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Corrélation d'images numériques: Stratégies de régularisation et enjeux d'identification

Corrélation d'images numériques: Stratégies de régularisation et enjeux d'identification. Stéphane Roux, François Hild LMT, ENS-Cachan. Atelier « Problèmes Inverses », Nancy, 7 Juin 2011. Image 2. Image 1. Relative displacement field ?. Image 2. Image 1. Deformed image. Reference image.

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Corrélation d'images numériques: Stratégies de régularisation et enjeux d'identification

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  1. Corrélation d'images numériques: Stratégies de régularisation et enjeux d'identification Stéphane Roux, François Hild LMT, ENS-Cachan Atelier « Problèmes Inverses », Nancy, 7 Juin 2011

  2. Image 2 Image 1 Relative displacement field ?

  3. Image 2 Image 1

  4. Deformed image Reference image Relative displacement field ?

  5. Displacement field Uy Deformed image Reference image

  6. Displacement fields are nice, but … Can we get more ?

  7. Stress intensity Factor, Crack geometry Image 2 Image 1

  8. Damage field Deformed image Reference image

  9. Constitutive law Deformed image Reference image

  10. Outline • A brief introduction to “global DIC” • Mechanical identification • Regularization

  11. From texture to displacements DIC in a nutshell

  12. Digital Image Correlation • Images (gray levels) indexed by time t • Texture conservation (passive tracers) (hypothesisthatcanberelaxed if needed)

  13. Problem to solve • Weak formulation: Minimize wrt u where the residual is Provides a spatiallyresolvedqualityfield of the proposed solution

  14. Solution • The problemisintrinsicallyill-posed and highly non-linear ! • A specificstrategy has to bedesigned for accurate and robust convergence • It impacts on the choice of the kinematic basis

  15. Global DIC • Decompose the soughtdisplacementfield on a suited basis providing a naturalregularization • Yn: • FEM shapefunction, X-FEM, … • Elastic solutions, Numericallycomputedfields, Beamkinematics…

  16. The benefit of C0 regularization ZOI size / Element size (pixels) Key parameter = (# pixels)/(# dof)

  17. Example: T3-DIC* Pixel size = 67 mm *[Leclerc et al., 2009, LNCS 5496 pp. 161-171]

  18. Example: T3-DIC

  19. Example: T3-DIC Ux (pixel) 0.46 0.28 0.11 -0.06 -0.23 [H. Leclerc]

  20. Example: T3-DIC Uy (pixel) 0.54 0.35 0.15 -0.04 -0.24

  21. Example: T3-DIC

  22. Example: T3-DIC Residual 28 21 14 7 0 Mean residual = 3 % dynamic range

  23. Identification

  24. The real challenge • For solidmechanics application, the actual challenge is • not to get the displacementfields, but rather • to identify the constitutive law (stress/strain relation) • The simplest case islinearelasticity

  25. Plane elasticity • A potential formulation canbeadoptedshowingthat the displacementfieldcanbewrittengenerically in the complex plane as whereF and Y are arbitraryholomorphicfunctions • mis the shearmodulus, • kis a dimensionlesselastic constant (related to Poisson’s ratio)

  26. Plane elasticity • It suffices to introduce a basis of test functions for F(z) and Y(z) and considerthat and are independent • Direct evaluation of 1/m and k/m

  27. Validatedexamples • Brazilian compression test • Cracks

  28. Example 1:Brazilian compression test • Integrated approach: decomposition of the displacement field over 4 fields (rigid body motion + analytical solution)

  29. Integrated approach

  30. Integrated approach Identifiedproperties for the polycarbonate m 880 MPa n 0.45 In good agreement withliterature data

  31. Need for coupling to modelling • Elasticity (or incremental non-linearbehavior) • FEM

  32. Dialog DIC/FEA modeling • Local elastic identification R. Gras, Comptest2011

  33. T4-DVC

  34. More generalframework • Inhomogeneouselasticsolid • Non-linear constitutive law • Plasticity • Damage • Non-linearelasticity

  35. Regularization

  36. Mechanical regularization • The displacement field should be such that or in FEM language for interior nodes. This can be used to help DIC

  37. Integrated DIC • Reach smaller scale H. Leclerc et al., Lect. Notes Comp. Sci. 5496, 161-171, (2009)

  38. Tikhonov type regularization • Minimization of • Regularizationisneutralwith respect to rigid body motion • How should one chooseA ?

  39. Spectral analysis • For a test displacementfield Regularization log(||.||2) DIC Cross-over scale log(k)

  40. Boundaries • The equilibrium gap functionalisoperativeonly for interiornodes or free boundaries • Atboundaries, information maybelacking • Introduce an additionalregularizationterm(e.g. ) • Extendelasticbehavioroutside the DIC analyzedregion

  41. Regularizationat voxel scale • An example in 3D for a modest size 243 voxels

  42. Voxel scale DVC 1 voxel  5.1 µm Displacementnorm (voxels) Vertical displacement (voxels) H. Leclerc et al., Exp. Mech. (2011)

  43. Non-linear identification

  44. Identification • As a post-processingstep, a damage lawcanbeidentifiedfrom the minimization ofwhereU has been measured and Kisknown • Manyunknowns !

  45. Validation < 5.3 %

  46. Constitutive law State potential (isotropic damage) State laws Dissipated power Thermodynamic consistency Growth law ~ equivalentscalarstrain

  47. Use of a homogeneous constitutive law • Postulating a homogeneouslaw, damage is no longer a twodimensionalfield of unknowns, but a (non-linear) function of the maximum strainexperienced by an element of volume.

  48. Damage growth law • Identifiedform or truncation

  49. Identified damage image 10

  50. Identified damage image 11 log10(1-D)

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