result is that the original spot of light is transformed into grain-oriented pattern which is quasi-elliptical in shape.
- a measure of grain length is obtained by analysing the mtensity of a scatter ellipse around two or more constant radii.
- Information independent of the incident light intensity, to provide an absolute measure of fibre length may be obtained from a measure of fall-off in intensity of the scatter ellipse. This attenuation of intensity is preferably measured along both the major and minor axes of the scatter ellipse, although it may be measured in any direction. Further, a measure of fibre length can be obtained from intensity fall off in just one direction.
- Fibre length information can be subsequently used to indicate the pulp type a wood chip will produce, estimate the MoE to be expected from sawn timber, and/or provide some other measure that may indicate a propensity for the wood specimen to distort, for example warp.
- An apparatus 30 for obtaining intensity fall off data that demonstrates the method is shown Figure 3.
- the detector array 31 here comprises photodiodes pre-aligned along the major and minor axes of the scatter ellipse. It measures the intensity along the major and minor axes, and determines the attenuation in intensity along each axis as the distance from the light source increases.
- collimators 33 each detector views an area of about 100 microns diameter on the wood surface 34 to enable the processor 32 to record the scatter intensities 35 in orthogonal directions.
- this intensity fall-off is approximately exponential along major 22 and minor axes 24, and this defines two characteristic lengths, ⁇ ma j or and ⁇ mi nor .
- This characteristic length is the distance over which the intensity falls by e.
- the fibres can be classified by these lengths which are independent of illumination intensity.
- the major axis 22 characteristic length will provide an approximate measure of fibre length.
- the ratio of attenuation distance along the major 22 and minor 24 axes is approximately constant for a particular location and describes the effect of the wood on the light, i.e. it defines the scatter in orthogonal directions, and may also be calibrated to indicate fibre length. The same principles apply to wet or dry wood, but calibration values will be different for each state.
- the simple exponential fall-off is seen to be an approximation.
- the characteristic length increases with distance from the illumination point because, superimposed on the attenuation law is the geometric effect of the energy spreading from a point.
- the logarithmic intensity along the minor axis 24 remains a constant fraction of that along the major axis.
- Figure 4a illustrates the extent of the scatter created from the apparatus 30 when sensitive detectors 31 are used.
- the intensity of the scatter 35 from a laser spot on dry wood 34 is tracked along the major 22 and minor axes 24 of the scattering ellipse by the processor 32 using the output of the array 31.
- the wood sample has an MOE of 13GPa and is therefore of long fibre type.
- Figure 4a shows that the light fell in a systematic way by more than four orders of magnitude (the values shown are natural logarithms of intensity) over a length of 15mm from the spot centre in the grain direction. In the transverse directions, the fall is much faster. Over any decade of intensity, the light falls approximately exponentially.
- the preferred method of the invention for characterising the material is carried out by determining an intensity attenuation distance of the scatter ellipse 65, along the major 22 and/or minor 24 axes.
- the attenuation along one axis, or the ratio of attenuations along two axes, is correlated with tracheid length to provide an absolute measure. This measure is independent of the intensity factors noted above.
- mtensity data are available from, for example, a linear response CMOS camera of limited dynamic range
- the description of the scatter along the major 22 and minor 24 axes is by an intensity- independent wood parameter, the logarithmic decay constant. This is shown in Figure 4b.
- the scatter intensities along and perpendicular to the major axis of the ellipse are given by:
- the lengths 81 and 41 pixels define characteristic lengths ⁇ over which the intensity falls by e. From a knowledge of the camera magnification, these dimensions can be converted to absolute fibre length in millimeters. Similar relationships can be determined for other measures of intensity drop off in other specimens, as required. The longer the tracheids, the greater the characteristic attenuation length will be along the major axis 22. Since the intensity falls approximately exponentially along both major 22 and minor 24 axes, the two decay curves can be overlaid by scaling one axis by the ratio of the scale lengths. This ratio (e.g. ⁇ ma j or / ⁇ m i ⁇ or) describes the shape of the scatter pattern 46, independent of illumination intensity.
- the preferred description of the scatter is in terms of characteristic attenuation distances ⁇ along and perpendicular to the grain, which are illumination dependent and characteristic of the wood.
