Polymers (Aug 2022)

Mask-Point: Automatic 3D Surface Defects Detection Network for Fiber-Reinforced Resin Matrix Composites

  • Helin Li,
  • Bin Lin,
  • Chen Zhang,
  • Liang Xu,
  • Tianyi Sui,
  • Yang Wang,
  • Xinquan Hao,
  • Deyu Lou,
  • Hongyu Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14163390
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 16
p. 3390

Abstract

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Surface defects of fiber-reinforced resin matrix composites (FRRMCs) adversely affect their appearance and performance. To accurately and efficiently detect the three-dimensional (3D) surface defects of FRRMCs, a novel lightweight and two-stage semantic segmentation network, i.e., Mask-Point, is proposed. Stage 1 of Mask-Point is the multi-head 3D region proposal extractors (RPEs), generating several 3D regions of interest (ROIs). Stage 2 is the 3D aggregation stage composed of the shared classifier, shared filter, and non-maximum suppression (NMS). The two stages work together to detect the surface defects. To evaluate the performance of Mask-Point, a new 3D surface defects dataset of FRRMCs containing about 120 million points is produced. Training and test experiments show that the accuracy and the mean intersection of union (mIoU) increase as the number of different 3D RPEs increases in Stage 1, but the inference speed becomes slower when the number of different 3D RPEs increases. The best accuracy, mIoU, and inference speed of the Mask-Point model could reach 0.9997, 0.9402, and 320,000 points/s, respectively. Moreover, comparison experiments also show that Mask-Point offers relatively the best segmentation performance compared with several other typical 3D semantic segmentation networks. The mIoU of Mask-Point is about 30% ahead of the sub-optimal 3D semantic segmentation network PointNet. In addition, a distributed surface defects detection system based on Mask-Point is developed. The system is applied to scan real FRRMC products and detect their surface defects, and it achieves the relatively best detection performance in competition with skilled human workers. The above experiments demonstrate that the proposed Mask-Point could accurately and efficiently detect 3D surface defects of FRRMCs, and the Mask-Point also provides a new potential solution for the 3D surface defects detection of other similar materials

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