4.4 Article

Automatic Industry PCB Board DIP Process Defect Detection System Based on Deep Ensemble Self-Adaption Method

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCPMT.2020.3047089

Keywords

Automated optical inspection (AOI); defect detection; deep learning; dual in-line package (DIP); machine learning; Printed Circuit Board Assembly (PCBA); printed circuit board (PCB)

Funding

  1. Advantech Linkou assembly factory under the Featured Areas Research Center Program within the Ministry of Education (MOE), Taiwan
  2. Center for mmWave Smart Radar Systems and Technologies under the Featured Areas Research Center Program within the Ministry of Education (MOE), Taiwan
  3. MOST Projects through Pervasive Artificial Intelligence Research Labs (PAIR Labs) in Taiwan [MOST 108-3017-F-009-001, MOST 109-2634-F-009-017]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study introduces an adaptive deep ensemble convolutional neural network model for inspecting soldering defects on printed circuit boards, achieving high detection rates and fast deployment by retraining with exception data. The proposed system effectively shortens inspection and repair time for online production operators, showing a significant efficiency boost.
A deep ensemble convolutional neural network (CNN) model to inspect printed circuit board (PCB) board dual in-line package (DIP) soldering defects with Hybrid-YOLOv2 (YOLOv2 as a foreground detector and ResNet-101 as a classifier) and Faster RCNN with ResNet-101 and Feature Pyramid Network (FPN) (FRRF) achieved a detection rate of 97.45% and a false alarm rate (FAR) of 20%-30% in the previous study [34]. However, applying the method to other production lines, environmental variations, such as lighting, orientations of the sample feeds, and mechanical deviations, led to the degradation in detection performance. This article proposes an effective self-adaption method that collects exception data like the samples with which the Artificial Intelligent (AI) model made mistakes from the automated optical inspection inference edge to the training server, retraining with exceptions on the server and deploying back to the edge. The proposed defect detection system has been verified with real tests that achieved a detection rate of 99.99% with an FAR 20%-30% and less than 15 s of inspection time on a resolution 7296x6000 PCB image. The proposed system has proven capable of shortening inspection and repair time for online operators, where a 33% efficiency boost from the three production lines of the collaborated factory has been reported [6]. The contribution of the proposed retraining mechanism is threefold: 1) because the retraining process directly learns from the exceptions, the model can quickly adapt to the characteristic of each production line, leading to a fast and reliable mass deployment; 2) the proposed retraining mechanism is a necessary self-service for conventional users as it incrementally improves the detection performance without professional guidance or fine-tuning; and 3) the semiautomatic exception data collection method helps to reduce the time-consuming manual labeling during the retraining process.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available