- Such lengths are obtainable from convention camera-type equipment, or more preferably equipment using multiple rings of detectors.
- a knowledge of the system magnification allows these lengths to be expressed in millimetres.
- the characteristic length along the grain, or the ratio of the length can be calibrated against actual fibre length.
- the data shown in Figure 4a obtained by the apparatus in Figure 3 illustrate the nature of radial intensity fall attenuation. While a solid state camera, or the apparatus of Figure 30 could be used to obtain intensity fall off in accordance with the invention, these are not preferable approaches due to the intensive processing required. Using the relationship identified, the applicants have developed an apparatus that requires less intensive processing to obtain a measure of grain length from intensity fall off. In a preferred embodiment, the apparatus 50 of Figure 5a is used to carry out the above method of obtaining and processing radial attenuation information to produce a measure of localised absolute fibre length.
- the apparatus 50 includes a laser source 51 for shining a laser beam 52 onto a spot 58 on the wood specimen 56 under investigation. This laser spot 58 creates a scatter pattern 56 on the surface of the wood specimen.
- the apparatus includes two or more rings of concentric photodiodes 51a, 51b, and the laser beam 52 is introduced into the optic axis of a lens 53a by a small angled mirror 53b attached to the lens at its centre, so that the reduction in aperture is minimal.
- a narrow band filter 54 is centred at the laser wavelength that allows operation in ambient light.
- a light absorber 55 at the centre of the rings 51a, 51b suppresses reflection from the bright image of the spot centre, which could otherwise re- reflect from the interference filter or other surface back onto the photodiodes, washing out the desired information.
- the scatter pattern which typically may be 5- 10mm in extent, is enlarged by the lens 53a so that its image 59 (see Figure 5b) falls onto the circular array of photodetectors 51a, 51b disposed on the apparatus to measure the mtensity of scattered light 59 from the specimen at two constant radii 51a, 51b around the laser spot 58.
- the output of the arrays of photodetectors 51a, 51b is passed to a processor 57, which is adapted to carry out the method of analysis of the intensity patterns detected by the concentric photodiode arrays 51a, 51b, to determine grain length in accordance with the method described above.
- the processor can use the readings of the two concentric rings of photodiodes 51a, 51b to determine the fall off of intensity in a radial direction (e.g. along the major and minor axes 22, 24 from the inner ring 51ato the outer ring 51b).
- a third or subsequent set of concentric rings could optionally added, to provide more information.
- Grain length information obtained using the apparatus 50 can be output in a suitable form, for subsequent use in a desired application. For example, it may be used to find a map of grain lengths of the surface of the specimen, for subsequent analysis and determination of specimen properties.
- Each output is boosted by amplifiers with a time constant of 20 ⁇ s, sufficient to resolve a distance of 0.2mm on a board moving at a high mill processing speed of lOm/s, and comfortably below the anticipated scatter ellipse size on the board of several millimeters.
- a multiplexer followed by an ADC sequentially samples the 30 detector channels, and the intensities from the two rings are processed by a discrete Fourier transform in a 20 ⁇ s, and the amplitudes and phases needed are passed to a controlling PC or other processor. Though not optimised for speed, the total time of 40ms means that 25000 analysed images per second are available from relatively simple processing.
- the radial attenuation of intensity can be determined from the intensity measured by each set of concentric photodiodes 51a, 51b.
- the spatial fall-off in intensity can be estimated by combining their information.
- each ring provides values of maximum and minimum intensity at a known radii, the two maxima being in the along-grain direction (major axis), and the two minima in the cross-grain direction (minor axis). If the fall-off between the rings is assumed to be exponential, values of the characteristic lengths , ⁇ ma j or and ⁇ m jn or , can be readily calculated for the two directions using the known intensity drop off and the distance between the rings.
- Two sets of concentric photodiodes 51a, 51b can provide a sufficient measure of intensity attenuation, although the apparatus can be adapted to include further sets of concentric rings to provide a better measure of intensity fall off.
- CMOS camera or similar could capture the radial intensity attenuation, and the information processed in accordance with the preferred method to obtain a measure of absolute fibre length.
- Either the entire CMOS array could capture intensity information, or more preferably, concentric rings of pixels in a CMOS camera can be used to obtain constant radius intensity profiles. Using concentric rings to capture information is more preferable, due to the lesser amount of data processing required. This improves overall speed in industrial applications.
