Real time measurement system for seed cotton or lint

Image analysis – Applications – Textiles or clothing

Reexamination Certificate

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C382S224000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06567538

ABSTRACT:

This invention relates to computer/machine vision. More specifically, a system of machine vision is disclosed for the real time measurement of lint and trash being processed in a cotton gin. The system provides the ability to quantify the amount of trash and seed cotton/lint without detaining or impeding the flow through the cotton gin at any time.
The file of this patent application includes at least one color drawing. Copies of this patent application with the color drawing(s) will be provided by the Patent and Trademark Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Modem cotton gins have the purpose of extracting lint (the cotton) from trash and seeds- usually the sticks, leaves and burrs that are entrained with the cotton. These modem gins include many individual machine components that are operated sequentially to form the gin processing line. The components are often specific in the types of trash that they remove. Stick machines, inclined cleaners, and especially lint cleaners process the lint to a purity where it can be baled and delivered to spinning mills.
Unfortunately, the cotton processed by such machines varies widely in trash content. For example, stripper harvested cotton has trash content in the range of 30% by total weight of the seed cotton processed, where if the same cotton is stripper harvested with the addition of a field cleaner on the harvester, it may come in with only a 15% trash weight. Even larger trash fluctuations can be observed in regions that are running both stripper and picker harvesters, as the picker harvesters will only have a trash contents in the range of 5%. Due to these different harvesting techniques, the same gin can “see” and process both types of cotton. As a consequence, and depending upon the trash content of the cotton processed, various components of a cotton gin are either left in the serial process combination, or are taken out of the serial process combination. When most cotton gins no longer require their individual components to be configured in series to process cotton for the optimum removal of trash and seed from the lint, the same cotton gin components can also be configured to operate parallel processing lines in order to increase throughput. It is therefore highly desirable to have the cotton gin immediately responsive in its configuration to the trash level of the lint being processed.
It is to be understood that it is customary to over clean the cotton resulting in an economic loss of the valuable line that gets removed at each cleaning apparatus.
Moreover, new growing techniques are also having an impact. For example, new planting techniques utilize ultra narrow rows that can only be harvested with “stripper” harvesters.
It is known that running unnecessarily certain components of a cotton gin can be inefficient to the total economic efficiency of the gin. Trash removed from cotton inevitably extracts lint. And as a general rule, the later in the process the particular piece of cleaning machinery is located, the greater the loss of lint with extracted trash. By way of example, an inclined stick machine placed before ginning of the seed from seed cotton cause lint loss in the range of 0.5%. At the same time, the running of a lint cleaner can cause losses in the range of 20% of the lint. It therefore becomes extremely important to know and understand when a particular component within a cotton gin can be idled while having the output of the gin meet the required quality standard for the ultimately produced lint cotton.
This need to produce a better quality product for sale to the cotton textile mills and to reduce labor costs during processing has led to considerable interest in process control for cotton gins. Anthony and Byler (1994) indicate that process control can range from $15,000 to $100,000. Most of the work to date has involved the online measurement of moisture and trash. Anthony (1990) reported on a system, which used a dynamic programming model along with black and white video trash sensors to determine the optimum number of lint cleaners needed to optimize the returns to the grower.
It is inevitable that the cotton gins in the near future will become fully computerized and automated (Byler and Anthony, 1997). This is due to the fact that optimal control of the gin will produce optimal economic returns for a given ginned bale of cotton (Bennett et al, 1997). This will be advantageous to the growers, the ginners, and the processing mills as they will receive a consistent product that can be tailored to their desired specifications. In this regard, expect the gins to become fully automated in the near future as this technology becomes available. It has already been shown that this automation will utilize some form of trash measurement system at several key locations scattered throughout the ginning process.
Improved machine vision is required. Further, such machine vision will encounter widely varying conditions. For example, the majority of cotton produced in Texas is stripper-harvested. This inexpensive harvesting technique results in large amounts of trash contamination of the seed cotton. The current cleaning techniques present a tradeoff between trash removal and loss of the valuable lint. It has been recognized that adjusting the number of lint cleanings can maximize the profit. The optimum number of lint cleanings can be determined if the trash content and lint turnout is known (Baker, 1994).
One of the major problems facing producers and ginners in the stripper-harvested areas is the presence of large variations in the trash content levels. Additionally the recent innovation of the field cleaner for stripper harvesters has intensified this variation. I feel that this variation leads to a wide range of optimal gin machinery settings for stripper harvested seed cotton cleaning.
Byler and Anthony (1997) reported on a computer-based cotton color and trash measurement system that was used to control the drying and cleaning machinery selection. This system utilizes a global calorimetric color sensor that measures the average color of the imaging area. In addition to the color sensor is a black and white video camera for measurement of the trash particles. A sampling system that presents a solid piece of lint (no voids or holes) and at a uniform packing density to remove the lint shadows is requisite for proper system function. At the time that this system was installed at a gin in Cortland, Ala., it was reported to be the most complete computerized gin process control system in the world. This process control system utilized two trash level sensors. The cotton color/trash sensors were based upon the High-Volume-Instruments (HVI) that are used in the classing office. The first sensor was located opposite of a ram located in the back of the feed control. The ram was periodically extended to press cotton against a glass sample imaging plate. The second color/trash/moisture measurement station was located behind the gin stand and before the lint cleaners. A paddle sampler was used to obtain a sample from the duct and press the sample against a viewing window.
Anthony (1989) reported that sample compression against an imaging window was used to increase the sample density in order to produce a more repeatable image by minimizing the shadows. The coefficient of determination was reported to be r
2
=0.62 and r
2
=0.72 for the two trash measurement stations located at the feed control. The sample compression was felt to be important enough that several devices were developed to accomplish this and U.S. Pat. No. 5,125,279 Jun. 30, 1992 entitled System for Analyzing Cotton was obtained for a paddle sampler to accomplish the sample compression for the trash, moisture and color measurement. It is still in use to date in the Zellweger Uster Intelligin and was reported to be fully functional in two commercial gin's as conducted in a USDA study (Anthony et al, 1995).
The modem classing methods use High-volume-Instruments (HVI) systems to measure trash content an

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