Embedded vision system powers advanced holographic label production

Jan. 25, 2019
Combustión Ingenieros, based in Bogota, Colombia, a producer of holographic products such as labels and manufacturing equipment, has utilized smart cameras developed by Vision Components (Ettingen, Germany: https://www.vision-components.com) to develop Firefly, a microlithography system that allows users to upload image files and use those images as templates for producing hologram designs that can be used as masters for further production.

Combustión Ingenieros, based in Bogota, Colombia, a producer of holographic products such as labels and manufacturing equipment, has utilized an embeddedvision system developed by Vision Components to develop Firefly, a microlithography system that allows users to upload image files and use those images as templates for producing holographic label designs that can be used as masters for further production.

Holographic labels are used as an authentication and security measure for official documents like driver's licenses, credit cards, or currency because it is very difficult to forge a hologram unless one is in possession of the master hologram. The ability to produce master copies of high-quality holographic labels therefore enables organizations to design their own levels of security for document protection. The more complex the hologram, the more difficult it is to forge that hologram. The Firefly microlithography system developed by Combustión Ingenieros allows users to design these high-quality master holograms.

The Firefly machine works by projecting a laser onto a photoresist plate, which is then treated by a chemical to develop the master hologram. This laser etching process requires precise positioning. In order for the hologram to have good levels of contrast the optics cannot lose focus, which requires rapid refocusing. Combustión Ingenieros achieves this in the Firefly by using a Vision Components embedded vision system, the VCSBCnanoZ-0011, to guide the laser with 50 µm accuracy to draw patterns between 200 - 300 µm, and to refocus the Firefly's optics every 20 ms.

The Vision Components system captures and processes the image, and transmits the position data to a piezoelectric nanopositioning system via an RS232 interface. According to Combustión Ingenieros, this process only takes a few milliseconds.

The VCSBCnanoZ-0011 features a single-board camera with a 1.3 MPixel CMOS sensor with 40 x 65 mm footprint. It utilizes a Xilinx Zynq dual-core Cortex-A9 ARM processor with a 2 x 866 MHz clock rate and integrated FPGA. The embedded system is equipped with 1 Gbit Ethernet, RS232 serial, and I²C interfaces, 12 inputs and outputs including an opto-isolated fast trigger input and flash-trigger output, and a battery-backed real-time clock.

The Firefly machine is controlled by a computer running Linux OS, the VCSBCnanoZ-0011 runs the VC Linux OS, and Combustión Ingenieros wrote custom Python code on the vision system.

Share your vision-related news by contacting Dennis Scimeca,Associate Editor, Vision Systems Design

To receive news like this in your inbox,
click here.

Join our LinkedIn group | Like us on Facebook | Follow us on Twitter

About the Author

Dennis Scimeca

Dennis Scimeca is a veteran technology journalist with expertise in interactive entertainment and virtual reality. At Vision Systems Design, Dennis covered machine vision and image processing with an eye toward leading-edge technologies and practical applications for making a better world. Currently, he is the senior editor for technology at IndustryWeek, a partner publication to Vision Systems Design. 

Voice Your Opinion

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Vision Systems Design, create an account today!