Device and method for counting and detecting flat products

The device (10) according to the invention for counting and detecting flat products (14) comprises a light source (16) having an illumination beam profile (24), an optical sensor (18) having a detection beam profile (30) and an evaluation unit (20) connected to the optical sensor (18). The detection beam profile (30) overlaps the illumination beam profile (24) in a detection region in which a section (33) of a surface profile of the flat products (14) is illuminated, the section being at least partially delimited by the illumination beam profile (24). A detection signal generated by the optical sensor (18) is fed to the evaluation unit (20), which determines therefrom the number of flat products located in the detection region.

The present invention relates to a device for counting and detecting flat products in accordance with the preamble of claim1, and to a method for counting and detecting flat products as claimed in claim9.

Devices for counting flat products (also termed counting devices, for short) are generally known technical aids for determining the number of flat products. Appropriate error correction processes can be triggered given the establishment of a deviation between an expected number of flat products and the number determined by the counting device. Optical sensors are often used in counting devices in order to detect the number of flat products without contact and quickly.

Counting devices are disclosed, for example, in EP-A-1 661 833 and WO 2007/012206. In the case of a device described in the last mentioned document, flat products transported in clamps are provided with identification information which is subjected to optoelectronic monitoring during the movement of the flat product past a monitoring point. In the process, images of the identification information are recorded by means of an image recording unit. The recorded images are processed electronically and control signals for downstream processing devices are generated as a result of this processing.

In the case of the known device, the flat products must additionally be provided with identification information that is then to be detected in an image recording process often dependent on the ambient illumination. It is impossible in this way, or possible only with relatively large outlay, to count products bearing completely against one another in a flat fashion.

It is an object of the present invention to provide a counting device and a method for counting flat products, which device and/or which method permit the number of flat products to be determined with certainty and reliably and with the lowest possible outlay.

This object is achieved by a device for counting and detecting flat products as claimed in claim1, and by a method for counting and detecting flat products as claimed in claim9. Particularly preferred embodiments are provided with the features set forth in the dependent claims.

The inventive device for counting and detecting flat products, in particular printed products, has a light source, an optical sensor and an evaluation unit connected to the optical sensor. The light source, a laser in a preferred embodiment, has a beam shaping optics, for example in the form of optical lenses, in particular of cylindrical lenses, of diaphragms or diffractive optical elements by means of which a predetermined illumination beam profile is “impressed” on the emitted light. Objects located inside the illumination beam profile are irradiated with light. Via the beam shaping optics, the light source can be assigned an optical axis that extends rectilinearly in space starting from the light source. In the meaning of this application, this optical axis simultaneously forms a central beam axis of the illumination beam profile and is also denoted below as illumination beam axis.

The optical sensor, for example in a preferred embodiment an electronic camera with a plurality of photosensitive elements, is equipped with a detection optics for forming a detection beam profile. A camera objective, for example, is used as detection optics. The detection beam profile comprises all the locations from which the optical sensor can detect light. When use is made of an optical sensor with a plurality of photosensitive elements, as in the case of the camera already mentioned, the detection beam profile of the optical sensor is composed of the individual detection beam profiles assigned to each individual photosensitive element. The detection beam profile of the optical sensor could, for example, be rendered visible by replacing the photosensitive elements by small light sources. By analogy with the light source, it is also possible to assign an optical axis to the optical sensor via the detection optics. In the meaning of this application, this optical axis simultaneously forms a central beam axis of the detection beam profile and is also denoted below as detection beam axis.

According to the invention, the illumination beam profile and the detection beam profile are aligned angularly offset from one another in such a way that they overlap in a detection region. In a preferred embodiment, the illumination beam axis and the detection beam axis even lie in a plane. In order to count the flat products, at least one section of the surface profile of the flat products must be located in the detection region. According to the invention, this section is at least partially delimited by the illumination beam profile and can be detected by means of the optical sensor. The optical sensor can generate a detection signal with information relating to the detected section of the surface profile. The detection signal is passed on to a downstream evaluation unit. The evaluation unit, preferably a computer, can determine from the detection signal the number of the flat products that were located in the detection region at the instant of the detection.