- the required mtensity measurements of the scatter ellipse along the major 22 and minor 24 axes are obtained.
- the apparatus 60 is used to measure intensity about circles of two or more fixed radii, decay lengths can be calculated as previously outlined.
- the processor 52 in the apparatus 50 utilises this information to determine the absolute tracheid length according to the method of the invention.
- the apparatus 50 can scan the entire wood specimen, as previously described, to build a map of tracheid length.
- the intensity fall off is measured along the major and minor axes 22, 24.
- the direction of these can be determined from the scatter ellipse, in a manner that will be described with reference to Figures 6a and 6b.
- Figure 6a shows the scatter ellipse contours 60-63 at several different intensities generated from a laser spot incident on a sample of rough-sawn wet wood. The data were recorded from one frame of a CMOS camera. When analysed by shape, the best-fit ellipses to the actual intensity contours 60-63 do not share a common origin, because of the basic irregularity of the ellipses. Such plots emphasise also that the eccentricities of the ellipses 60-63 are intensity-dependent; i.e. the mathematical ellipticity cannot describe the entire scatter pattern.
- a preferred embodiment of the mvention can be employed that uses simpler processing than the existing ellipse fitting technique, but which still yields acceptable accuracy.
- the method involves producing a scatter pattern on the wood specimen surface using incident light, such as a laser beam.
- incident light such as a laser beam.
- the preferred embodiment identifies the azimuth of maximum scatter intensity at a fixed radius around the point of incident light. The azimuth of maximum scatter intensity indicates the orientation of the major axis of the scatter ellipse.
- the intensity of scatter is measured around at least one circle, at a fixed radius from the point at which the light source forming the scatter ellipse is incident on the wood specimen.
- This intensity pattern is analysed to determine the one, or preferably two (approximately diametrically opposed), points around the circle at which maximum intensity occurs.
- point can more generally mean a small area, the size being commensurate with the resolution of the apparatus measuring the point.
- the line through these two points indicates the major axis, and from this, the orientation of the major axis 22 of the ellipse.
- the two points of lowest intensity indicate the minor axis 24.
- the analysis step involves determining the phase angle of the maximum intensity points using any suitable technique.
- the analysis step involves using an azimuthal Fourier analysis, which addresses this, and at the same time provides a stable method of interpolating between sensors.
- the azimuthal Fourier analysis will be described with reference to Figure 6b, in which the data of Fig 6a are shown as intensity data as a function of azimuth around circles of 10, 20, 30 and 50 pixels radius (approximately 1, 2, 3 and 5mm). Two peaks are seen at azimuths of about 10 and 190 degrees, which indicate the points of maximum intensity of the scatter pattern, and hence major axis orientation.
- each of the curves of Fig 6b as a sum of azimuthal harmonics by Fourier analyzing the data at each radius.
- the even harmonics i.e. those with brightness maxima in pairs 180 degrees apart
- the odd harmonics describe an asymmetry around the scatter ellipse, for example the condition described earlier in which the brightness maxima were not 180 degrees apart.
- to find the major axis in a wood specimen includes creating a scatter pattern using an incident light source, capturing light intensity information around a fixed radius centred on the light spot, and conducting an azimuthal Fourier analysis of the light intensity data to determine the points of maximum intensity around the circle, the phase angle of which can be used to infer grain orientation.
- the angle can be found using just the second azimuthal harmonic of mtensity, although more harmonics (such as higher order even harmonics and/or and the first and/or higher order odd harmonics) and/or the constant term, can be utilised to increase accuracy.
- the number of harmonics utilised can be decided upon depending upon the accuracy and speed processing requirements for the end application of the invention.
- the constant term of the azimuthal Fourier series (corresponding to the average brightness around the detector arrays 51a, 51b) and the second harmonic are used to create a smoothed representation of the scatter ellipse.
- the light magnitude in the brightest direction is given by the sum of the constant term plus the amplitude of the second harmonic, and the direction of this maximum is given by the phase of the second harmonic with respect to the reference direction of the diode rings.
- the brightness in the cross-grain direction is given by the constant term minus the second harmonic.
