FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a method for marking defect
on a steel sheet in a steel making process line and to a device therefor.
DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ARTS
Cold-rolled steel sheets manufactured by cold-rolling are
subjected to inspection of surface defects over the whole length of coil thereof
for quality assurance.
JP-A-5-196581
, (the term "JP-A" referred herein signifies the "Unexamined Japanese patent
publication"), discloses a method for detecting surface defects and internal defects
of steel sheets. According to the disclosure, detection of the surface defects on
a steel sheet is conducted by scanning the surface of steel sheet which is running
through a manufacturing line, in width direction thereof by laser light, by converting
the reflected light to voltage intensity using a photoelectric transfer device such
as CCD element, then by judging the presence/absence and the degree of the defect
based on the voltage signals. The internal defects of a steel sheet are detected
by computing the defect depth in the thickness direction of the steel sheet and
the defect size using a magnetic particle tester. Usually, the result of the defect
inspection is displayed on a CRT or the like as information in terms of defect position,
defect name, defect grade, and the like, or is printed in a document.
It is impossible to obtain products completely free from
defects. Consequently, the products are shipped after removing portions of harmful
defect for the buyer concerned on the basis of the defect information displayed
on a CRT or the like in the manufacturing line, or after removing the portions of
harmful defect for the buyer concerned by applying re-inspection in succeeding stage
on the basis of the above-described defect information. Alternatively, a document
of the above-described harmful detect information is submitted to the buyer concerned,
together with the coil that contains harmful defect portions, thus letting the buyer
remove the harmful defects.
In the case that the harmful defect portions are removed
in the manufacturing line or in succeeding stage, since there is no definite standard
of the degree of harm for the surface defects, the removal of harmful defect portions
is practiced in an excessive action from the standpoint of quality assurance. Also
there are cases of not-removing harmful defects caused from a miss-judgment such
as overlooking and from a state of very close to injudgicable defect. Furthermore,
removal of harmful defect portions raises problems such as reduction in the coil
weight and reduction in the work efficiency of the buyer.
On the other hand, the buyer needs to work on coils while
referring the documented data of defect information, which induces troublesome work
and, in some cases, may result in treatment of coils leaving defects non-detected.
JP-A-4-291138
discloses a marking device that sprays a paint on flawed portions of steel
sheets. According to the disclosure, marking is done by spraying a paint to flawed
portions of the steel sheets detected by a flaw detection device, thus enabling
the buyer to readily identify the flawed portion on re-inspection by the buyer.
Since, however, the method for marking according to
JP-A-4-291138
does not give confirmation whether the marking was correctly given or
not, and an abnormal marking induces further troubles to the buyer. In addition,
paint spray generates shade of color on marking, which may induce dents, in an area
with large quantity of applied paint, even at normal portions after the paint is
dried. For the case of spray marking, an oiled steel sheet cannot leave any marking
on the surface thereof because the paint is sprayed on an oil film, though that
kind of problem does not occur on a steel sheet free of applied oil. When marking
is given on all of the flawed portions, the marking is also given to the defects
of harmless to the buyer, which induces disadvantages including reduction in work
efficiency.
There are inspection methods for surface defects, disclosed
in
JP-A-58-204353
,
JP-A-60-228943
,
JP-A-8-178867
,
JP-A-57-166532
, and
JP-A-9-166552
. All of these disclosed methods aim to detect flaws having significant
surface irregularity or to detect flaws with the presence of foreign matter such
as oxide film. Thus, for pattern-like scabbed flaws or the like which do not have
significant surface irregularity, these methods cannot surely identify all the flaws.
As means for applying marking to flawed portions and singular
parts generated on a metal material, there are commercially available apparatuses
such as ink jet printer and ink dot marking device.
When an ink jet printer is used, kinds and colors of ink
are limited because special inks are required owing to various conditions such as
charging the inks. Nevertheless, when the manufactured metal materials are used
for automobile steel sheets, ink performance and color may be specified for convenience
of customer's inspection.
For example, if an ink is under limitations such that the
ink should have excellent quick drying property, the ink should not be blotting
on applying oil, and the ink should be blue, respective special inks should be developed
to satisfy the customer's conditions. The development of that special inks needs
long time and much money, which is difficult to practically respond to the request.
In addition, since the ejection part of the ink is necessary
to maintain clean, significant cost and time should be consumed for maintenance.
Accordingly, when an ink jet printer is used, a special ink has to be used, so that
color and kind of the ink cannot readily be changed.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method
for defect marking that readily and surely identifies harmful defects, and an apparatus
therefor.
It is another object of the present invention to provide
a surface flaw marking device that detects pattern-like scabs having no significant
surface irregularity such as surface crack, burr, and curl up, thus allowing to
notifying the defect information to the user concerned with a simple means, also
to provide a metal strip with marking, and to provide a method for manufacturing
thereof.
To attain the objects, firstly, the present invention provides
a method for marking defect, which comprises the steps of:
- (a) installing a surface defect tester to detect surface flaw and a marker device
to apply marking at defect position, in a continuous processing line of steel sheet;
- (b) detecting the surface flaw on the steel sheet using the surface defect tester;
- (c) calculating to determine defect name, defect grade, defect length, and defect
position in width direction of the steel sheet, on the basis of thus detected flaw
information, further identifying the defect in terms of harmful defect, injudgicable
defect, and harmless defect;
- (d) tracking the defect position for each of the harmful defect and the injudgicable
defect; and
- (e) marking the defect position at a moment that the defect reaches the marker
device.
Secondly, the present invention provides a method for defect
marking, which comprises the steps of:
- (a) calculating to determine defect name, defect grade, defect length, and defect
position in width direction of a coil for a surface defect thereon, in a processing
line provided with a surface defect tester, further identifying the defect in terms
of harmful defect and injudgicable defect;
- (b) feeding the coil to a steel sheet continuous processing line provided with
a marker device for applying marking; and
- (c) marking to the defect position at a moment that the harmful defect or the
injudgicable defect reaches the marker device, on the basis of the information of
preliminarily identified harmful defect or injudgicable defect.
Thirdly, the present invention provides a flaw inspection
device, which comprises:
- a plurality of light-receiving devices that identify reflected lights coming
from an inspection plane of a metal strip under two or more of optical conditions
different from each other;
- and
- a signal processing section that judges presence/absence of surface flaw on
the inspection plane, based on a combination of reflected light components identified
under these optical conditions different from each other.
Fourthly, the present invention provides a defect marking
device, which comprises:
- a flaw inspection means comprising plurality of light-receiving parts that identify
reflected lights coming from an inspection plane of a metal strip under two or more
of optical conditions different from each other, and a signal processing section
that judges presence/absence of surface flaw on the inspection plane based on a
combination of reflected light components identified under these optical conditions
different from each other; and
- a marking means that applies marking that indicates information relating to
the flaw on the surface of the metal strip.
Fifthly, the present invention provides a method for manufacturing
metal strip with defect marking, which comprises the steps of:
- (a) identifying reflected lights coming from an inspection plane of a metal
strip under two or more of optical conditions different from each other;
- (b) judging presence/absence of surface flaw on the inspection plane based on
a combination of reflected light components identified; and
- (c) marking information relating to the flaw on the surface of the metal strip
based on the judgment result.
Sixthly, the present invention provides a method for working
metal strip, which comprises the steps of:
- (a) identifying reflected lights coming from an inspection plane of a metal
strip under two or more of optical conditions different from each other;
- (b) judging presence/absence of surface flaw on the inspection plane based on
a combination of reflected light components identified;
- (c) marking information relating to the flaw on the surface of the metal strip;
- (d) winding the marked metal strip to prepare a coil;
- (e) rewinding the coil to detect the marking, and specifying a specific range
of the metal strip based on the information given by the marking; and
- (f) applying specified working to a residual portion of the metal strip after
avoiding or removing the specified range.
Seventhly, the present invention provides a metal strip
with marking, which has, on a portion that shows an abnormality compared with a
portion of normal combination of surface reflected light components separated under
two or more optical conditions different from each other, marking indicating information
relating to a flaw on the surface thereof.
Eighthly, the present invention provides a metal strip
with marking, which has, on a portion that gives an abnormal quantity of light for
one or both components of a specular reflection component on surface and a specular-diffuse
reflection component on plurality of micro-area reflection surfaces, a marking indicating
information relating thereto.
Ninthly, the present invention provides a marking device
for applying marking a flawed portion and a singular part on an inspection body,
detected by an inspection device, comprises
a marker pen;
a penholder to which the marker-pen is detachably mounted; a penholder lifting mechanism
for ascending/descending the penholder together with the marker-pen;
a protective cap being capable of opening/closing to protect a pen tip of the marker-pen;
and
a shutter mechanism to open/close the protective cap linking with the penholder
lifting mechanism.
Tenthly, the present invention provides a marking device
for applying marking a flawed portion and a singular part on a metal member, detected
by an inspection device in a continuous manufacturing line of a metal material,
comprises:
- a marker pen;
- a penholder to which the marker-pen is detachably mounted;
- a penholder lifting mechanism for ascending/descending the penholder together
with the marker-pen;
- a protective cap being capable of opening/closing to protect a pen tip of the
marker-pen; and
- a shutter mechanism to open/close the protective cap linking with the penholder
lifting mechanism.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
- Fig. 1 illustrates an arrangement of main facilities of the first coiling line
for steel sheet relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 2 illustrates an arrangement of main facilities of the second coiling line
for steel sheet relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 3 illustrates an arrangement of main facilities of the third coiling line
for steel sheet relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 4 illustrates an arrangement of main facilities of the fourth coiling line
for steel sheet relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 5 is an example of CRT display relating to the Best Mode 1 according to
the present invention.
- Fig. 6 illustrates a relation state between the defect position and the defect
marking position relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 7 illustrate an example of arrangement of each one unit of the defect marking
device and the defect marking detection device, relating to the Best Mode 1 according
to the present invention.
- Fig. 8 illustrate an example of arrangement of each two units of the defect
marking device and the defect marking detection device, relating to the Best Mode
1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 9 illustrate an example of arrangement of each one unit of the defect marking
device and the ink drying device, relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present
invention.
- Fig. 10 illustrate an example of arrangement of each one unit of the defect
marking device, the defect marking detection device, and the ink drying device,
relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 11 illustrate an example of arrangement of each two units of the defect
marking device and the ink drying device, relating to the Best Mode 1 according
to the present invention.
