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Article
Feasibility of Automatic Detection of Surface Cracks in Wind Turbine Blades
Wind Engineering
  • Huiyi Zhang, Iowa State University
  • John K. Jackman, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2014
DOI
10.1260/0309-524X.38.6.575
Abstract

Cracks on the surface of a wind turbine blade (WTB) can be a sign of current or future damage to the underlying structure depending on the severity of the cracks. We investigated a new method for automatically detecting surface cracks based on image processing techniques. The method was evaluated by varying crack parameters and our method parameters. Identifying and quantifying cracks as small as hair thickness is possible with this technique. Orientation of a crack did not affect the results. The effects of uneven background illumination (present in images captured on-tower) were significantly reduced by optimizing the threshold value for the Canny edge detection method. The accuracy of quantifying a crack was increased by processing an image with both the Sobel and Canny edge detection methods and then combining the results to reduce background noise.

Comments

This article is from Wind Engineering 38 (2014): 575, doi: 10.1260/0309-524X.38.6.575. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Multi-Science Publishing
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Huiyi Zhang and John K. Jackman. "Feasibility of Automatic Detection of Surface Cracks in Wind Turbine Blades" Wind Engineering Vol. 38 Iss. 6 (2014) p. 575 - 586
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john_jackman/10/