On the limitation of dual-view triangulation in reducing the measurement error induced by the speckle noise in scanning operations
Soichi Ibaraki, Yoshitomo Kitagawa, Yoshihiro Kimura, Shizuo Nishikawa
 
 
 
Abstract
 
A triangulation-based laser displacement sensor
using the diffuse reflection light has a strong practical
advantage in its robustness against the tilting of the object
surface to the sensor’s sensitive direction. On the other hand,
it is often subject to higher-frequency noise-like measurement
error in scanning operations. This error is caused by
the movement of the speckle in the reflected laser beam
spot with the scanning operation. This paper first discusses
how the dual-view triangulation, using two image sensors
aligned symmetrically about the laser beam axis, can reduce
the scanning noise in principle. Then, its inherent limitation
is discussed. Since different points on the target surface
cast the specular reflection to each image sensor, the influence
of the sensor’s lateral movement cannot be canceled by
comparing the reflected spot’s displacement on each image
sensor. This issue can be observed clearer when measuring a
surface of a less random surface profile. It is experimentally
validated.
 
Keywords:
Laser displacement sensor, Triangulation, Speckle, Scanning
 
 
 
 
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