- Fig. 12 illustrate an example of arrangement of each two units of the defect
marking device, the defect marking detection device, and the ink drying device,
relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 13 illustrates an example of applying marking on defect portions using
a single unit of defect marking device relating to the Best Mode 1 according to
the present invention.
- Fig. 14 illustrates an example of applying marking separately on a harmful defect
and an injudgicable defect using two units of defect marking device relating to
the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 15 illustrates an example of arrangement of main facilities of a processing
line provided with a defect marking device and a defect marking detection device
relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 16 illustrates an example of arrangement of main facilities of another
processing line provided with a defect marking device and a defect marking detection
device relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 17 illustrates an example of arrangement of main facilities of a processing
line provided with a defect marking device, a defect marking detection device, further
an inspection table and a defect marking detection device, relating to the Best
Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 18 illustrates an example of arrangement of main facilities of a coiling
line provided with a defect marking detection device, relating to the Best Mode
1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 19 illustrates an example of arrangement of main facilities of a shear
line provided with a defect marking detection device, relating to the Best Mode
1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 20 illustrates an example of applying defect marking on a defect portion,
relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 21 illustrates an example of applying defect marking at two points on the
same position in the width direction of steel sheet, independent of the place of
defect portion, relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 22 illustrates the relative state between the defect position and the defect
marking position, relating to the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 23 illustrates an example of applying separate marking for a harmful defect
and an injudgicable defect using two units of detect marking device, relating to
the Best Mode according to the present invention.
- Fig. 24 is a block diagram of an example of the devices relating to the Best
Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 25 is a plan view of an example of metal strip relating to the Best Mode
2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 26 is a schematic drawing of an example of rough structure of a surface
flaw inspection device for the devices relating to the Best Mode 2 according to
the present invention.
- Fig. 27 is a cross sectional schematic drawing of a surface flaw detection device
relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 28 illustrates an arrangement of camera units along the metal width direction,
equipped in the surface flaw inspection device, relating to the Best Mode according
to the present invention.
- Fig. 29 illustrates an arrangement of cameras equipped in a single camera unit,
relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 30 is a block diagram of another example of the devices relating to the
Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 31 is a block diagram of an example of the signal processing section of
the devices relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 32 is a block diagram of further example of the devices relating to the
Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 33 (a) through (c) illustrate examples of light intensity signals observed
by a device relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 34 (a) through (c) illustrate another examples of light intensity signals
observed by a device relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 35 (a) through (d) illustrate the method for manufacturing alloyed zinc
plated steel sheet and show detail cross sectional views of the sheet, relating
to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 36 shows a schematic cross sectional view of the tempered part and the
non-tempered part on the surface of metal strip after temper-rolling, illustrating
the relation between the incident light and the reflection light, relating to the
Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 37 (a) through (c) show angle distribution of reflected light at the tempered
part and the non-tempered part, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present
invention.
- Fig. 38 shows cross sectional views of an alloy zinc plated steel sheet to illustrate
the progress of occurrence of scab, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the
present invention.
- Fig. 39 (a) through (c) show angle distribution of specular reflection component
and specular-diffuse reflection component, at scabbed portion and mother material,
relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 40 (a) through (c) show the relation between the normal angle to micro-area
element and the area percentage, at scabbed portion and mother material on the inspection
plane, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 41 shows the relation between angles of the incident light, the reflection
light, and the like, on a micro-area element on the inspection plane, relating to
the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 42 (a) and (b) show the relation between the normal angle to a micro-area
element and the weight function, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present
invention.
- Fig. 43 (a) and (b) show the relation between individual incident lights emitted
from various positions on the linear diffusion light source and the responding incident
positions on the inspection plane, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the
present invention.
- Fig. 44 (a) and (b) shows the polarized state of reflection light coming from
a micro-area element in the case that each incident light coming from the linear
diffusion light source is polarized, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the
present invention.
- Fig. 45 illustrates the reflection light coming from a micro-area element in
the case that the incident light coming from center part of the linear diffusion
light source is polarized, relating to the Best Mode '2 according to the present
invention.
- Fig. 46 illustrates the reflection light coming from a micro-area element in
the case that the incident light coming from a part other than the center part of
the linear diffusion light source is polarized, relating to the Best Mode 2 according
to the present invention.
- Fig. 47 illustrates the relation between the normal angle to micro-area element
and the elliptic polarized light of the reflected light, relating to the Best Mode
2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 48 shows the relation between the normal angle to micro-area element and
the weight function, relating to the Best Mode 2 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 49 shows the relation between the normal angle to micro-area element and
the weight function at various analyzing angles, relating to the Best Mode 2 according
to the present invention.
- Fig. 50 shows the relation between the normal angle to micro-area element on
the inspection plane and the area percentage, relating to the Best Mode 2 according
to the present invention.
- Fig. 51 shows a rough vertical cross sectional view of the devices relating
to the Best Mode 3 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 52 shows a rough plan view of the devices of Fig. 51.
- Fig. 53 shows a rough side view of the device of Fig. 51.
- Fig. 54 illustrates a steel sheet manufacturing line provided with the devices
relating to the Best Mode 3 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 55 (a) through (c) illustrate the action of the devices relating to the
Best Mode 3 according to the present invention.
- Fig. 56 is a rough sketch of a steel sheet manufacturing line provided with
the devices (providing a dryer) relating to the Best Mode 3 according to the present
invention.
- Fig. 57 illustrates the marking state on a steel sheet relating to the Best
Mode 3 according to the present invention.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
Best Mode 1
The main constitution of the Best Mode 1 is the following.
- (1) A defect marking method comprises the steps of:
- installing a surface defect tester to detect surface flaw, an ink marker device
to apply marking by an ink at defect position, and an internal defect tester to
detect internal defect of a steel sheet, in a continuous processing line of the
steel sheet;
- detecting the surface flaw on the steel sheet using the surface flaw tester;
calculating to determine defect name, defect grade, defect length, and defect position
in width direction of the steel sheet, on the basis of thus detected flaw information,
further identifying the defect in terms of harmful defect, injudgicable defect,
and harmless defect; detecting the internal flaw of the steel sheet using the internal
defect tester; calculating to determine the defect length and the defect position
in the width direction of the steel sheet, on the basis of thus detected flaw information,
further identifying the defect in terms of harmful defect and harmless defect; applying
tracking of the defect position for each of the harmful defect and the injudgicable
defect; and applying marking with ink to the defect position at a moment that the
defect reaches the ink marker device.
- (2) A defect marking method comprises that, in the method for defect marking
of (1), the surface flaw is subjected to identification of harmful defect, injudgicable
defect, and harmless defect, on the basis of the defect name, the defect grade,
the defect length, the defect position in width direction of the steel sheet, the
defect position on each of front face and rear face of the steel sheet, and the
use of the steel sheet, and that the internal flaw is subjected to identification
of harmful defect and harmless defect, on the basis of the defect length, the defect
position in the width direction of the steel sheet, and the use of the steel sheet.
- (3) A defect marking method comprises that, in a line provided with a surface
defect tester and an internal defect tester, the surface defect is subjected to
calculation to determine the defect name, the defect grade, the defect length, and
the defect position in width direction of a coil, further to identification of the
defect in terms of harmful defect and injudgicable defect, and that the internal
defect is subjected to calculation to determine the defect length and the defect
position in the width direction of the coil, further to identification of the defect
in terms of harmful defect and harmless defect, further that the coil in which the
harmful defect and the harmless defect are identified is fed to a continuous processing
line of steel sheet, provided with an ink marker device that applies marking with
ink, thus applying marking with ink to the defect position at a moment that the
harmful defect or the injudgicable defect reaches the marker device, on the basis
of the information of preliminarily identified harmful defect or injudgicable defect.
- (4) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(3), an inspector applies re-judgment of defect which was identified as an injudgicable
defect by the surface defect tester to identify harmful defect and harmless defect,
and applies marking with ink to the position of harmful defect.
- (5) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(4), an alarm is generated to a defect that is identified as an injudgicable defect
by the surface defect tester, and an automatic speed reduction is conducted, then
an inspector applies re-judgment on the injudgicable defect.
- (6) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (4) and (5),
on applying re-judgment by the inspector for the defect that is identified as an
injudgicable defect by the surface defect tester, display of the defect image and
display of defect position for the defect are generated.
- (7) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(7), the position of defect marking is changed on the basis of the information of
defect in the width direction given by the surface defect tester and by the internal
defect tester.
- (8) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(7), the position of defect marking is changed on the basis of the use of the steel
sheet.
- (9) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(8), the marking is applied separating the harmful defect from the injudgicable
defect.
- (10) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(9), the marking is applied separating the harmful defect from the injudgicable
defect by changing color from each other.
- (11) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(10), the color of defect marking is changed with respective grades of steel sheet.
- (12) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(11), a defect marking detection device is installed at downstream side of the ink
marker device, thus monitoring the marking state.
- (13) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(12), the threshold value of the defect marking detection device is changed with
respective grades of steel sheet.
- (14) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(13), the ink marker device and the defect marking device are installed as a set,
thus letting these devices track the defect marking position.
- (15) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(14), an ink drying device is installed at downstream side of the defect marking.
- (16) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(15), the ink marker device, the defect marking device, and the ink drying device
are installed as a set, thus letting these devices track the defect marking position.
- (17) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(16), the threshold value of harmful defect and of harmless defect is changed with
respective uses of steel sheet.
- (18) A method for working a coil with defect marking comprises that a coil with
defect marking marked in accordance with the method of above-described (1) through
(17) is fed to a facility provided with a defect marking detection device to reflect
the defect information detected by the defect marking detection device on the defect
removal work.
- (19) A method for working a coil with defect marking comprises that, a coil
with defect marking marked in accordance with the method of above-described (1)
through (17) is fed to a facility provided with a defect marking detection device
and a cleaning means, and the defect information detected by the defect marking
detection device is reflected on the defect removal work, and an inspector applies
re-judgment on the injudgicable defect, then, when the judgment concluded as the
harmless defect, the marking ink is cleaned by the cleaning means.
- (20) A defect marking method comprises that, in the above-described (1) through
(19), (excluding (10), (15), and (16)), an abrasive member marker device that applies
marking using an abrasive member is installed instead of the ink marker device using
ink, thus applying marking with the abrasive member instead of applying marking
with ink.
