Publication | Open Access
Camera-Based In-Process Quality Measurement of Hairpin Welding
33
Citations
13
References
2021
Year
Laser-based Hairpin WeldingConvolutional Neural NetworkFriction WeldingEngineeringMachine LearningMeasurementNeural NetworkEducationImage AnalysisData ScienceWelding ProcessPattern RecognitionHairpin WeldingInstrumentationVideo TransformerProcess MeasurementMachine VisionFeature LearningStructural Health MonitoringComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceMedical Image ComputingDeep LearningOptical Image RecognitionAutomated InspectionComputer Vision
The technology of hairpin welding, which is frequently used in the automotive industry, entails high-quality requirements in the welding process. It can be difficult to trace the defect back to the affected weld if a non-functioning stator is detected during the final inspection. Often, a visual assessment of a cooled weld seam does not provide any information about its strength. However, based on the behavior during welding, especially about spattering, conclusions can be made about the quality of the weld. In addition, spatter on the component can have serious consequences. In this paper, we present in-process monitoring of laser-based hairpin welding. Using an in-process image analyzed by a neural network, we present a spatter detection method that allows conclusions to be drawn about the quality of the weld. In this way, faults caused by spattering can be detected at an early stage and the affected components sorted out. The implementation is based on a small data set and under consideration of a fast process time on hardware with limited computing power. With a network architecture that uses dilated convolutions, we obtain a large receptive field and can therefore consider feature interrelation in the image. As a result, we obtain a pixel-wise classifier, which allows us to infer the spatter areas directly on the production lines.
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