- the inner and outer detector rings give measurements that are independent of each other, and so provide a measure of confidence in the estimate of grain angle.
- the apparatus 50 shown in Figure 5a can be used to determine the major 22 and minor 24 axis directions. Determining axis orientation and then using this to determine grain length can be carried out using an integrated method with apparatus 50.
- the number of photodetectors 51a, 51b required is dependent on the highest azimuthal harmonic required by the end user. At least four photodetectors 51a, 51b are required to detect the second harmonic.
- other suitable processing methods could be used for finding the major 22 and minor 24 axes. For example, if there are enough photodetectors 51a, 51b, the processor could simply identify the detectors which detect the highest intensity, and use this information to determine grain angle.
- the he photodetectors 51a, 51b illustrated in Figures 5a and 5b are discrete detectors, with suitable adjustment of the optical magnification, they could be pixels of fixed coordinates in a solid-state camera or photodiodes within a custom chip, though in the latter cases the laser 52 could never be concentrically mounted, and its beam would need to be injected to the viewing axis via a mirror. Since collecting data in an industrial situation will usually require the fastest possible methods, the preferred embodiment provides a way of finding the major 22 and minor 24 axis directions to an acceptable level of accuracy, without the need to perform intensive image processing on the scatter ellipse 46, as is required by existing methods which, for example, best-fit an ellipse to the image formed in a camera.
- the apparatus and method described can be utilised in suitable end applications where obtaining fibre length (relative or absolute) of wood is required.
- the grain length information may simply be displayed in some form, for example visually, for an end user.
- the length of the scatter that is the length of the major axis 22 of the scatter ellipse 46, will be of the order of a tracheid. Tracheid length is related to the length of the major axis 22 of the scatter ellipse 46.
- the captured information could be passed to another system for subsequent use.
- the apparatus 50, or a camera can be adapted to scan over the entire surface of the wood under test. For example, it may be supported in a x-y axis scanning apparatus.
- the wood under test could be placed on a conveyancing bed that can be moved relative to the fixed apparatus 50 or camera.
- a scatter ellipse is created using the incident laser beam, and the resulting scatter ellipse analysed to provide grain angle, grain length and/or eccentricity information on the tracheid(s) in the vicinity of the spot.
- a map of tracheid parameters, over the surface is obtained, which can be later utilised to determine bulk characteristics of the wood specimen. For example, this map could be used to determine the wood specimen's MoE and/or propensity to warp during drying, as described later on.
- a map of one or more localized tracheid parameters over a wood specimen are obtained.
- the map can be used determine characteristics of the wood specimen.
- Scatter parameters may be derived from wet and very rough sawn timber.
- maps of major axis 22 length derived from a detector circle show relative changes in MoE, MFA and/or other tracheid characteristics that can be used in wood stability prediction, such as determining the propensity to warp. Either, these predictions can relate to warp occurring upon drying of wet wood, or warp of dry wood.
- the maps could be used anywhere a saw cut is opened, for example across the face of a cant, or in timber sawn from a log or cant.
- a method in which relative or absolute fibre lengths are utilised to determine various characteristics of a wood specimen. Whether or not an absolute fibre length is extracted from optical scatter, knowledge of relative or absolute changes in fibre length (relative or absolute) over the surface of a specimen provides usable information. For example, using this method provides a map of relative fibre length changes over the specimen, that in turn enables relative changes in MoE to be predicted, or changes in MFA to be identified, both of which might indicate the possibility of distortion occurring during drying.
- Figures 7a to 7d show a section of a log cut from pith to bark and intersecting the centre of a branch stub or knot. More particularly, Figure 7a shows a sample of wood with a knot,
- Figure 7b shows the grain angle around the knot
- Figures 7c and 7d show the sample scanned on a grid of 5mm using the apparatus of Figure 5 a.
- the brightness eccentricity at each grid point has been plotted as a gray scale, with black represent low eccentricity, i.e. no preferred scatter direction, or short fibre.
- the pith was intersected at the lower right, and appears as a black line.
- An contour of broadly constant brightness eccentricity is shown, with lighter shades (longer fibres) above, and darker shades (shorter fibres) below it. This contour closely follows an annual ring (not shown).