Figs. 1 through 4 illustrate examples of arrangement of
main facilities of continuous treatment line of steel sheet, being used in the description
of the Best Mode 1 according to the present invention.
In Fig. 1, the reference number 3 designates a surface
defect tester equipped with a detector 2 each one on front face and rear face of
a steel sheet 1 and with a signal processing section 4, the reference number 5 designates
a CRT, 6 designates a centralized control panel, 7 designates a secondary judgment
entering device, 8 designates a defect marking device (an ink marker device), 9
designates a defect marking detection device, 10 designates a tension reel, 11 designates
a transfer roll, 12 designates a pulse generator, 13 designates a arithmetic unit
for detecting steel sheet transfer distance, 14 designates an external memory device,
15 designates a cutting machine, and 16 designates an inspection table.
Fig. 2 illustrates the facilities of Fig. 1 further providing
a magnetic particle tester (an internal defect tester) 34 equipped with a magnetic
sensor 35 which detects internal defect of the steel sheet 1, and with a signal
processing section 36. The facilities of Fig. 3 and Fig. 4 have an ink drying device
40 to dry the marked ink at downstream side of the defect marking device (ink marker
device) 8.
In the facilities shown in Figs. 1 through 4, the detector
2 positioned at each of front face and rear face of the steel sheet, in the surface
defect tester 3, detects flaws that are candidates of defects on each of front face
and rear face of the steel sheet 1, and sends the detected signals to the signal
processing section 4.
The signal processing section 4 calculates the identification
of defect name, defect grade, defect length, and defect position in the width direction
of the steel sheet, based on the signals obtained from characteristic quantity,
exceeding a specific threshold value of the signals, of defect candidates.
The magnetic sensor 35 of the magnetic particle tester
34 detects an internal defect of the steel sheet 1, and sends the detected signals
to the signal processing section 36. The signal processing section 36 calculates
the identification of defect length and defect position in the width direction of
the steel sheet, based on the signals obtained from characteristic quantity, exceeding
a specific threshold value of the signals, of defect candidates, then transmits
the calculation result to the signal processing section 4 of the surface defect
tester 3.
Furthermore, calculation of marking command is conducted
based on the marking information sent from a host computer 23, including the marking
target defect name (including'internal defect in the case of providing the internal
defect tester 34), defect grade, and edge insensitive zone, for each of front face
and rear face, and on the result of calculation on the basis of defect information
detected by the surface defect tester 3, or further on the basis of grade and use
of the steel sheet.
Both the calculated marking command and the calculated
defect information are displayed on the screen of CRT 5. Furthermore, the defect
generation signal, the defect information, and the defect position are generated
on the centralized control panel 6.
The rotational speed of the transfer roll 11 that transfers
the steel sheet 1 is measured by the pulse generator 12, and the steel sheet feed
length is calculated by the arithmetic unit for detecting steel sheet transfer distance
13, then the result is generated to the centralized control panel 6. The centralized
control panel 6 edits the above-described defect information, identifies harmful
defect and injudgicable defect, (harmful defect for internal defect: and so forth),
based on the defect name and the defect grade, and furthermore, if needed, identifies
harmful defect and injudgicable defect considering the defect position information
and the use of the steel sheet for each of front face and rear face. If necessary,
the centralized control panel 6 gives judgment of necessity of marking for the harmful
defect and the identified injudgicable defect which were identified.
The centralized control panel 6 tracks the defect position
based on the feed length of steel sheet transmitted from the arithmetic unit for
detecting steel sheet transfer distance 13, and generates alarm of arriving the
injudgicable defect at the re-judgment place (inspection table). If necessary, automatic
speed reduction is given, and the defect image is displayed on CRT 5, thus easing
the defect judgment of worker.
When a defect portion arrives at the secondary judgment
place (inspection table) 16, the worker conducts the secondary judgment under visual
inspection, and confirms the detection result of the surface defect tester 3 on
the CRT 5, thus giving conclusion of correct/incorrect result. If the result differs
in the comparison, correction is given, and the corrected result is entered to the
secondary judgment entering device 7, further is generated to the centralized control
panel 6. Fig. 5 is an example of CRT display. The defect information given in the
figure is the information of the surface defect tester 3, and the blank column in
the figure is the place to enter the secondary judgment result.
The centralized control panel 6 conducts re-edition of
the above-described defect information on the basis of the corrected information,
and identifies harmful defect and injudgicable defect based on the defect name and
defect grade. Furthermore, the centralized control panel 6 conducts tracking of
the positions of harmful defect and in judgicable defect, (the defect judged to
have marking in the case that the judgment of presence/absence of marking is given),
based on the feed length of the steel sheet 1 obtained from the rotational speed
of the transfer roll 11, thus moves the defect marking device 8 and the defect marking
detection device 9 to a place of defect before the defect portion passes through
the defect marking device 8. Then, the centralized control panel 6 generates a start
signal to start the defect marking device 8 at the moment that the defect part passes
through the defect marking device 8.
Based on the above-described start signal, the defect marking
device 8 starts, thus conducting marking on the harmful defect and the injudgicable
defect synchronously with the timing that the harmful defect and the injudgicable
defect pass through the defect marking device 8.
The defect marking device 8 begins applying marking at
a moment of receiving the marking command. Marking is given by applying ink onto
the steel sheet 1 by directly pressing a felt impregnated with ink against the steel
sheet 1. Even on a coil applied with oil, marking is surely applied on the surface
of the steel sheet. Since there is no problem of shading in color, which occurs
in paint coating, no dent appears on the surface of the steel sheet. The felt wears
by direct contact with the steel sheet 1. If the marking exceeds a standard length,
the centralized control panel 6 generates an alarm to notify the worker to replace
the felt.
Considering the tracking accuracy of the defect position,
the marking length is set so as the defect portion not to come outside of the defect
marking. The facility adds 0.5 m to the defect length judged by the centralized
control panel 8 on each of front and rear edges of the defect, taking into account
of the tracking information, and generates a command for applying marking by 1 m
longer than the actual defect length. If the defect is a pattern of point-like defects
each having not more than several millimeters in length, the command is to apply
marking by adding 0.25 m to each of front and rear edges of the defect.
For the length of marking, it is preferred to determine
thereof under a negotiation with the buyer concerned. The centralized control panel
6 conducts monitoring of allowable number of markings and allowable length of marking,
as additional control items. If these monitoring values exceed allowable limit,
the centralized control panel 6 generates an abnormality alarm to an alarm device
24.
The host computer 23 conducts control of individual coils
on the basis of the information coming from the centralized control panel 6, and
gives judgment of shipment.
Fig. 6 shows a state of the defect position and the defect
marking position. The harmful defect 20 is within the display range of the defect
marking 21 in the length direction.
From the standpoint of easiness in visual detection and
of easiness in detection by the defect marking detection device 9, the line width
of the marking is most preferably in a range of from 3 to 10 mm. From the point
of felt wear and ink visibility, the pressing force of felt is most preferably in
a range of from 150 to 500 g.
The defect marking device 8 may be a single unit. However,
it is preferable that two of the defect marking device 8 are installed to prepare
two kinds of ink, thus changing the marking color at need.
By installing two units of defect marking device 8 with
two kinds of ink color, the ink color is changed responding to the defect grades,
(for example, red ink marking is applied to the case that the harmful defect for
the buyer is distinctive, and blue ink marking is applied to the case of injudgicable
defect), or the ink color is changed responding to the grades of the steel sheets,
(for example, black ink marking is applied to the case of white steel sheet as seen
in the electrolytic galvanized steel sheet, and white ink marking is applied to
the case of black steel sheet as seen in the alloyed hot dip galvanized steel sheets),
thus improving the work efficiency of the working with identifying the defect by
visual inspection and of the identification working with the defect marking detection
device. In press-working or the like, the defect marking may be removed by blanking
even when the defect exists. Therefore, the defect marking is preferably applied
to arbitrary position in the width direction of the steel sheet independent of the
place of harmful defect. Any kind of ink is necessary be selected to vanish by a
weak alkali cleaning agent. In some uses of the steel sheets, however, cleaning
agent other than that of weak alkali may be applied.
For applying marking with ink as described above, once
the ink is dried, no problem occurs. However, ordinary inks take few seconds to
dry. If the ink is not dried, the ink is transferred onto the roll or the coil.
If oil is applied before the ink is dried, the ink cannot be dried, and the ink
is transferred onto a tension reel by winding the coil therearound. The problem
is completely solved by installing an ink drying device at downstream side of the
ink marker device to dry the ink marked.
Fig. 7 illustrates an example of arrangement of each one
unit of the defect marking device 8 and the defect marking detection device 9. Both
the defect marking device 8 and the defect marking detection device 9 are located
at the same position in the width direction of the steel sheet 1 on a table 25,
which devices are movable in the width direction of the steel sheet at a position
that is commanded by a marking command, via a transfer device 26 which is driven
by a motor 27.
Fig. 8 illustrates an example of arrangement of each two
units of the defect marking device and the defect marking detection device. Each
pair of the defect marking device 8a and the defect marking detection device 9a,
and the defect marking device 8b and the defect marking detection device 9b, are
installed at the same position in the width direction of the steel sheet 1 on respective
table 25a and table 25b, which devices are movable in the width direction of the
steel sheet separately as in the case of the facility of Fig. 7.
Fig. 9 and Fig. 10 show that the ink drying device is located
at downstream side of the defect marking device. In Fig. 9, the defect marking device
8 and the ink drying device 40 are located at the same position in the width direction
of the steel sheet 1 on the table 25. In Fig. 10, the defect marking device 8, the
ink drying device 40, and the defect marking detection device 9 are located at the
same position in the width direction of the steel sheet 1 on the table 25. For both
facilities, these devices are movable in the width direction of the steel sheet
to a position commanded by the marking command, via the transfer device 26 driven
by the motor 27.
The defect marking device 8, the ink drying device 40,
and the defect marking detection device 9 may be installed by two units thereeach.
Fig. 11 shows that each pair of the defect marking device 8a and the ink drying
device 40a, and the defect marking device 8b and the ink drying device 40b, are
located at the same position in the width direction of the steel sheet 1 on respective
tables 25a and 25b. Fig. 12 shows that each set of the defect marking device 8a,
the ink drying device 40a, and the defect marking detection device 9a, and the defect
marking device 8b, the ink drying device 40b, and the defect marking detection device
9b, are located at the same position in the width direction of the steel sheet 1
on respective tables 25a and 25b, thus allowing these devices to move in the width
direction of the steel sheet, separately in each set to each other, as in the case
of Fig. 8.
