Litcius/Paper detail

A Vision-Based Displacement Measurement System for Foundation Pit

Chao Mi, Yi Liu, Yujie Zhang, Jiaqi Wang, Yufei Feng, Zhiwei Zhang

2023IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement53 citationsDOI

Abstract

The early displacement monitoring of excavation pits is currently a primary method to prevent pit collapse accidents. However, conventional pit displacement monitoring mainly relies on regular manual measurement or automated professional instrument measurement, which results in high cost, complex operation and deployment, non-real-time measurement, and non-intuitive data collection. Consequently, this paper proposes a method for the visual measurement of three-dimension (3D) displacement of pits based on a two-stage Perspective-n-Point (PNP) algorithm. Initially, markers are installed on the reference points with known 3D spatial coordinates and on each displacement measurement point of the excavation pit. All markers are scanned sequentially by panning the camera and zooming the lens, ensuring at least two adjacent markers enter the frame and are captured in each shot. Secondly, the improved Histogram of Oriented Gradients (HOG) combined with Support Vector Machine (SVM) rapid algorithm is utilized to perform quick detection and coarse positioning of each marker in the aforementioned photos. Thirdly, the sub-pixel algorithm and image morphology are combined. Based on the coarse positioning, the pixel coordinate values of the markers in the images are calculated. Lastly, the two-stage PNP algorithm is applied in a cyclical fashion: by using the known 3D spatial coordinates and its pixel coordinates of the previous marker to solve for the current camera’s 3D spatial coordinates and pose, the 3D spatial coordinates of the next marker can be derived using the current camera’s 3D spatial coordinates and pose and the pixel coordinates of the next marker. This cycle continues until the 3D spatial coordinates of all markers are fully resolved, thereby achieving accurate measurement of the 3D displacement of the pit. Experimental results show that the accuracy of the proposed method is nearly as high as the measurement accuracy of manual total stations, meeting the requirements for daily 3D displacement measurement of excavation pits. Meanwhile, this method offers the advantages of low cost, simple deployment and operation, and a high degree of automation.

Topics & Concepts

Foundation (evidence)Displacement (psychology)Computer scienceEngineeringGeographyPsychologyArchaeologyPsychotherapistInfrastructure Maintenance and MonitoringRobotics and Sensor-Based Localization3D Surveying and Cultural Heritage