Laser-range Scanner
Principle
The DLR Laser Range Scanner is a device for the exploration of
three-dimensional environments. It uses the principle of laser
triangulation, as shown in Figure 1. A laser beam is send from a source
and will be dispersed diffusely on the scanned object's surface. Some of
the reflected rays strike a lens which focuses the light onto a sensitive
area of a position sensitive detector (PSD). Thereby the position of the
focal point on the PSD in X-dimension changes with the angle of incidence
on the lens which on the other hand depends on the distance between sensor
and the scanned objects surface.
This method measures only one range value at once. The system has been
improved by embedding the triangulation modul in a rotating device. Thus a
2D-slice of the environment can be measured at once.
Design
The triangulation principle has been realized in a miniaturised
range-scanner device. It consists of a rotating scanhead, a motor, an
indexing system and a controller box. The figure shows the device, for the
weight and the metrics see the Data Sheet.
Scanhead
The scanhead contains all parts that are necessary for triangulating
and computing the range values. These are the laser diode module, the
receiveroptics with an achromat and the position sensitive device (PSD),
and the complete elcetronics for computing and transmitting the sensor
data.
The DLR laser diode module used in the scanhead emits a laser beam of
670 nm wavelength. While commercial modules show deviations of up to 7°
between the laser beam and the axis of the housing, the DLR module can be
adjusted precisely. With its dimensions of Ø9 x 11.5 mm it generates a
laser beam of Ø1.2 mm and 2 mrad divergence. The deviation of the laser
beam and the module's housing is reduced to a value well under 0.1°. The
laser diode being electricaly isolated, is thermicaly well coupled to the
module's housing. The scanhead serves as a heatsink in order to increase
the on-time of the laser. The PSD-signal is processed by the electronics
of the scanhead. For the distance measurements 12 Bit resolution are
achieved, whereas the intensity of the sensed light spot is transmitted by
a 4 Bit signal (logarithmically).
Splitted into three boards, the scanhead's electronics also controls
the laser diode, the data transmission and the contact-free, inductive
power supply. The bi-directional data transmission connecting the rotating
scanhead and the chassis is realized by optical communication components
of ELCOS. With these IR emitting/receiving SMDs a data transfer rate of 1
MBit/s can be achieved. The contact-free data transmission guarantees
wear-free and robust operation of the system. The power supply of the
scanhead is also realized contact-free. Two transformer coils embedded in
ferrite cores are integrated vis-a-vis in the scanhead and the scanner's
chassis respectively. The air gap between the two cores can be adjusted to
a value well below 0.1 mm. The assembled power and data transmission unit
is shown.
Motor
The Scanhead is driven by a modified stepper motor of PORTESCAP. By
using a stepper motor, the speed can be regulated very fast by referencing
a optical index with the incremental rotation angle of the motor control.
At the startup the motor speed is increased along a ramp function to 1500
rpm (25Hz), a speed where the measurement can be synchronized with
external video clock. The motor is supplied with 24 Volt, whereas the
electronics run at 5 Volt(DC).
Indexing
After motor startup, the scanhead rotates with a constant speed. An
optical double-mirror which is integrated into the scanhead serves as a
reference and reflects the light of a IR-LED onto a differential photo
diode (both chassis-mounted). The actual rotation angle is calculated from
the durations of the last and actual rotation.
Controller Box
The controller box contains the motor driver ,the CAN-interface and a
micro controller which provides basic controls (e.g. on/off). The range
data and the rotation angle are correlated by the controller and
transmitted via CAN. In addition the active scan angle is adjusted. In the
range of the maximum scan angle of 135°, an arbitrary segment can be
defined where the scanner performs measurements. Measurements and laser
diode are switched off in the other segements. This feature is important
for safety reasons and for the reliability of measurements in multi-sensor
systems (e.g. additional video cameras). The field of view (FoV) can be
focussed on interesting areas. Furthermore the controller has an BNC-port
to synchronize the scan cycles with an external video source.
Datasheet
Height |
H =42.0 mm |
Width |
B =32.0 mm |
Length |
L =75.0 mm |
Weight |
G=180g |
Min. Scan Distance |
DMIN=53 mm |
Max. Scan Distance |
DMAX=300 mm |
Max. Scan Angle |
ßMAX=270° |
Scan Angle Resolution |
? ß=0.9° |
Sampling Rate |
f=10kHz |
Interface |
CAN Bus |