Fig. 13 illustrates an example of applying marking on defect
portions and defect marking position using a single unit of defect marking device.
In the figure, same ink color is used to indicate the harmful defect 20 and the
injudgicable defect 22 as the defect marking 21.
Fig. 14 illustrates an example of applying marking with
different ink colors using two units of defect marking devices. The harmful defect
20 is expressed by the defect marking 21a (red, for example) ; and the injudgicable
defect 22 is expressed by the defect marking 21b (blue, for example).
The defect marking detection device 9 continuously monitors
the state of defect marking, monitors the marking length, the blurred ink, and the
presence/absence of marking at non-defect place, then generates the monitored result
on the centralized control panel 6. To improve the detection accuracy of the defect
marking, it is preferred to correct the threshold value of the defect marking detection
device responding to the grades of the steel sheets. The centralized control panel
6 judges the acceptance/rejection of the marking, and, if an abnormality occurs,
generates a signal to the alarm device 24 to notify the abnormal situation to workers
concerned, and generates a command to hold the coil shipment. To the coil which
is stopped from shipment, re-inspection or the like is applied.
When the defect marking monitored by the defect marking
detection device 9 is judged as normal, the defect information and the defect position
are entered to an external memory device 14, and the cutting machine 15 is actuated
to cut the steel sheet. Then, the defect information and the defect position are
inversely developed, or the position measured from inner periphery of the coil is
converted to the position measured from outer periphery thereof, and the data are
printed.
Since the coil is cut by the cutting machine 15 for individual
buyers, the standard length of coil is based on the cut signal at the cutting machine
15. The document to be submitted to buyer has an expression of inverse development
starting from the outer periphery of the coil for convenience of use of the buyer.
Since a distinctive marking is applied to the harmful defect
position as described above, in the succeeding step to remove the harmful defect'
or on applying working at the buyer, presence/absence of harmful defect during coil
rewinding is readily judged.
The above-described procedure adopted a visual inspection
of a worker to give judgment of harmful defect. However, the visual inspection may
be eliminated if only the defect detection accuracy of the surface defect tester
3 is satisfactory. Furthermore, by installing a defect marking detection device
in the succeeding stage for the marked coil, more accurate and efficient work for
defect removal can be conducted.
The facilities shown in Figs. 1 through 4 arrange the surface
defect tester 3 or further the magnetic particle tester 3, the defect marking device
8 and the defect marking detection device 9 in series on a line. As described before,
however, it has already been brought into practical use that the calculation is
given to determine the defect position, the defect name, and the defect grade on
the basis of the defect information detected by the surface defect tester or further
by the internal defect tester on a processing line that is provided with the surface
defect tester or further the internal defect tester, and that the information is
displayed on a CRT or is printed on a document.
Accordingly, it may be implemented that at least one of
the defect marking device and the defect marking detection device is located on
a separate line from the line that is provided with a surface defect tester or further
an internal defect tester, and that the marking at the defect position and the confirmation
of the defect marking are conducted by identifying the harmful defect and the injudgicable
defect on the separate line that is provided with the surface defect tester or further
the internal defect tester, as in the case of facilities of Figs. 1 through 4, thus
printing the result on a document.
In that case, it may be done that the edited and identified
harmful defect and injudgicable defect information on a processing line provided
with a surface defect tester or further an internal defect tester is generated,
together with the defect position information, to a centralized control panel on
a separate line via an external memory device, and the separate line conducts tracking
of the harmful defect and the injudgicable defect, then a defect marking device
conducts marking, and a defect marking detection device monitors the state of defect
marking, and further the monitored result is re-edited by the centralized control
panel to generate the edited information to an external memory device. By this procedure,
the effect of the present invention is attained with further inexpensive facilities.
Figs. 15 through 17 show examples of arrangement of main
facilities in the separate line in that case. Fig. 15 is the case that an oiler
17 is located at downstream side of the defect marking detection device 9. Fig.
16 is the case that the oiler 17 is located at upstream side of the defect marking
device 8. Fig. 17 is the case that a trimmer 18 and an inspection table 16 are located
at upstream side of the marking device 8, while locating the defect marking detection
device 9 at downstream side thereof. In the case of Fig. 17, the result of visual
inspection of the defect on the inspection table may be subjected to secondary correction,
at need, as in the case of Figs. 1 through 4.
Examples of working with a marked coil are described referring
to Figs. 18 and 19.
Fig. 18 shows a recoil line which is a downstream stage
in a continuous line, which recoil line is provided with a cleaning liquid ejection
device 32 and a cleaning liquid wipe-off device 33, adding to the defect marking
detection device 9. When the defect marking detection device 9 detects a defect
marking of an injudgicable defect, it generates a line-stop command, and the inspector
applies re-judgment to the matter. The inspector classifies harmful defect and harmless
defect. If the inspector judges as harmless defect, the cleaning liquid ejection
device 32 ejects a weak alkali cleaning liquid to wash off the marking, then the
cleaning liquid wipe-off device 33 wipes out the cleaning liquid and the marking
ink, then re-applies oil. When the injudgicable defect is subjected to re-judgment
and when the defect is judged as harmful defect, the cutting machine 15 cuts off
the harmful defect portion, and a tension reel 10 winds only the accepted coil.
Fig. 19 shows a shear line. A sheet free from defect marking
is sent to a non-defective items piler 29. When the defect marking detection device
9 located at inlet of the sheet line detects a defect marking, it generates a signal
to a gate switching device 28. On receiving the signal, the gate switching device
28 switches the gate, and, the sheet having the defect marking portion is sent to
a defective items piler 30, where the harmful defect portion and the injudgicable
defect portion are removed.
As for a steel sheet being subjected to press-working,
it is preferable to apply a marking method that takes into account of its use. Figs.
20 and 21 illustrate examples of defect marking in the case that visual inspection
is given on a harmful defect portion 20 after pressed. Fig. 20 is the case that
defect marking 21 is applied to the defect portion 20. Fig. 21 is the case that
the defect marking is applied on each side of steel sheet 1 at the same position
in width direction thereof independent of the place of the defect. The position
of defect marking may be selected responding to the defect information in the width
direction of the steel sheet and to the use thereof.
The description above-given is the case that an ink marker
is positioned in the defect marking device 8 to apply marking at the defect position,
or that further a coil with defect marking is treated. Instead of the ink marker
device, however, an abrasive member marking device that applies marking using an
abrasive member may be installed to conduct marking with the abrasive member to
the defect position.
With the defect marking device using an abrasive member,
a grinder or an abrasive member such as nonwoven fabrics containing abrasives is
directly pressed against the steel sheet 1, or a rotating brush roll is pressed
against the steel sheet 1, thus applying marking.
For the case of a defect marker device using an abrasive
member, the marking response is inferior to some degree to the case of ink marker
device.' Consequently, the marking length and line width are varied to some extent,
or the marking color can not be changed different from the case of ink marking,
so that different marking indications are given to individual defect grades. For
other features, however, the defect marker device with abrasives is able to give
working with a defect marking and a coil with defect marking, similar to the case
of ink marker device.
For the case of using abrasive member, the marking length
is preferably selected to somewhat longer than the ink marking length considering
the tracking accuracy and the response performance. In concrete terms, a command
is generated by the centralized control panel 8 to apply marking longer than the
identified defect length by 0.5 to 1.0 m to each of front and rear edges of the
defect, or totally 1 to 2 m longer than the identified defect length. For a dot-like
defect having lengths of several millimeters or less, the command is generated to
apply marking by adding 0.25 to 1.0 m to each of front and rear edges of the defect.
For the convenience of detection by visual inspection and by the defect marking
detection device 9, the marking line width is most preferably in a range of from
50 to 200 mm. Fig. 22 illustrates the state between the defect position and the
defect marking position. The harmful defect 20 is within an indication range of
the defect marking 21 in the length direction.
When two units of ink marker device are installed, as illustrated
in Fig. 14, the ink color is changed responding to the defect grade. In the case
of an abrasive member is applied, however, color cannot be changed. Therefore, in
the case that two units of abrasive member marker device are installed, similar
working with the ink marker device can be conducted by changing the marking line,
(for example, a single marking line is applied when the defect harmful to the buyer
is distinctive, and double marking line is applied when the defect is injudgicable
one.)
Fig. 23 illustrates a state of defect and defect marking
position in the case of marking with two units of abrasive member marker device.
The figure shows a single defect marking line 21a for the harmful defect 20 and
a double defect marking line 21b for the injudgicable defect 22.
The defect marking using an abrasive member does not induce
problem of dent generation on the surface of steel sheet because no shading problem
occurs, which is observed in the paint marking case, and applies sure marking on
the surface of the steel sheet even if the coil is applied with oil. In addition,
the steel sheet may be applied with oil immediately after marking, and no dryer
is necessary, which is needed in the case of ink marking. Thus, simpler facilities
are realized.
When the marking is applied using a brush roll as the abrasive
member, the brush roll may be located to allow the marking over the whole width
of the steel sheet, at need, thus applying marking over the whole width thereof.
As described above, according to the present invention,
it is possible to apply defect marking without inducing flaw on the steel sheet
and to surely and readily identify the harmful defect independent of presence/absence
of oil such as rust-preventive oil on the surface of the steel sheet.
Furthermore, by tracking the defect position on the surface
of the steel sheet, then by applying marking to the harmful defect portion, the
buyer readily detects the defect portion. In addition, by winding also the harmful
defect portion, the shipment can be done with a necessary coil length, which improves
the work efficiency of the buyer.
Furthermore, since adequate marking indication is given
by changing the marking indication method responding to the degree of defect, and
by considering the defect name, the defect degree, and the use of the steel sheet,
the effect of improving the work efficiency is further enhanced.
By adopting the ink marker device, the defect marking color
is selected responding to the grade of steel sheet and to the surface color of the
steel sheet, so that the effect of improvement in work efficiency and the effect
of prevention of overlooking defect are further enhanced.
With use of a grinding member marker device, even a coil
with applied with oil can be surely marked on the surface thereof. In addition,
the steel sheet may be applied with oil immediately after marking, and no dryer
is necessary, which is needed in the case of ink marking. Thus, simpler facilities
are realized.