In a particularly preferred embodiment, the device for counting and detecting flat products is assigned a transport device. The flat products moved through the detection region along a transport direction with the aid of the transport device are preferably counted continuously in order, for example, to monitor their completeness. In this case, the illumination beam axis is preferably aligned in a fashion inclined to the surface normal of the, for example, flat products resting on a conveyor belt or transported by means of clamps or grippers. By means of the beam shaping optics, the illumination beam profile in the detection region is preferably formed as a substantially rectilinear region, in particular as a so-called illumination line, which illuminates the section of the surface profile of the flat products in a defined way. The illumination line preferably extends in a fashion substantially parallel to the transport direction. Located directly above the flat products, with its detection beam axis slightly inclined to the surface normal thereof, and in a fashion substantially at right angles to the transport direction, is a camera serving as optical sensor. The detection beam profile is formed by the detection optics in such a way that an image of the illumination line projected by the light source onto the surface of the flat products is produced on the photosensitive elements of the camera.

Particularly whenever an edge region of a flat product is located in the detection region, because of the differences in height in the surface profile “to be scanned” that are caused by the thickness and the arrangement of the flat products, an image, recorded by the camera, of the illumination line projected onto this uneven “projection surface” will reproduce the curves and offsets thereof. This image information is passed on in the detection signal to an electrically connected computer. An image processing program that can be executed on the computer can then determine the number of the flat products that were located in the detection region from the image of the projected illumination line with the aid of the curve and offsets. In order for the image information to be influenced as little as possible by movement artifacts owing to the transport of the flat products during the image recording, the recording and/or detection time is short by comparison with the time within which a flat product has moved by the amount of its thickness.

The number of the flat products located in the detection region is determined solely from the detected surface profile of the flat products. It is not necessary to apply identification information to the flat products. An adequate contrast in image recordings results from the fact that the light in the illumination beam profile, particularly inside the illumination line in the detection region, has been produced with a comparatively high intensity by the light source as compared with the ambient light, and so a reliable identification of the irradiated surface profile is ensured. Given the use of a substantially monochromatic light source, for example a laser, the optical sensor can, moreover, be equipped with appropriate filter elements in order additionally to reduce the interference from ambient light.

A particularly preferred embodiment of the inventive device for counting and detecting flat products (also called counting device below, for short)10is illustrated schematically inFIG. 1with a transport device12assigned to it. The counting device10for flat products14, in particular printed products, such as newspapers, magazines, brochures, etc., transported by means of the transport device12, has a light source16, an optical sensor18and an evaluation unit20connected to the optical sensor18.

Use can preferably be made as light source16of lasers, in particular laser diodes or gas lasers, LEDs, but also of classic radiation sources such as incandescent or halogen lamps. The light source16is equipped with a beam shaping optics22that provides a predetermined illumination beam profile24and defines an optical axis of the light source16.

In the case of the embodiment shown inFIG. 1, the illumination beam profile24of the light source16arranged to the side of a transport direction T, along which the flat products14are being transported, has a cross section (also beam cross section) formed substantially in a fashion delimited at least partially rectilinearly, substantially linearly, preferably substantially rectilinearly. The beam cross section is measured here at right angles to the optical axis of the light source16, also called the illumination beam axis26below. The linear, preferably rectilinear beam cross section is also denoted as the illumination line. The illumination beam profile24with its linear beam cross section extends in this case substantially in a plane.

Elongated, substantially linear beam cross sections can be produced with the aid of known beam shaping optics22that are, for example, equipped with cylindrical lenses, diaphragms or diffractive elements. The illumination beam profile24preferably has a higher light intensity than the ambient light, at least in a detection region defined below. In addition, the light source16provides preferably substantially monochromatic light such as is produced, for example, by lasers, monochromatic LEDs or classic light sources equipped with a filter. It is possible in this way for the light produced by the light source16, scattered on the flat products14and detected by the optical sensor18to be distinguished from ambient light on the basis both of its intensity and of its spectral region, and thus to ensure a reliable detection and counting of the flat products14.

