APPARATUS FOR MEASURING THE STIFFNESS OF MAILPIECES
20190168264 ยท 2019-06-06
Assignee
Inventors
- Hicham El Bernoussi (Paris, FR)
- Anthony La Paglia (Montelier, FR)
- Jean-Marc TELUOB (Cornas, FR)
- Jean-Michel REBOUL (Saint Donat, FR)
- Fabrice Eyraud (Portes les Valence, FR)
Cpc classification
B07C1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
Apparatus for measuring the stiffness of mail articles on the principle of measuring deflection of a beam in bending comprises a rectilinear conveying portion for conveying the mail articles, a deflection roller disposed in a staggered offset manner between two wheels having deformable rims in such a manner as to form a substantially triangular peak on the rectilinear conveying portion, and an inlet ramp that is disposed upstream from the peak and that follows the upward slope of the peak.
Claims
1. A measurement apparatus for measuring a stiffness of flat articles, comprising: a rectilinear conveying portion, wherein the flat articles are conveyed in series and on an edge; a stiffness sensor for measuring a deflection of a beam in bending, the stiffness sensor being disposed along the conveying portion for measuring in a contactless manner the stiffness of each flat article; a deflection roller being disposed in a staggered offset manner between a first wheel and a second wheel, the first and second wheels having deformable rims that form a substantially triangular peak on the conveying portion; and an inlet ramp disposed upstream from the peak relative to a conveying direction of the flat articles, wherein the flat articles to follow an upward slope of the peak without any obstacle.
2. The measurement device of claim 1, further comprising an outlet ramp disposed downstream from the peak relative to the conveying direction of the flat articles, wherein the outlet ramp follows the downward slope of the peak.
3. The measurement apparatus of claim 1, wherein the inlet ramp extends upstream relative to the conveying direction beyond a pinch point between the first wheel and the inlet ramp to form a disengagement zone for rear ends of the flat articles.
4. The measurement apparatus of claim 1, wherein an upward slope of the inlet ramp is less than or equal to 10.
5. The measurement apparatus of claim 1, wherein the stiffness sensor is a multiple sensor suitable for performing multiple stiffness measurements at a plurality of points distributed over a height of the flat articles.
6. The measurement apparatus of claim 5, further comprising a data processor unit, the data processor unit uses multiple stiffness measurements respectively at the foot of the flat article and at the top of the flat article to evaluate whether the flat article is flexible enough or too stiff.
7. The measurement apparatus of claim 6, wherein the evaluation is based on a linear combination of deflection values.
8. The measurement apparatus of claim 6, wherein the evaluation is based on a statistical estimation of a deflection value of a reference database produced by off-line learning.
9. The measurement apparatus of claim 8, wherein the reference database is increased dynamically during use.
10. The measurement apparatus of claim 1, further comprising: a postal sorting machine comprising: a sorting conveyor with sorting outlets; and a reject outlet; and wherein the conveying portion is upstream from the sorting outlets and from the reject outlet, and wherein the measurement apparatus is disposed at the conveying portion.
11. The measurement apparatus of claim 2, wherein the inlet ramp extends upstream relative to the conveying direction beyond a pinch point between the first wheel and the inlet ramp to form a disengagement zone for rear ends of the flat articles.
12. The measurement apparatus of claim 6, wherein the data processor unit uses the evaluation to direct the flat article towards a sorting outlet or a reject outlet disposed downstream of the conveying portion.
13. A postal sorting machine, comprising: a sorting conveyor with sorting outlets; a reject outlet; a conveying portion disposed upstream from the sorting outlets and from the reject outlet; and a measurement apparatus for measuring a stiffness of flat articles disposed at the conveying portion, the measurement apparatus, comprising: a rectilinear conveying portion, wherein the flat articles are conveyed in series and on an edge; a stiffness sensor for measuring a deflection of a beam in bending, the stiffness sensor is being disposed along said the conveying portion for measuring in a contactless manner the stiffness of each flat article; a deflection roller being disposed in a staggered offset manner between a first wheel and a second wheel, the first and second wheels having deformable rims that form a substantially triangular peak on the conveying portion; and an inlet ramp disposed upstream from said the peak relative to a conveying direction of the flat articles, wherein the flat articles to follow an upward slope of the peak without any obstacle.