Also for the steel sheet manufacturers, the work to remove
harmful defect portion becomes easy, and the work efficiency significantly increases.
Furthermore, for the injudgicable defect, excessive defect removal work is not required,
which also improves the work efficiency.
Best Mode 2
The first aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a surface flaw marking
device for a metal strip, which surface flaw marking device comprises: a flaw inspection
means having plurality of light-receiving parts that identify reflected lights coming
from an inspection plane of a metal strip under two or more of optical conditions
different from each other, and a signal processing section that judges presence/absence
of surface flaw on the inspection plane based on a combination of reflected light
components identified under these optical conditions different from each other;
and a marking means that applies marking indicating the information about the flaw
on the surface of the metal strip.
The device according to the first aspect of the Best Mode
2 receives light reflected from the surface of the metal strip by two or more of
light-receiving part, having different optical conditions such as polarization condition
to each other, and analyzes the optical properties from the received result. Then,
the signal processing section of the flaw inspection means gives judgment on normal
part and abnormal part, or judgment on the surface flaw, on the surface of the metal
strip based on thus obtained optical properties. For the part judged as the surface
flaw, marking is applied using a specified method such as printing, carved stamping,
and drilling. The position for marking can be selected by tracking the position
of or nearby the surface flaw using a tracking means or the like.
The following is the description about the mode of optical
reflection on the surface of steel sheet, which is a target of the inspection by
the surface flaw inspection device according to the present invention, relating
to microscopic surface irregularity on the surface of the steel sheet. Generally,
the microscopic irregularity on the surface of steel sheet, which is originally
significantly rough, improves its flatness by strong rolling by a roll during temper
rolling (tempering), while other portions leave their irregular shape because the
roll of the temper rolling does not contact thereto.
For example, in the case of alloyed galvanized steel sheet,
the cold-rolled steel sheet 101, the mother material, is subjected to hot dip galvanizing
as shown in Fig. 35 (a)., then passes through an alloying furnace. During the passage,
the iron element of the mother material steel sheet diffuses into the zinc of the
plating layer to generally form columnar alloy crystals 103 as shown in Fig. 35(c).
When the steel sheet is subjected to temper rolling as shown in Fig. 35(b), the
particularly projected portions of the columnar crystals 103 are collapsed in flat
shape, (tempered part 106), as shown in Fig. 35(d), while leaving other portions
(non-tempered part 107) as in the columnar crystal shape.
Fig. 36 is a model illustrating what kinds of optical reflections
occur on that type of steel sheet surface. The incident light 108 coming into the
portion collapsed by temper rolling, (tempered part 106), gives specular reflection
to the direction of regular reflection to the steel sheet. On the other hand, the
reflection direction of the incident light coming into the portion which leaves
original columnar crystals not collapsed by the temper rolling, (non-tempered part
107), does not necessarily coincide with the regular reflection direction to the
steel sheet, though it is reflected in specular manner on individual micro-area
elements on the columnar crystal surface in microscopic view.
Therefore, the distribution of reflection light angles
at tempered part and non-tempered part becomes to Fig. 37(a) and Fig. 37(b) in macroscopic
view, respectively. That is, (a) at the tempered part 106, a specular reflection
109 having a sharp distribution in the regular reflection direction to the steel
sheet occurs, and (b) at the non-tempered part, a reflection 110 having a broad
range responding to the angle distribution on micro-area elements on the surface
of columnar crystals appears. Hereinafter the former is referred to as the specular
reflection, and the latter is referred to as the specular-diffuse reflection. The
actually observed distribution of reflection angles is the sum of the angle distribution
of specular reflection and the angle distribution of specular-diffuse reflection
responding to each area percentage of the tempered part and the non-tempered part,
as shown in Fig. 37(c).
The above-given description deals with an alloyed galvanized
steel sheet. However, the description is generally applicable to other steel sheets
generating flat portions by temper rolling.
The following is the description about the optical reflection
characteristics of flaw called the pattern-like scab, and which has no significant
surface irregularity, which is a target of the present invention. For example, as
seen in Fig. 38, a scab 111 appeared on an alloyed hot dip galvanized steel sheet
104 exists in an original plate 101 of cold-rolled steel sheet before plating, on
which a plating layer 102 is applied, and further the alloying proceeds by diffusion
of the iron in the mother material.
Compared with mother material, the scabbed portion generally
differs in plating thickness and in degree of alloying. As a result, for example,
in the case that the plating layer thickness at the scabbed portion becomes thick
and that the scab is convex against the mother material, the temper rolling increases
the area of tempered part than that of non-tempered part. Inversely, if the scabbed
portion is concave against the mother material,the scabbed portion does not touch
the temper rolling roll, and the non-tempered part occupies large portions. If the
alloying at scabbed portion is shallow, the angle distribution of micro-area elements
is enhanced in the normal direction to the steel sheet, and the diffusion performance
becomes weak.
The following is the description about the appearance of
pattern-like scabs depending on the difference in surface property of the scabbed
portion and of the mother material. When the difference between the scabbed portion
and the mother material is classified depending on the above-described modified
model of plating surface during temper rolling, three kinds of groups appear as
shown in Fig. 40.
- (a) In a scabbed portion (solid line), the area percentage of the tempered part
and the angle distribution on micro-area elements in the non-tempered part differ
from those in the mother material (broken line). The tempered part corresponds to
the normal angle &xgr; = 0, indicating the peak in the figure. The peak height
(area percentage) differs in the scabbed portion and the mother material. The non-tempered
part corresponds to the other parts (slope), and, in the figure, the distribution
of the area percentage differs in the scabbed portion and the mother material. The
slope part reflects the angle distribution on micro-area elements in the non-tempered
part.
- (b) Although the area percentage of the tempered part differs between the scabbed
portion and the mother material, the angle distribution on micro-area elements in
the non-tempered elements does not differ from each other. The figure shows different
peak height in scabbed portion and in mother material. However, the slope shape
agrees to each other.
- (c) Although the angle distribution on micro-area elements in the non-tempered
part differs between the scabbed portion and the mother material, the area percentage
in the tempered part does not differ to each other. The figure shows different peak
height in scabbed portion and in mother material. However, the slope shape differs
from each other.
That difference in the area percentage of the tempered
part and in the angle distribution on micro-area elements is observed as the difference
in the angle distribution of reflected light quantity, as shown in Fig. 39.
If the area percentage of the tempered part shows a difference,
(as in the case of above-described (a) and (b)), the angle distribution of the reflected
light quantity becomes that on the scabbed portion 111a and on the mother material
112a, as shown in Figs. 39(a) and (b). The difference is observed in the direction
that the angle distribution becomes a peak, or the direction of regular reflection.
If the area percentage of the tempered part in the scabbed portion is larger than
that in the mother material, (Figs. 39(a) and (b), and Figs. 40(a) and (b)), the
scab is seen bright from the regular reflection direction. And, if the tempered
percentage in the scabbed portion is less than that in the mother material, the
scab is seen dark from the regular reflection direction.
If there is no difference in the area percentage of the
tempered part, (in the case of above-described (c)), the observation from the normal
reflection direction to the steel sheet cannot see the scab. Nevertheless, if there
is a difference in the diffusion property of the components of specular-diffuse
reflection, the flaw can be seen from the diffusional direction at an off-peak angle
distribution, as shown in Fig. 39(c). For example, when the diffusional property
of the components of specular-diffuse reflection is small, generally the scab is
viewed bright from a diffusional direction relatively near to the regular reflection,
and the brightness gradually becomes weak with off-setting from the regular reflection
direction, and finally, the difference between the scabbed portion and the mother
material becomes none at a certain angle, thus the observation at around this angle
is no more possible. Further off-setting from the regular reflection angle allows
the observation of scab in dark color.
To identify and detect that pattern-like scab from the
mother material, it is necessary to investigate the angle of micro-area elements
for identifying the reflection light. For example, as in the case of Figs. 39(a)
and (b), the detection of difference between the scabbed portion and the mother
material in the regular reflection direction means the determination of the &xgr;
= 0 angle distribution among the angle distribution in micro-area elements, shown
in Fig. 40, thus detecting the difference between the scabbed portion and the mother
material.
When the identification at &xgr; = 0 angle distribution
is described in terms of arithmetic expression, a function S(&xgr;) shown in Fig.
40 is multiplied with a function that signifies an identification characteristic
expressed by a delta function &dgr;(&xgr;) shown in Fig. 42(a), (hereinafter
referred to simply as "weight function"), then the product is integrated. Furthermore,
for example, at an incident light angle of 60 degrees, the observation at 40 degrees,
or offsetting by 20 degrees, means that the reflection on a plane (micro-area element)
offsets by 10 degrees of normal angle &xgr;. This corresponds to the use of a
weight function of &dgr; (&xgr; + 10), as seen in Fig. 42(b). The relation between
the reflection angle and the normal angle &xgr; to a micro-area element is calculated
from Fig. 41.
According to the consideration, the identification of reflected
light from an angle of micro-area element corresponds to the design of a weight
function. The weight function is not necessarily a delta function, and it may have
a certain width.
Based on the concept, when the scabs having respective
area percentages expressed by Figs . 40(a), (b), and (c) are identified separately
from the mother material, and when a weight function for the detection is considered,
the &dgr; function &dgr; (&xgr;) given in Fig. 42 is also an example thereof.
This, however, cannot bring the size of visible area of the two optical systems
the same because the cameras are installed at different receiving angles, respectively.
If the cameras are installed for measuring a diffuse reflection light, the change
in the weight function is not easy because the camera positions have to be changed.
For the former issue, measurement on the same optical axis
is required. And, it is preferred that both components of the specular reflection
and of the specular-diffuse reflection are grasped by the measurement in the direction
of regular reflection on the steel sheet, not grasping the diffuse reflection light.
For the latter issue, it is preferred that the weight function can be set with some
degree of freedom against the changes in the camera position.
According to the object, the present invention adopts a
linear light source having a diffusional characteristic, not a parallel light source
such as that of laser light. Furthermore, the specular reflection component and
the specular-diffuse reflection component are separated and identified from the
regular reflection direction to the steel sheet using polarized light.
To explain the action and the effect of the linear diffusional
light source, a linear diffusional light source 114 is placed in parallel with a
steel sheet 104, as shown in Fig. 43, and the reflection characteristic is investigated
by observing a point which is in a plane vertical to the light source and which
is on the steel sheet 104 from the direction that the incident angle coincides with
the outgoing angle, (hereinafter referred to as the "regular reflection direction
to the steel sheet").
