Particle Image Velocimetry Algorithm Based on Spike Camera Adaptive Integration.
Xiaoqiang Li, Changxu Wu, Yichao Wang, Hongyuan Li, Yuan Li, Tiejun Huang, Yuhao Huang, Pengyu Lv
Abstract
Open AccessIn particle image velocimetry (PIV), overexposure is particularly common in regions with high illumination. In particular, strong scattering or background reflection at the liquid-gas interface will make the overexposure phenomenon more obvious, resulting in local pixel saturation, which will significantly reduce the particle image quality, and thus reduce the particle recognition rate and the accuracy of velocity field estimation. This study addresses the overexposure challenges in particle image velocimetry applications, mainly to address the challenge that the velocity field cannot be measured due to the difficulty in effectively detecting particles in the exposed area. In order to address the challenge of overexposure, this paper does not use traditional frame-based high-speed cameras, but instead proposes a particle image velocimetry algorithm based on adaptive integral spike camera data using a neuromorphic vision sensor (NVS). Specifically, by performing target-background segmentation on high-frequency digital spike signals, the method suppresses high illumination background regions and thus effectively mitigates overexposure. Then the spike data are further adaptively integrated based on both regional background illumination characteristics and the spike frequency features of particles with varying velocities, resulting in high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) reconstructed particle images. Flow field computation is subsequently conducted using the reconstructed particle images, with validation through both simulation and experiment. In simulation, in the overexposed area, the average flow velocity estimation error of frame-based cameras is 8.594 times that of spike-based cameras. In the experiments, the spike camera successfully captured continuous high-density particle trajectories, yielding measurable and continuous velocity fields. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed particle image velocimetry algorithm based on the adaptive integration of the spike camera effectively addresses overexposure challenges caused by high illumination of the liquid-gas interface in flow field measurements.