14. The postal sorting machine of claim 13, further comprising an outlet ramp disposed downstream from the peak relative to the conveying direction of the flat articles wherein the outlet ramp follows the downward slope of the peak.
15. The postal sorting machine of claim 13, wherein the inlet ramp extends upstream relative to the conveying direction beyond a pinch point between the first wheel and the inlet ramp to form a disengagement zone for rear ends of the flat articles.
16. The postal sorting machine of claim 13, wherein an upward slope of the inlet ramp is less than or equal to 10.
17. The postal sorting machine of claim 13, wherein the stiffness sensor is a multiple sensor suitable for performing multiple stiffness measurements at a plurality of points distributed over a height of the flat articles.
18. The postal sorting machine of claim 17, further comprising a data processor unit, the data processor unit uses multiple stiffness measurements at the foot of the flat article and at the top of the flat article to produce a stiffness assessment.
19. The postal sorting machine of claim 18, wherein the data processor unit uses the stiffness assessment to direct the flat article towards the sorting outlets or towards the reject outlet.
20. The postal sorting machine of claim 18, wherein the stiffness assessment is based on at least one of a linear combination of deflection values and on a statistical estimation of a deflection value of a reference database produced by off-line learning, wherein the reference database is increased dynamically during use.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] The present invention can be better understood and other advantages appear on reading the following detailed description of an embodiment given by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0035]
[0036] The mail articles may be very flexible, such as catalogues that are flexible but that have rigid edges, letters that are flexible but that contain rigid objects inside them (e.g. keys or pens), or indeed large-format flat articles of the type that are reinforced with cardboard or with some other rigid material, etc.
[0037]
[0038] The articles 2 are stacked on edge in the magazine 5 of an unstacker 6 that feeds the articles 2 in series and on edge into the sorting conveyor 7 that moves them towards the outlets 3 or 4 in a conveying direction indicated by arrow F1.
[0039]
[0040] As can be seen in
[0041] As can be seen in more detail in
[0042] In this measurement apparatus of the invention, a deflection roller 12 over which one of the belts 10 is engaged is disposed in staggered offset manner between two wheels 11a and 11b having deformable rims and over which the other belt 10 is engaged in such a manner as to form a substantially triangular peak on the rectilinear conveying portion formed by the parallel belts 10.
[0043] In this example, each of the wheels has a hub provided with curved spokes for absorbing very non-uniform articles 2 of thickness that can range from less than one millimeter (mm) to a few centimeters (cm). In this example, the wheels 11a and 11b are wheels that are freely rotatably mounted and that are driven in rotation by a driving belt, and, in this example, the deflection roller 12 is a rigid idler roller for imparting the peak-shaped deflection to the articles.
[0044] The distance between the two wheels 11a, 11b having deformable rims is defined so that the largest of the articles 2 cannot be pinched by both wheels at the same time.
[0045] In accordance with the invention, an inlet ramp 13 is provided upstream from the peak formed by the roller 12 relative to the conveying direction in which the articles are conveyed, which ramp follows the upward slope of the peak that may be less than equal to 10.
[0046] The inlet ramp 13 may be made of sheet metal or of a hard plastics material. It may extend upstream relative to the conveyor direction F1 beyond a pinch point between the wheel 11a and the inlet ramp 13 to form a disengagement zone 14 for the rear ends of the articles 2. In this way, even the articles that are very stiff arrive flat on the ramp 13 so that they are flat as they go over the peak of the rectilinear conveying portion.
[0047]
[0048] In particular, with a first sensor 15, a measurement indicated by arrow M1 is taken of the thickness of an article 2 pressed against the upward slope of the peak, while, with the other sensor 15, a second measurement indicated by arrow M2 is taken of the thickness of the article by taking into account the deformation of the belts 10 caused by the article 2 bending to go over the top of the peak. These two measures M1 and M2 are taken without coming into contact with the articles, and the difference between the two measurements is representative of the stiffness of the article.
[0049] The sensors 15 may be optoelectronic sensors such as laser sensors having depth gauges. As shown in
[0050] An outlet ramp 16 may be disposed downstream from the peak relative to conveying direction F1, which outlet ramp follows the downward slope of the peak.
