Abstract

Digital image correlation (DIC) is a revolutionary image-based optical technique for full-field deformation measurement. In last forty years, DIC has evolved to the most practical, popular, and thriving photo-mechanics technique in the experimental mechanics community, and it has found numerous successful applications in various fields including but not limited to solid mechanics, material science, biomechanics, aerospace, civil engineering. Basically, the continuous development of DIC techniques benefits from the contributions from two aspects: the introduction of novel/improved imaging techniques and the development of new/refined correlation algorithms. This presentation focuses on some recent advances we made on novel DIC techniques through the adoption of various new/improved imaging techniques. Specifically, we will first show the new possibilities in DIC by controlled use of the illumination light and reflected/excitation light, which enlightens us to develop blue-light/ultraviolet active imaging DIC, time-gated active imaging DIC, fluorescent DIC. Secondly, we will present the enriched information from new optical arrangements, which leads to the flexible and easy-to-use single-camera stereo-DIC and mirror-assisted multi-view panoramic/dual-surface deformation measurement techniques. These “magic imaging techniques” enrich the input information available for DIC, and consequently, greatly extend the accuracy, robustness, and applicability of DIC to various challenging measurement tasks in a simple way.

About the Speaker

Dr. Bin Chen finished his bachelor study in 2015 in Beihang University, China with double degree: aircraft design and engineering, and mathematics. In 2021, he got his Ph.D degree in solid mechanics from Prof. Bing Pan’s group, Beihang University. He is currently a postdoc researcher in KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden. He is the author of over 20 peer-reviewed papers. His research focuses mainly on the methodology development and applications of advanced experimental mechanics techniques, such as fundamental digital image correlation (DIC) algorithms, novel DIC setups, finite element model updating, etc.. Multi-physics study on advanced biocomposites is also his research interest.

By Dr. Bin Chen

  • Institute of Solid Mechanics, Beihang University, Beijing, China
  • Wallenberg Wood Science Center, Department of Fiber and Polymer Technology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
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