In the case of the described embodiments of the inventive counting device10, use is made as optical sensor18of an electronic camera with a plurality of photosensitive elements, for example a CCD camera. The optical sensor18is equipped with a detection optics28in the form of a camera objective, which detection optics provide a detection beam profile30and define an optical axis of the optical sensor18. The optical axis of the optical sensor18is denoted below as detection beam axis32. The optical sensor18is arranged above the flat products14such that an image of the illumination line projected onto the flat products14is produced by means of the detection optics28on the photosensitive elements of the optical sensor18. That is to say, the illumination beam profile24of the light source16, and the detection beam profile30of the optical sensor18are aligned with one another with an angular offset such that they overlap in a detection region in which at least one section33of a surface profile of the flat products14is located for counting. The section33, located in the detection region and illuminated thereby, of the surface profile is at least partially delimited by the predetermined illumination beam profile24.

A scattering angle α that is enclosed by the illumination beam axis26and the detection beam axis32, is preferably between 10° and less than 180°, with particular preference between 30° and 45°. As shown in the case of the arrangement inFIG. 1andFIG. 3, to this end the light source16can be arranged to the side with reference to the flat products14in such a way that the longitudinal axis of the illumination line is aligned substantially parallel to the transport direction T. In the case of the detection operation for counting the flat products14, the illumination line preferably extends over an edge region of the flat products14, preferably, in the case of folded flat products14, over the fold34thereof.

The optical sensor18can be arranged both above and to the side of the flat products14. The positions shown for the light source16and optical sensor18can also be interchanged. In the case of an arrangement above the flat products14, the detection beam axis32or the illumination beam axis26is preferably aligned in a fashion inclined to the surface normals of the flat products14, and at right angles to the transport direction T.

The basic principle of the counting device10consists in the fact that the substantially rectilinear illumination line, whose form is known, is projected onto a section33, which is uneven owing to the thickness and/or arrangement of the flat products14, of the surface profile of the flat products14, and in the case of an angularly offset detection the changes in height of the surface profile of the flat products can be established as curves and offsets in the image of the illumination line as acquired by the optical sensor18.

The illuminated section33, detected by the optical sensor18, of the surface profile of the flat products14is present as recorded image in the case of the embodiment under consideration, where a camera is used as optical sensor18. The image information is passed on to the evaluation unit20, for example a computer, via an electric connection by means of a detection signal.

Use is made in the evaluation unit20of a suitable computer program, in particular an image processing program, in order to extract from the detection signal the relevant information relating to the detected section33of the surface profile, and to assign curves, edges and offsets that have been found to a specific number of flat products14. In extracting the relevant information relating to the surface profile, known discrimination methods can be used to filter out interfering additional information still present in the images, for example characters and images, visible owing to the ambient light, on the surface of the flat products14.

A surface profile scanned by means of the inventive counting device is illustrated inFIGS. 1 and 3by dashed lines that are provided with the reference symbol A. The flat products14are transported inFIG. 1with the aid of transport means36, belonging to the counting device10, in the form of clamps. Here, one transport means36each respectively holds two flat products14in such a way that a flat product14leading in the transport direction T reaches further into a clamp mouth of the transport means36than does a trailing further flat product14resting partially on the leading flat product14.

As likewise shown inFIG. 1, the respective transport means36themselves also can be detected by a further sensor38, for example in the form of a light barrier. During the passage of a transport means36through a monitoring region of the further sensor38, the further sensor38generates a trigger signal and passes it on to the evaluation unit20. The number of flat products14detected at a specific instant can now respectively be assigned to a specific transport means36by taking account of the transport speed of the transport means36. Through a comparison with a prescribed desired number of flat products that should be held by a transport means36, it can now be established whether faults have occurred in the loading of the transport means36or in the transport so that, for example, an appropriate control signal can be triggered at a downstream processing device.

The further sensor38used for the assignment is likewise shown inFIG. 2. As seen in the transport direction T, it can be arranged both ahead of the counting device10and behind the counting device10. In the embodiment of the transport device12shown inFIG. 2, two flat products14are each held by transport means36designed as grippers in a fashion lying completely over one another.

A further embodiment of a transport device12with a conveyor belt as transport means36is illustrated inFIG. 3. The flat products14are transported through the detection region of the counting device10with their fold34leading in the transport direction T in an imbricated formation resting on the transport means36. As already previously mentioned, in this illustration the surface profile A of the flat products14that is scanned by the counting device10is illustrated by a dashed line.