As shown in Fig. 43(a), when the light is emitted from
center part of the linear light source 114, the light entered the tempered part
is reflected in a specular mode, all of which is caught in the regular reflection
direction to the steel sheet. On the other hand, the light entered the non-tempered
part is reflected in a specular diffusional mode, of which only the light reflected
from micro-area elements that face the same direction with that of the normal to
steel sheet can be detected. Since the number of those micro-area elements is very
few in probability, the reflected light that is detected in the regular reflection
direction to the steel sheet is occupied mainly by the specular reflection from
the tempered part.
To the contrary, when the light is emitted from a part
other than the center part of the linear light source, as shown in Fig. 43(b), the
light entered the tempered part is reflected to a direction other than the regular
reflection direction to the steel sheet by specular reflection, thus the light cannot
be detected in the regular reflection direction to the steel sheet. On the other
hand, the light entered the non-tempered part is reflected in specular-diffuse reflection
mode, of which the light reflected in regular reflection direction to the steel
sheet can be detected. Consequently, all the reflected light that can be detected
in regular reflection direction to the steel sheet is the light of specular- diffuse
reflection on the non-tempered part.
Both of the above-described cases lead a conclusion that,
for the light emitted from the whole area of a linear light source, the detective
light under observation from regular reflection direction to the steel sheet is
the sum of the specular reflection light on the tempered part and the specular-diffuse
reflection light on the non-tempered part.
The following is the description about the variations in
polarized light characteristics on observation on an inspection plane from the regular
reflection direction using that type of linear light source.
Generally, for the reflection on a specular metal surface,
particularly to a light having the direction of electric field in parallel with
the incident plane, (or p-polarized light), or to a light normal to the incident
plane, (or s-polarized light), the polarized light characteristics are maintained
after the reflection, thus the p-polarized light outgoes as the p-polarized mode,
and the s-polarized light outgoes as the s-polarized mode. An arbitrary linear polarized
light that has p-polarized component and s-polarized component at a time outgoes
as an elliptically polarized light responding to the reflectance ratio and the phase
difference of p- and s-polarized lights.
The following discusses the case that a light is emitted
from a linear diffusional light source onto an alloyed galvanized steel sheet. As
shown in Fig. 44(a), the light emitted from center part of the linear light source
114 is specularly reflected at the tempered part of the steel sheet 104 and is observed
in the regular reflection direction to the steel sheet. In this case, the ordinary
reflection on a specular metal surface is established, thus the p-polarized light
outgoes as the p-polarized mode.
On the other hand, the light emitted from a part other
than the center part of the linear light source is specularly reflected on micro-area
elements that are inclined on the crystal surface on the non-tempered part, as shown
in Fig. 44(b), thus, some of the reflected light can be observed in the regular
reflection direction to the steel sheet. In this case, even when a p-polarized light
parallel with the incident plane of the steel sheet is entered, the light becomes
a linear polarized light having both p- and s-polarized light components because
the incident light is not in parallel with the incident plane for the micro-area
elements which are inclined from which the light is actually reflected. As a result,
the incident light outgoes from micro-area elements as an elliptical polarized light.
The same result appears when an s-polarized light is entered instead of p-polarized
light.
As for a linear polarized light with an arbitrary polarization
angle, having both p- and s-polarized light components, the same reason as above-described
can be applied, or, since the polarization angle becomes inclination from the incident
plane, the shape of elliptical polarized light that is emitted in the regular reflection
direction to the steel sheet differs from that of the light that entered from the
center part of the linear light source and is reflected from the tempered part.
For the case of emitting linear polarized light having
both p- and s-polarized light components, more detail explanation is given below.
As shown in Fig. 45, a light 108 coming from the linear
diffusional light source 114 is converted to a linear polarized light by a sheet
polarizer 115 having an azimuth &agr;, which is then entered the steel sheet 104
positioned in horizontal direction. The regular reflection light is received by
a light detector 116.
As described before, for the light 108 emitted from a point
C on the light source, both the component specularly reflected from the tempered
part and the component reflected in specular-diffuse reflection mode from micro-area
elements that, by chance, the normal thereof directs to the vertical direction in
the non-tempered part contribute to the light reflected from the point O (and from
a region 113 peripheral to the point O) on the steel sheet to the direction of the
light detector 116.
To the contrary, as for the light 108 emitted from the
point A which is offset by an angle &phgr; viewed from the point O, the specularly
reflected light component is reflected in a direction different from that of the
light detector 116, thus only the component of specular-diffuse reflection on micro-area
elements with a normal angle &xgr; (the angle of normal to the vertical direction
is &xgr;) contributes. The relation between &phgr; and &xgr; is given by the
equation below under a simple geometrical consideration.
Where, &thgr; designates the incident angle to the steel
sheet.
The state of polarized light of the light reflected in
that manner is considered in the following. Referring to Fig. 45, the light 108
which is emitted from the point C passes through the sheet polarizer 115 having
an azimuth &agr;, then is reflected at the point O on the steel sheet. The polarized
light state at that moment is expressed by Jones matrix which is generally used
in the polarization optics.
where, E in designates the linear polarized light vector (column vector) at an azimuth
&agr;, and T designates the reflection characteristic matrix of the steel sheet.
The component for each of them is written as follows.
where, t( ) designates the column vector, tan &psgr; designates the
amplitude reflectance ratio of p- and s-polarized lights, &Dgr; designates the
phase difference occurred from the reflectance of p- and s-polarized lights, and
rs designates the s-polarized light reflectance. The matrix expression
of them becomes the formula 1.
In a similar manner, referring to Fig. 46, the polarized
state of light 108 emitted from the point A and reflected on micro-area elements
having normal angle &xgr; to the direction of light detector 116 is expressed
by eq. (3) under an assumption that the incident plane crosses orthogonally with
the sheet polarizer 115 and an analyzer 117.
where, R designates the two-dimensional rotary matrix, and the component Rmn
is expressed by:
The matrix expression of R(&xgr;) becomes the formula
2.
Eq.(2) is a particular case of eq.(3) substituting &xgr;
= 0. Thus, both the specular reflection component and the specular-diffuse reflection
component can be integrally treated by eq.(3).
When eq.(3) is calculated to draw a figure of elliptical
polarized light state for the light reflected from micro-area elements having a
normal angle &xgr;, Fig. 47 is obtained. The azimuth &agr; of the incident polarized
light was assumed to 45 degrees, the incident angle &thgr; was assumed to 60 degrees,
and the reflection characteristics of steel sheet were assumed as &psgr;=28°
and &Dgr;=120°. The figure suggests that the ellipse inclines with variations
in &xgr; value against the ellipse at &xgr; = 0, or against the case of specular
reflection. Consequently, for example, by inserting an analyzer before the light
detector to set the analyzing angle, selection becomes possible to determine the
main reflected light coming from particular micro-area elements with a particular
normal angle.
To quantify the above-described procedure, the state of
polarized light ED, which is obtained by inserting an analyzer having
an analyzing angle &bgr; into a reflected light in a polarized state, is expressed
by eq.(3).
where, A = (Amn) designates the matrix expressing the analyzer, and A11
= 1, while other components are 0. The matrix expression of A becomes the formula
3.
When the light intensity L of the reflected light on the
micro-area elements having a normal angle &xgr;, detected by the light detector
116 (Fig. 46) is calculated by eq.(4), the light intensity L is expressed by eq.
(5) with an assumption of the area percentage of the micro-area element of S(&xgr;).
where, I(&xgr;, &bgr;) is, as described before, the weight function that determines
the degree of identification of reflected light on the micro-area elements having
a normal angle &xgr;, which weight function depends on the polarization characteristics
of optical system and of inspection body. The product of the weight function and
the reflectance of steel sheet, rs
2, the incident light quantity Ep2, and the area rate S( &xgr;
) is the light intensity that can be detected. In the case of a surface-treated
steel sheet, or a homogeneous material on the surface of steel sheet, the value
of rs
2 should be constant. In addition, the value of Ep2 may also
be constant if the incident light quantity is uniform at all positions of light
source. Accordingly, to determine the light intensity that is detected by the light
detector, only variables to be considered are the area percentage S(&xgr;) of
micro-area elements having a normal angle &xgr; and the identification characteristic
I(&xgr;, &bgr;).
Regarding the identification characteristic I(&xgr;,
&bgr;), when an analyzing angle &bgr;0 that makes the contribution
of the micro-area elements having a normal angle &xgr;0 maximum is
selected, the candidates can be given by solving eq.(6) in terms of &bgr;.
The general arithmetic expression of eq.(4) is given by
the formula 4.
When the analyzing angle that gives &xgr; = 0, or that
gives maximum contribution of the specular reflection component is determined by
eq.(6), the value of &bgr; becomes around -45 degrees. Also in this case, the
reflection characteristics of the steel sheet adopted &psgr; = 28° and &Dgr;
= 120° , and the azimuth of polarized light &agr; was 45° . Fig. 48
shows the relation between the normal angle &xgr; to the vertical direction of
micro-area element and the identification characteristic, or the weight function
I(&xgr;,-45), in the case that the analyzing angle &bgr; is -45 degrees. For
convenience of visibility, the maximum value is standardized to 1.
Fig. 48 shows that the &xgr; = 0, or the specular reflection
component, is the governing angle (easy for identification), and that the specular-diffuse
reflection light on micro-area elements around normal angles of &xgr; = ±
35 degrees is most difficult to be identified. Inversely, an analyzing angle &bgr;
that the reflection light at &xgr; = ± 35 degrees is identified best is determined
from eqs. (5) and (6), and the value of &bgr; becomes around 45 degrees. Fig.
49 shows the relation between the normal angle &xgr; against the analyzing angle
&bgr; = 45 degrees and the identification characteristic I (&xgr;, 45). The
curve of &bgr; = 45 degrees is not symmetrical in right and left sides. This is
a result of that, in view of incident light plane (flat plane formed by the incident
light and the reflected light relating to the micro-area element), a positive value
of &xgr; gives apparently less azimuth &agr; of the incident polarized light,
(or becomes close to p-polarized light), and that the reflectance of p-polarized
light on the steel sheet is less than the reflectance of s-polarized light. Fig.
49 also shows the case of &bgr; = 90° which gives an intermediate characteristic
between &bgr; = -45° and 45° .
