Title
Quantifying Wind Turbine Blade Surface Roughness Using Sandpaper Grit Sizes: An Initial Exploration
Abstract
Surface inspection of wind turbine blades is a necessary step, to ensure longevity and sustained high energy output. The detection of accumulation of damages and increased surface roughness of in-use blades, is one of the main objectives of inspections in the wind energy industry. Creating 3D scans of the leading edges of blade surfaces has been more and more used for capturing the roughness profile of blades. An important part in analysing these surface 3D scans is the standardization of the captured data across different blade surfaces, types and sizes. In this paper we propose an initial exploration of using sandpaper grit sizes to provide this standardization. Sandpaper has been widely used for approximating different levels of blade surface roughness and its standardized nature can be used to easily describe and compare blade surfaces. We reconstruct a number of different sandpaper grit sizes - from coarser P40 to a finer P180. We extract a number of 3D surface features from them and use them to train a random forest classification method. This method is then used to segment the surfaces of wind turbine blades in areas of different surface roughness. We test our proposed solution on a variety of blade surfaces - from smooth to course and damaged and show that it manages to classify them depending on their roughness.
Year
DOI
Venue
2021
10.5220/0010283908010808
VISAPP: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 16TH INTERNATIONAL JOINT CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION, IMAGING AND COMPUTER GRAPHICS THEORY AND APPLICATIONS - VOL. 5: VISAPP
Keywords
DocType
Citations 
3D Reconstruction, Surface Inspection, Sandpaper Roughness, Classification, Random Forests, Geometrical Properties
Conference
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Ivan Nikolov100.34
Claus Madsen200.34