The inventive counting device10can also be used to count individual flat products14or ones partially overlapping one another, which, as shown inFIG. 4, are transported in a fashion suspended from transport means36designed as grippers.

It proved possible for the abstracted image recordings shown inFIGS. 5ato5eto be recorded in the case of an arrangement of the optical sensor18in such a way that its detection beam axis32is aligned substantially along the longitudinal axis of the fold34of the flat products14. Here, the illumination beam axis26of the light source16is directed from above onto the free end region of the fold34on the camera side, and advantageously runs at least virtually parallel to the product sides40of the flat products14. The illumination beam axis26and the detection beam axis32also define here a plane that extends substantially at right angles to the transport direction T.

For the purpose of explanation, in addition to the sections33, illuminated by the illumination line, of the surface profiles that are illustrated as dashed lines,FIGS. 5ato5ealso illustrate the side views of the respectively scanned flat products14in the abstracted image recordings. It is shown with the aid of these exemplary abstracted image recordings that flat products14transported in a suspended fashion by means of grippers or clamps can be transported and counted individually (FIG. 5a), in pairwise fashion (FIGS. 5b,5cand5e) or else in a multiple arrangement, for example three at a time (FIG. 5d).

As shown inFIGS. 5band5e, it is possible in this case to detect and count both when flat products14are arranged offset from one another (FIG. 5candFIG. 5d), and when flat products14bear completely against one another. This holds true both for multi-page, folded flat products14, as shown inFIGS. 5ato5d, and for single-layer, unfolded flat products14, as illustrated inFIG. 5e. In order to increase the reliability of the counting in the case of a plurality of single-layer, unfolded flat products14held jointly in a clamp or a gripper, said products can, for example, be at least partially spread apart by blowing in air, and thus be spaced apart from one another.

In the case of continuous counting of flat products14transported continuously through the detection region by means of the assigned transport device12, it is preferred in the interests of the optical quality of the image recordings and thus of the reliability of the counting that the camera functioning as optical sensor18record image recordings within a time that be shorter, preferably very much shorter, than the time within which a flat product14moves in the detection region by the amount of its thickness.

Furthermore, the reliability of the counting can be increased when, as already mentioned previously, the light intensity of the light source16is enlarged by comparison with the ambient light, or a filter that is tuned to the wavelength of the light emitted by the light source16is used in the optical sensor18. In addition, by enlarging the angle α between the illumination beam axis26and the detection beam axis32it is possible to enlarge the curves, edges and offsets in the images of the illuminated surface sections33.

The inventive counting device10and the inventive method for counting flat products14enable flat products14to be counted in a way that can be implemented with a moderate outlay on apparatus, is reliable and suitable for the most varied transport formations of flat products14. The flat products14can be transported during the detection and counting, the absolute value of the transport speed being bounded by the shortest possible recording time of the optical sensor18during which counting can be conducted reliably despite movement artifacts resulting in the image recordings from the transport.

Otherwise, both the illumination beam profile24and the detection beam profile30can be adapted to the specific requirements. Thus, it is possible for a plurality of illumination lines, or else temporarily varying patterns of illumination lines, to be projected onto the surface of the flat products14and be detected by means of the optical sensor18. It is important here that the surface section33, located in the detection region, of the flat products14be bounded at least partially by the predetermined illumination beam profile24.

In addition to the counting of flat products14and, therefore, the determination of defective numbers, it is also possible to detect deformed and/or incomplete products14with the aid of the image, detected by the optical sensor18, of the illumination line. By comparison with expected changes in height in the surface profile, these products14have deviations from which it is possible to draw conclusions concerning a deformation and/or incompleteness. To this end, comparative operations between detected and expected signals are, for example, executed in the evaluation unit20. In the case when the deviations lie outside prescribed tolerance ranges, the evaluation unit20generates signals that trigger predetermined error processing procedures. In particular, a signal for ejecting deformed and/or incomplete products14can be passed on to a processing device downstream of the counting device10in the transport direction T. Of course, it is also possible in this way to detect products14of various types, for example on the basis of their different thickness, and subsequently to sort them, for example by separating the product stream.