Dynamic laser speckle for non-destructive quality evaluation of bread
2010
Coherent illumination of a diffuse object yields a randomly varying interference pattern, which changes over time at any
modification of the object. This phenomenon can be used for detection and visualization of physical or biological activity
in various objects (e.g. fruits, seeds, coatings) through statistical description of laser speckle dynamics. The present
report aims at non-destructive full-field evaluation of bread by spatial-temporal characterization of laser speckle. The
main purpose of the conducted experiments was to prove the ability of the dynamic speckle method to indicate activity
within the studied bread samples. In the set-up for acquisition and storage of dynamic speckle patterns an expanded
beam from a DPSS laser (532 nm and 100mW) illuminated the sample through a ground glass diffuser. A CCD camera,
adjusted to focus the sample, recorded regularly a sequence of images (8 bits and 780 x 582 squared pixels, sized 8.1 ×
8.1 μm) at sampling frequency 0.25 Hz. A temporal structure function was calculated to evaluate activity of the bread
samples in time using the full images in the sequence. In total, 7 samples of two types of bread were monitored during a
chemical and physical process of bread's staling. Segmentation of images into matrixes of isometric fragments was also
utilized. The results proved the potential of dynamic speckle as effective means for monitoring the process of bread
staling and ability of this approach to differentiate between different types of bread.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
0
References
3
Citations
NaN
KQI