- the brightness eccentricity is mirroring the well-known increase in fibre length with age. Boards cut from this log would contain mixed fibre lengths, and hence mixed MFA, and be expected to show differential shrinkage and hence distortion upon drying. The amount of distortion to be expected could be calibrated by correlating brightness eccentricity gradients with subsequent distortion in test pieces.
- Figure 8 shows data taken from a dried piece of timber, which over a distance of 90mm, progressed from pith to 14 year-old wood.
- the MoE 80 of small sticks 9mm by 11mm, and 343mm long was measured acoustically and compared with tracheid scatter measurements, measured in pixels out to an arbitrary intensity level, 30mm from one end of the sticks.
- the MoE increases from 6 to 16GPa moving outwards from the pith, while the major axis scatter 81 length (defined here by the distance taken to fall to a particular level) increased from 20 to 28 pixels (approximately 2 to 3 mm actual length since 1 pixel here equaled lOO ⁇ m.).
- Optical surface-scanning a timber sample can therefore yield spatial maps of a parameter which correlates with sonic speed (since sonic speed and MoE are closely related), but which is a more direct indicator of fibre length, and thus the MFA which is ultimately implicated in the shrinking process during timber drying.
- the knowledge of shrinkage potential can be used to determine distortion propensity.
- the sonic maps described in US Patents 6,305,224, and 6,308,571 could be replaced by relative optical scatter length plots produced in accordance this embodiment.
- the relative tracheid length method according to the invention works on rough sawn wet wood as well as for dry or planed dry wood.
- the scatter is usually slightly greater both along and across the grain in wet wood, and although rough surfaces introduce random elements, an ellipse orientation is apparent.
- the larger penetration in the almost translucent fresh-sawn wood tends to compensate for the roughness of the sawing.
- Figure 9 shows examples of scatter data (in the form of contours at two intensity levels) from the same piece of wood in a freshly sawn, wet state, and after dryhig.
- Spots 1 and 9 are for sapwood (saturated in its wet state), while spot 8, is from very rough sawn core wood (near fibre saturation point in its wet state).
- the shape of the ellipse is altered, but a scatter ellipse can be defined as for dry wood. Any calibrations relating attenuation distances to fibre lengths will require calibration for the wet condition.
- the tracheid scatter lengths across a wet, freshly sawn cant are shown in Figure 10.
- the scatter major axis length 100 increases with distance from pith as it did for the dry sample in Figure 8, as would be expected since fibre length, MoE and sound speed all should increase from pith to bark.
- the scatter data pass from drier core wood characteristic of radiata pine to saturated sapwood, no sudden change is seen in the scatter length which might indicate the passage through the quite abrupt moisture transition which occurs in this timber.
- Warp is one type of distortion that can occur during drying.
- the propensity for wood to warp can be determined using a map of fibre lengths. Warping occurs where the length of fibres in one area of the specimen is different to that in another.
- the long fibres have a low MFA and therefore shrink less than short fibres with a high MFA. This leads to different shrinkage rates over the specimen, and a consequent warping.
- a plank of wood 110 with long fibres 111 along the edge of one side, and shorter fibres 112 on the other edge will cause the wood to bend laterally 113 during drying.
- This particular type of warp is called crook.
- the potential to warp in other planes can also be investigated in a similar manner.