[0051]
[0052]
[0053]
[0054] The sensors 15 take measurement samples over the article 2, while the article is advancing in the direction F1, so as to derive a stiffness profile as shown in
[0055] In
[0056] In
[0057] In this example, the monitoring and control unit 17 is designed to establish a stiffness profile for each article 2.
[0058]
[0059] In
[0060] In
[0061] In
[0062] It can be seen that these stiffness profiles are quite distinctive from one another, and the unit 17 can be arranged so that, on the basis of the stiffness signals shown in
[0063] This detection can be rendered finer by producing stiffness profiles at different heights over the articles 2.
[0064]
[0065] It is possible to provide more than two sensors, superposed at different levels over the height of the article 2 on edge.
[0066] With these multiple measurements, it is possible to identify better mail articles having envelopes containing rigid objects inside them, e.g. pens at the bottoms of the envelopes. It is known that that type stiff mail article tends to cause jams in automatic mail sorting machines and it is therefore important to be able to distinguish them from other mail articles without error.
[0067] A rigid object, made of metal or of some other material, and inserted in an envelope tends to be placed by gravity in the bottom of the envelope (in the vicinity of the foot of the mail item), and therefore the stiffness of the article is greater at the bottom of the mail item than at its top.
[0068]
[0069]
[0070]
[0071]
[0072]
[0073]
[0074] In step 70, the multiple stiffness profile signals M1b, M2b, M1h, M2h are sensed by sensors 15b and 15h upstream and downstream from the peak along the conveying portion in the measurement apparatus of the invention, and are delivered to the data processor unit 17.
[0075] In step 71, the unit 17 filters the signals so as to smooth them.
[0076] In step 72, the unit 17 computes the deflections (maximum deformation values) upwards and downwards for the article 2 using the following relationships:
Fh=M2hM1h
Fb=M2bM1b
[0077] In step 73, the unit 17 combines the two upward and downward deflection values for the article so as to derive a composite stiffness value F using the following relationship:
F=Fb+(1)Fh
[0078] where the value of the coefficient is chosen in such a manner as to express that high stiffness at the top of the article (in this example at a height of 60 mm) causes more jamming than high stiffness at the foot of the article.
[0079] In step 74, the stiffness value F is compared with an adjustable threshold S1 that can be adjusted as a function of the physical length and width characteristics of the articles that are to flow through the sorting machine, for example. If the value F is less than S1, the article may be considered as being flexible and the unit 17 directs said article to a sorting outlet 3. If the value F is greater than S1, the unit 17 directs the article 2 recognized as being too stiff towards the reject outlet 4.
[0080] By way of an alternative to step 73, the unit 17 performs step 75 in which it computes a statistical probability value Pr on the basis of the stiffness profiles Fh and Fb, which statistical probability value is representative of the probability that the article is a stiff mailpiece or a flexible mailpiece on the basis of the following relationships:
Pr(Fh,Fb)=number of articles in a reference database that are recognized as being rigid with the stiffness profile (Fh,Fb)/total number of articles in the reference database with the stiffness profile (Fb,Fh).
[0081] The reference database is constructed in a prior learning phase of a neural network and it is advantageously increased dynamically by using the measurement apparatus.
[0082] In step 74, the unit 17 compares the probability value Pr with an adjustable threshold S2 that can be adjusted as a function of the physical length and width characteristics of the articles that are to flow through the sorting machine, for example.
[0083] If the value Pr is less than S2, the article can be considered as being too stiff and the unit 17 directs said article towards a reject outlet 4. If the value F is less than S1, the unit 17 directs the article 2 recognized as being flexible enough towards the sorting outlet 3.
[0084] The two stiffness assessments derived at 73 and 75 may be combined in step 77 so as to produce a decision that is even more precise in the unit 17 to direct the article towards a sorting outlet or to direct it towards the reject outlet.
[0085] In step 75, the statistical probability value may also be determined using a method based on logistic regression.
[0086] Naturally, the processing shown in
[0087] For example, it is possible to take a first measurement at the bottom of the foot of the article on edge, a second measurement half way up, corresponding to the height at which the switching flaps for diverting articles into the sorting outlets are disposed, and a third measurement at a height even higher than the height at which the second measurement is taken. These multiple measurements make it possible to obtain stiffness profiles that are highly discriminating as a function of the types of the mail articles.