As given in eq.(5), the reflected light intensity L on
a micro-area element having a normal angle &xgr; is given by a product of the
identification characteristics (weight function) I(&xgr;, &bgr;) and the area
percentage S(&xgr;). Accordingly, the intensity of the light received by the light
detector 116 is the integrated value of S(&xgr;)I(&xgr;, &bgr;) in terms of
&xgr;. For example, when a reflected light on a steel sheet having the reflection
characteristics shown in Fig. 50 is received through an analyzer having an analyzing
angle of &bgr; = -45 degrees, the quantity of received light is the integration
of the area percentage S(&xgr;) shown in Fig. 50 with a weight of identification
characteristics I(&xgr;, &bgr;) shown in Fig. 48.
If a pattern-like scab having characteristics shown in
Fig. 39 exists, the area percentage S(&xgr;) becomes respective Figs. 40(a), (b),
and (c).
For the case that only the specular reflection component
is different as shown in Fig. 39(b) and Fig. 40(b), the light intensity on receiving
that type of flaw through an analyzer having an analyzing angle &bgr; = -45 degrees
corresponds to the result of integration of Fig. 40(b) multiplied by a weight function
I(&xgr;, &bgr;) expressed by Fig. 48. Therefore, the difference in the reflected
light quantity between the mother material and the scabbed portion can be detected.
Regarding the analyzing angle &bgr; = 45 degrees, there is no difference in the
specular-diffuse reflection component, as shown in Fig. 40(b), and the difference
appears only at nearby &xgr; = 0° . Therefore, considering that the weight
function I(&xgr;,&bgr;) at &bgr; = 45° given in Fig. 49 is a low value
at around &bgr; = 0° , the product becomes a low value over the whole range
of &xgr;, and the difference is cancelled by integration. As a result, no difference
between the mother material and the scabbed part can be detected.
In the case that the difference appears only the specular-diffuse
reflection component, as shown in Fig. 39(c) and Fig. 40(c), the detection cannot
be attained by passing through an analyzer of -45 degrees. In that case, the detection
can be done by passing through an analyzer of 45 degrees that provides high value
of weight function I(&xgr;,&bgr;) distant from &bgr; = 0°.
The normal angle &xgr; giving no difference in the specular-diffuse
reflection component between the mother material and the scabbed portion is around
&xgr; = ± 20 degrees in Fig. 40(c). If, however, there is a flaw that gives
normal angle &xgr; nearby ± 30 degrees, the flaw cannot be detected even
through an analyzer of 45 degrees. In that case, a separate analyzing angle (for
example, &bgr; = 90° ) providing different identification characteristic
is prepared, and the light is received by the third light detector.
Generally, in most cases, the reflection characteristic
of the mother material and scabbed portion on the surface of steel sheet falls in
either one of Figs. 33(a), (b), and (c). Accordingly, detection can be done in most
cases by applying either two of the optical conditions (in this example, the analyzing
angle). In a special case as described above, however, to prevent overlooking, it
is preferable to use three analyzers each having different analyzing angle from
each other and to receive the light by identifying the reflected light on micro-area
elements having respective three normal angles.
When there is a difference in both the specular reflection
component and the specular-diffuse reflection component, as in the case of Fig.
39(a) and Fig. 40(a), basically the difference between the mother material and the
scabbed portion can be detected only from the reflected light passed through a single
analyzer.
According to the present invention, an incident sheet polarizer
is located covering the whole area of a linear diffusional light source, and the
azimuth of the polarized light includes both the p-polarized light and the s-polarized
light. Furthermore, there adopt a camera to take image via a polarizer having a
polarizing angle further penetrating the specular reflection component in the regular
reflection light, and a camera to take image via a polarizer having a polarizing
angle further penetrating the specular-diffuse reflection component. This type of
optical system conducts observation along a common light axis in the regular reflection
direction, so that two kinds of signal are available corresponding to respective
specular reflection and specular-diffuse reflection without being influenced by
the variations of distance of steel sheet and by the variations of speed. Thus,
a surface flaw inspection device that can detect pattern-like scab having no significant
surface irregularity is realized. The detection range of angles for specular-diffuse
reflection component is readily changed by determining the analyzing angle.
Furthermore, by determining the intensity or rate of the
specular reflection and the specular-diffuse reflection, changes in surface property
that affect the specular reflection or the specular-diffuse reflection, other than
the above-described pattern-like scab, can be detected. For example, for the surface
finish of metal strip, such as dull finish and hairline finish, can be detected,
in theory, if only there is a variation in distribution of micro-reflection-face,
and the application to inspect that type of surface property is expected.
The detection and the judgment of surface flaws may naturally
apply known method and means in parallel. The detail of the parallel application
of known method and means is described later.
In this manner, the position of the inspection plane that
is judged to have a surface flaw is tracked by a tracking means. The tracking can
be conducted by calculating the time that the position of surface flaw reaches the
marking means, on the basis of the transfer speed of the metal strip. The marking
means applies marking on the surface of the metal strip based on the marking command
generated from the tracking means.
Marking can be done by various methods depending on object
and use. Any kind of marking method may be applied if only the marking is readily
detected in succeeding stage. For example, printing by ink or paint, stamping using
a stamper, drilling using a drilling machine, change of surface roughness using
grinder or the like can be applied. For the case of ferromagnetic metal strip, a
magnetic marking or the like can be applied.
The position of marking may be matched with the position
of surface flaw, or may be matched thereto only in the longitudinal direction, not
in the width direction. For example, if automatic feeding to a press-line as a material
is adopted, the detection of marking may, in some cases, become easy by setting
the marking position to a fixed position rather in width direction.
The second aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a method for manufacturing
metal strip with marking, which method comprises the steps of: identifying reflected
lights coming from an inspection plane of a metal strip under two or more of optical
conditions different from each other; applying judgment of presence/absence of surface
flaw on the inspection plane based on a combination of reflected light components
under these different optical conditions; and applying marking that indicates information
relating to the flaw on the surface of the metal strip based on the judgment result.
According to the second aspect of the Best Mode 2, a marking
is applied to the surface of metal strip at the place where a surface flaw is judged
as existing by the above-described surface flaw judging method. Since the marking
to indicate the presence of surface flaw is applied, succeeding stage or user can
remove the portion of the surface flaw, thus preventing the defect portion from
entering the products. With the manufacturing method, the work of coil dividing
to remove the surface flaw portion is significantly simplified or is eliminated,
so that the production efficiency improves.
The third aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a method for working
metal strip comprising the steps of: identifying reflected lights coming from an
inspection plane of a metal strip under two or more of optical conditions different
from each other; applying judgment of presence/absence of surface flaw on the inspection
plane based on a combination of reflected light components under these different
optical conditions; applying marking that indicates information relating to the
flaw on the surface of the metal strip; winding the marked metal strip to prepare
a coil; rewinding the coil to detect marking; avoiding or removing a specific range
of the metal strip based on the information given by the marking; and applying specified
working to a residual portion of the metal strip after avoiding or removing the
specified range.
According to the third aspect of the Best Mode 2, marking
is applied onto the surface of metal strip, similar with the second aspect of the
Best Mode 2, and the metal strip is wound to form a coil. The coil is transported
to a plant or the like, where the forming-work is applied to produce steel sheet.
On applying the forming-work, the coil is unwound in advance to detect a marking
by visual inspection or using a simple detector. When the marking is detected, the
defect portion including the flaw on the metal strip is avoided or removed based
on the information.
For example, when marking is applied matching the position
of flaw, the range of the defect portion is the portion applied by marking. When
the marking has information of kind, degree, or the like of the flaw, the determination
is given on the basis of the kind and degree of flaw which becomes a defect during
the forming-work. The phrase "the defect portion including the flaw on the metal
strip is avoided or removed based on the information" means that the defect portion
of the metal strip is cut to remove, or the feed of the metal strip to the working
stage is adjusted to pass the defect portion of the metal strip, thus controlling
the feed of the metal strip to the working stage not to work the defect portion.
The fourth aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a metal strip with
marking having, on a portion that shows an abnormality compared with a portion of
normal combination of surface reflected light components under two or more optical
conditions different from each other, the marking indicating information relating
to a flaw on the surface thereof.
The metal strip according to the fourth aspect of the Best
Mode 2 is applied with marking at a place where the above-described surface optical
analysis judged as not normal, or the position of surface flaw. Accordingly, as
described above, succeeding stage or user of the metal strip can remove and prevent
the portion of the abnormal part from entering the products.
The fifth aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a metal strip with
marking having, on a portion that gives an abnormal quantity of light for one or
both components of a specular reflection component on surface and a specular-diffuse
reflection component on plurality of micro-area reflection surfaces, the marking
indicating information relating thereto.
The metal strip according to the fifth aspect of the Best
Mode 2 has a marking at a position where the state of specular reflection or of
specular-diffuse reflection on the surface differs from that of normal portion.
The term "specular-diffuse reflection" means the plane on which plurality of micro-area
specular reflection planes on which the normal faces to a specified direction are
distributed. Similar with the above-described aspects, the treatment of abnormal
part becomes easy with the use of the metal strip.
The sixth aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a surface flaw marking
device for a metal strip, described in claim 1, which marking device comprises:
plurality of surface flaw inspection means including a surface flaw inspection means
having a light-receiving part and a signal processing section; and a marking information
preparation means that totally judges the inspection result of the surface flaw
on the metal strip and prepares the marking information relating to the metal strip
surface.
According to the sixth aspect of the Best Mode 2, the surface
flaw inspection means having the light-receiving part and the signal processing
section, in the first aspect of the Best Mode 2, is combined with an ordinary surface
inspection means that inspects abnormality of the surface property such as flaw
and stain by detecting size and shape of flaw and stain, or reflectance of the emitted
light, or the like, thus classifying the kind and degree of abnormal portions such
as surface flaw. By the procedure, total judgment is given on various kinds of abnormalities
in surface properties such as abnormal specular-diffuse reflection, thus the marking
of the information about these abnormalities is available.
The seventh aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a method for manufacturing
metal strip with marking, of the second aspect of the Best Mode 2, comprises the
step of applying judgment of presence/absence of surface flaw based on the inspection
result using plurality of surface inspection methods which include the surface flaw
inspection method that conducts the inspection on the inspection plane based on
a combination of reflected light components identified under two or more of optical
conditions different from each other.