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- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
- Biochemistry (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Immunology (AREA)
- Pathology (AREA)
- Textile Engineering (AREA)
- Food Science & Technology (AREA)
- Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
- Length Measuring Devices By Optical Means (AREA)
- Investigating Or Analysing Materials By Optical Means (AREA)
Abstract
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AU2003238741A AU2003238741A1 (en) | 2002-06-11 | 2003-06-05 | Method and apparatus for determining wood parameters, including grain length |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
NZ51947502A NZ519475A (en) | 2002-06-11 | 2002-06-11 | Measuring wood properties by optical investigation of tracheid orientations |
NZ519475 | 2002-06-11 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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WO2003104776A1 true WO2003104776A1 (fr) | 2003-12-18 |
Family
ID=29728992
Family Applications (2)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/NZ2003/000113 WO2003104777A1 (fr) | 2002-06-11 | 2003-06-05 | Procede et appareil permettant de determiner des parametres du bois, notamment l'angle de grain |
PCT/NZ2003/000112 WO2003104776A1 (fr) | 2002-06-11 | 2003-06-05 | Procede et appareil permettant de determiner les proprietes de specimens de bois, notamment la longueur de grain |
Family Applications Before (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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PCT/NZ2003/000113 WO2003104777A1 (fr) | 2002-06-11 | 2003-06-05 | Procede et appareil permettant de determiner des parametres du bois, notamment l'angle de grain |
Country Status (3)
Country | Link |
---|---|
AU (2) | AU2003238742A1 (fr) |
NZ (1) | NZ519475A (fr) |
WO (2) | WO2003104777A1 (fr) |
Families Citing this family (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
JP4704804B2 (ja) * | 2005-05-18 | 2011-06-22 | 株式会社名南製作所 | 木材の節探査方法及び装置及びプログラム |
AT504170B1 (de) * | 2006-08-31 | 2008-08-15 | Karl Buchegger | Verfahren zur bestimmung des drehwuchses von zumindest teilweise entrindeten baumstämmen |
DE102006044307A1 (de) * | 2006-09-17 | 2008-09-25 | Massen Machine Vision Systems Gmbh | Multisensorielle Inspektion von Naturholz-Oberflächen |
US7545502B2 (en) | 2006-09-27 | 2009-06-09 | Weyerhaeuser Nr Company | Methods for detecting compression wood in lumber |
ES2648217T3 (es) * | 2007-04-26 | 2017-12-29 | Sick Ivp Ab | Método y aparato para determinar la cantidad de luz dispersada en un sistema de visión artificial |
EP2065676A1 (fr) * | 2007-11-27 | 2009-06-03 | Weyerhaeuser Company | Procédé pour la détection de bois de compression dans les pièces de bois |
ITBZ20110003A1 (it) * | 2011-01-17 | 2012-07-18 | Microtec Srl | Metodo ed apperecchiatura per l'individuazione dell'orientamento delle fibre nel legname |
EP3894844A4 (fr) * | 2018-12-10 | 2022-09-14 | Usnr, Llc | Détection de bois humide dans des produits de bois sciés ou rabotés |
CN112782125B (zh) * | 2020-12-31 | 2023-02-28 | 西安理工大学 | 一种生物组织弹性模量测量装置及方法 |
Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3922093A (en) * | 1972-11-24 | 1975-11-25 | Bbc Brown Boveri & Cie | Device for measuring the roughness of a surface |
US6067162A (en) * | 1994-01-07 | 2000-05-23 | Honeywell Ag | Process for measuring the roughness of a material surface |
EP1193469A1 (fr) * | 2000-09-28 | 2002-04-03 | National Research Council of Canada | Procédé et dispositif pour mesurer l'orientation des celle du bois |
Family Cites Families (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4606645A (en) * | 1984-10-29 | 1986-08-19 | Weyerhaeuser Company | Method for determining localized fiber angle in a three dimensional fibrous material |
US20020025061A1 (en) * | 2000-08-23 | 2002-02-28 | Leonard Metcalfe | High speed and reliable determination of lumber quality using grain influenced distortion effects |
-
2002
- 2002-06-11 NZ NZ51947502A patent/NZ519475A/en unknown
-
2003
- 2003-06-05 AU AU2003238742A patent/AU2003238742A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2003-06-05 WO PCT/NZ2003/000113 patent/WO2003104777A1/fr not_active Application Discontinuation
- 2003-06-05 WO PCT/NZ2003/000112 patent/WO2003104776A1/fr not_active Application Discontinuation
- 2003-06-05 AU AU2003238741A patent/AU2003238741A1/en not_active Abandoned
Patent Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3922093A (en) * | 1972-11-24 | 1975-11-25 | Bbc Brown Boveri & Cie | Device for measuring the roughness of a surface |
US6067162A (en) * | 1994-01-07 | 2000-05-23 | Honeywell Ag | Process for measuring the roughness of a material surface |
EP1193469A1 (fr) * | 2000-09-28 | 2002-04-03 | National Research Council of Canada | Procédé et dispositif pour mesurer l'orientation des celle du bois |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
AU2003238742A1 (en) | 2003-12-22 |
AU2003238741A1 (en) | 2003-12-22 |
WO2003104777A1 (fr) | 2003-12-18 |
NZ519475A (en) | 2004-10-29 |
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