According to the seventh aspect of the Best Mode 2, the
surface flaw inspection method combines an ordinary surface inspection means with
the surface flaw inspection method, of the second aspect of the Best Mode 2, that
conducts inspection of the inspection plane based on a combination of reflected
light components identified under two or more of optical conditions different from
each other, thus classifies the kinds and degrees of surface flaws. The "ordinary
surface flaw inspection method" means, for example, the surface inspection method
to inspect abnormality in the surface property such as flaw and contamination, by
detecting the size and shape of flaw, the reflectance of emitted light, or the like.
In this manner, total judgment is given to various kinds of surface property abnormality
including abnormal specular-diffuse reflection, thus applying marking the information
about these abnormal parts.
The eighth aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a metal strip with
marking of the fourth aspect of the Best Mode 2, comprising a metal strip with marking
having, on a portion that shows an abnormality compared with a portion of normal
combination of surface reflected light components under two or more optical conditions
different from each other, marking indicating information relating to a flaw on
the surface thereof.
According to the metal strip of the eighth aspect of the
Best Mode 2, adding to the abnormal part in the third aspect of the Best Mode 2,
marking is applied to the surface relating to the surface inspection result or the
information of various surface properties, based on the ordinary surface flaw inspection
in terms of flaw size and shape, or reflectivity of emitted light, or the like.
The "abnormal part" referred in the third aspect of the Best Mode 2 means the part
that, when reflected lights are separated under two or more of optical conditions,
as described above, the intensity or the ratio of the reflection component differs
from that of the normal part.
The ninth aspect of the Best Mode 2 is a metal strip with
marking of the fifth aspect of the Best Mode, having, about the information relating
to the metal strip surface containing a portion that gives an abnormal quantity
of light for one or both components of a specular reflection component on surface
and a specular-diffuse reflection component on plurality of micro-area reflection
surfaces, marking is applied on the surface to indicate the information relating
thereto.
According to the metal strip of the ninth aspect of the
Best Mode 2, adding to the abnormal part in the fifth aspect of the Best Mode 2,
marking is applied to the surface relating to the surface inspection result or the
information of various surface properties, based on the ordinary surface flaw inspection
in terms of flaw size and shape, or reflectivity of emitted light, or the like.
The "abnormal part" referred in the fourth aspect of the Best Mode 2 means the part
that, as described above, the state of specular reflection or specular-diffuse reflection
on the surface differs from that of normal part, and, when a reflected light is
separated under two or more of polarization conditions, the intensity or the ratio
of the reflection component differs from the normal part.
With the above-described aspects of the Best Mode 2, the
marking indicating the information about the abnormal parts of various surface flaws
including abnormality in specular-diffuse reflection or about the abnormal parts
of surface property is applied on the surface of metal strip. Accordingly, succeeding
stage or user can notice the kind and degree of the surface flaw, thus being capable
of responding to various uses and objects.
Furthermore, by applying marking on the surface of metal
strip, the metal strip can be wound without cutting-off the surface flaw portion
and other defective portions, which prevents from increasing the number of coils
by strip cutting. Since the number of coils is not increased, the coil handling
does not increase the winding work. In addition, during transfer, rewinding, and
working on the coils, the handling work is reduced because the number of coils is
not increased.
Fig. 24 shows a block diagram of an example of carrying
out the present invention. A surface flaw detection device 141 identifies a light
reflected from the metal strip 104 under two or more optical conditions different
from each other. A signal processing section 130 judges the presence/absence of
surface flaw on the inspection plane based on the combination of these reflection
components.
A tracking means 143 calculates the time that the position
of surface flaw arrives at a marking means. That is, a sheet length calculation
means 147 coverts the position of the surface flaw into the sheet length on the
basis of the rotational speed determined by a rotameter 146 attached to a transfer
roll 145, and converts the covered sheet length into the time necessary to arrive
at a marking means 144. When thus determined time comes, the tracking means 143
generates a command signal for marking to the marking means 144. On receiving the
command, the marking means 144 applies marking on the surface of the metal strip
to indicate the position by printing, drilling, or the like.
Fig. 25 shows an example of the metal strip with marking.
According to the example, the position of a marking 149 matches the position of
surface flaw 111 in longitudinal direction, and maintains a fixed position from
an edge in the width direction. Accordingly, for applying in a press line, the marking
149 can be detected at a fixed position from an edge independent of the position
of the surface flaw 111, and it is possible to give treatment such as rejection
of a certain portion including the surface flaw 111, thus preventing the production
of defective products.
Fig. 26 and Fig. 27 show an example of the surface flaw
detection device 141. As a linear diffusion light source 122, a transparent light-conductive
rod applied with a diffuse reflection paint on a part thereof is used. A light emitted
from a metal-halide light source is entered to both ends of the transparent light-conductive
rod. The light coming out from the light-conductive rod of a light source 122 in
diffusional mode passes through a cylindrical lens 125 and a sheet polarizer 126
with 45° polarization, then is conversed in a line with 60° of incident
angle to enter over the whole width of a steel sheet 121. A reflected light 127
is further reflected by a mirror 128 located in regular reflection direction to
the steel sheet, and enters camera units 129a through d, structuring the light-receiving
part.
These camera units 129a through d are arranged in the sheet
width direction, as shown in Fig. 28. With that positioned mirror 128, the facility
can be designed in compact size. When the mirror 128 is positioned at an adequately
distant from the steel sheet 121, the mirror 128 gives a region that comes outside
of the view-field of all cameras, as shown in Fig. 28, thus the mirror can be structured
with divided segments. The divided mirror construction decreases the fabrication
cost.
Each of the camera units 129a through d in the light-receiving
part comprises three linear-array cameras 132a through c, having respective analyzers
133a through c with respective analyzing angles of -45° , 45° , and 90°
in front of each lens, while the light axes are in parallel to each other. The offset
of the view-field of these three cameras is compensated by a signal processing section
130. With the light axes kept in parallel to each other, respective individual pixels
of the three cameras 132a through c agree one-to-one to each other within the same
view-field. Compared with the division of a single reflected light using a beam
splitter, the method avoids loss of light quantity, and efficient measurement is
available.
The light-receiving range A of individual light-receiving
cameras 132a through c in each of camera units 129a through 129d overlaps in a part
with the light-receiving range A of the corresponding light-receiving cameras 132a
through c in each of other adjacent camera units 129a through d, as shown in Fig.
28. In other words, the light reflected from arbitrary position in the width direction
on the steel sheet 121 is received by at least one of the three kinds of light-receiving
cameras 132a through c in each of the camera units 129a through d.
Instead of the linear array camera, the light-receiving
part may use a two-dimensional CCD camera. In addition, the light-emitting part
may use a fluorescent lamp as the linear diffusional light source 122. Furthermore,
a fiber light source may be applied by arranging the light-emitting end of a bundle
of fibers in a line. That is, since the light emitted from each fiber has sufficiently
broad angle responding to the fiber N/A, the fiber light source arranged with the
fibers substantially functions as a diffusional light source.
The detail of the arrangement of plurality of cameras is
described referring to Fig. 28. The plurality of camera units 129a through d are
arranged at a fixed spacing therebetween. Each of the camera units 129a through
d comprises three cameras 132a through c which receives light under different conditions
(polarization of -45° , 45° , and 90° , respectively). These cameras
are arranged in parallel to each other at a fixed spacing therebetween. Accordingly,
the view-field of each camera offsets by the amount of camera distance.
The sequent order of camera arrangement in every camera
unit is the same thereeach. For example, 45° , 90° , and -45° from
left to right viewed from front side thereof. The measuring range (effective range),
for example, is defined as the range that is observed under three kinds of optical
conditions. And, a range where observation can be available only under one condition
or only under two conditions, (range on both end portions), is concluded as ineffective,
and not to be used. The camera spacing and the unit spacing are determined as a
value that allows the maximum width of steel sheet to enter the measurement range
(effective range).
The three cameras in each unit are not adjusted to provide
the same view-field. After each camera determined the flaw candidate region, each
camera is adjusted in terms of each flaw candidate region. As described above, since
the view-field of each camera is offset from each other, in some cases not all of
these three cameras can have a view-field for a certain flaw candidate region, (or
three optical conditions cannot be satisfied). In these cases, the three optical
conditions are satisfied using the results of the cameras of adjacent unit. The
concept is applicable not only for receiving light of three polarized lights, but
also for observing under arbitrary two or more conditions by dividing the total
width of inspection body into plurality of view-fields.
Hereinafter the plurality of light-receiving part and the
signal processing section are referred to as the flaw inspection means. Then, the
surface flaw marking device shown in Fig. 24 is redrawn to Fig. 30. The flaw inspection
means 140 has the light-receiving parts 132a through c, (corresponding to the cameras
in Fig. 28 and Fig. 29), and the signal processing section 130. The signal processing
section 130 conducts signal processing to detect the above-described diffusion specular
reflection component based on the intensity of the reflected light which is identified
under different optical conditions, thus giving judgment of presence/absence of
abnormal part. After that, similar with Fig. 24, the position of surface flaw is
calculated using the tracking means 143 and the sheet length calculation means 147,
and applies marking to the position of abnormal part using the marking means 144.
As for the signal processing section, Fig. 31 shows an
example of block diagram. The light intensity signals a through c coming from respective
light-receiving cameras 132a through c enter respective average value decimation
parts 134a through c, thus calculating the average value. After that, based on the
pulse signals entered along with the movement by a certain distance in the longitudinal
direction of the inspection body, the signal for a single line in the width direction
is generated. By the decimation treatment, the resolution in the longitudinal direction
is maintained to a fixed value. In addition, if the frequency of calculation of
average value is regulated so as the moving distance in the longitudinal direction
of the inspection body to not come outside of the view-field of the light-receiving
cameras 132a through c, overlooking can be avoided.
Then, pre-treatment sections 135a through c compensate
the irregular luminance relating to signals. The irregular luminance referred herein
includes that caused from optical system, that caused from reflectivity of inspection
sheet. The pre-treatment sections 135a through c detect the edge position of the
steel strip and apply treatment not to mis-recognize sudden changes in signal at
edge part as a flaw.
The signals completed the pre-treatment enter binary calculation
sections 136a through c, where flaw candidate points are identified by comparing
with preliminarily set threshold value. The identified flaw candidate points enter
characteristic quantity calculation sections 137a through c, where the signal processing
for flaw judgment is conducted. In the case that the flaw candida