The present invention relates to a method of
controlling banknotes.
As is known, banknotes are made from a sheet of
such a size as to contain several finished banknotes,
and which comprises watermarked regions and/or regions
including metal bands, and is fed along a given path
along which it undergoes various printing steps, each
involving a different printing technique.
The most common printing steps are offset printing,
i.e. of images normally representing a coloured
background; intaglio or copperplate printing, i.e. of
famous faces and numbers representing the value of the
banknote; and silk-screen printing, i.e. of the serial
number. Offset printing is performed on both faces with
no alignment with the edge of the sheet, which therefore
cannot be used as a reference for the coordinates of the
offset printed details.
Intaglio printing is performed at high pressure
using a plate, and deforms the paper slightly so that
the plate is inclined with respect to the offset print,
and the intaglio print itself possibly misaligned with
respect to the offset print rollers. Intaglio printing
is performed on one or both faces of the sheet, and may
comprise a number of successive prints, each of which
may be misaligned with respect to the offset or other
intaglio prints. Misalignment of the various successive
prints may take the form of translation along the x
and/or y axis, or rotation.
Once offset and intaglio printed, the sheet is
quality controlled and cut into separate banknotes. The
quality control process consists in assigning a pass or
reject signal to each banknote, and only the passed
banknotes are silk-screen printed with serial numbers.
Quality control is frequently performed manually by
a checker, who ensures the offset and intaglio prints do
not deviate too far from an ideal value, and checks for
coloring errors, i.e. over- or underinked regions,
blurring or other defects.
Alternatively, quality control may also be
performed automatically using a television camera, which
assigns each pixel a characteristic luminance value of a
given banknote surface associated with the pixel, and
compares these values with a respective acceptance
range. If at least one of the detected values is outside
the respective acceptance range, the banknote is
rejected. Automatic control is complicated by numerous
factors, foremost of which is determining acceptance
ranges enabling accurate control of both coloring and
misalignment, which in turn is complicated by the
luminance of each pixel depending on various factors,
such as the printed region partly occupying the surface
corresponding to the pixel, and the type of ink and
paper used. The problem is further compounded by
misalignments of up to a millimeter between the intaglio
and offset prints being considered acceptable, and by
effective colour control requiring the use of television
cameras of such definition that each pixel corresponds
to a banknote surface portion of 0.125 X 0.125 square
millimeters. Misalignment to the above extent, in
relation to the size of said surface portion, therefore
means the luminance value of each pixel may vary within
a very wide range, due to the surface portion
corresponding to the pixel possibly being fully inked or
having no ink at all, particularly when the surface
portion in question is located at the edge of a figure.
On the other hand, wide acceptance ranges would fail to
provide for effective control by possibly passing
banknotes which should be rejected.
It is an object of the present invention to provide
a control method enabling reliable automatic control of
banknotes.
According to the present invention, there is
provided a method of controlling banknotes comprising a
first and a second print executed at different stages;
the method comprising the steps of acquiring the
luminance values of the pixels of an image of a
banknote; comparing each said luminance value with a
respective acceptance range of values relative to each
pixel; and emitting a reject signal in the event at
least one of said luminance values is outside the
respective acceptance range; said method being
characterized in that each said acceptance range of each
respective pixel is determined as a function of the
respective luminance values of said pixel acquired from
the banknotes.
The method according to the present invention is
particularly advantageous by determining, for each
pixel, a respective range which, in some cases,
particularly for pixels close to the edges of the
figures or numbers, may be relatively wide, and, in the
case of pixels some distance from the edges of the
figures or numbers, may be relatively narrow; and by the
control device determining the relatively wide and
relatively narrow ranges statistically from the
banknotes themselves.
The present invention also relates to a device for
controlling banknotes.
According to the present invention, there is
provided a device for controlling banknotes comprising a
first and a second print executed at different stages;
the device being characterized by comprising a
television camera for acquiring the luminance values of
the pixels of an image of a banknote; a specimen memory
for storing luminance acceptance ranges of respective
pixels; and a processing unit for comparing each said
luminance value with the respective acceptance range
relative to each pixel; said unit emitting a reject
signal in the event at least one of said luminance
values is outside the respective acceptance range, and
calculating said acceptance range of each pixel as a
function of the luminance values of said pixel acquired
from the banknotes.
A non-limiting embodiment of the present invention
will be described by way of example with reference to
the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 shows a block diagram of a device for
implementing the method according to the present
invention; Figure 2 shows a flow chart of a first operating
mode of the Figure 1 device; Figure 3 shows a flow chart of a second operating
mode of the Figure 1 device; Figures 4a and 4b show two portions of two
different banknotes corresponding to the same pixel.
Number 1 in Figure 1 indicates a device for
controlling banknotes 2 printed on a sheet 3. Control
device 1 comprises a television camera 4 for picking up
one banknote 2 at a time and generating a discrete,
digitized grey-tone television signal which is
transmitted to an image memory 5. Memory 5 stores the
images of banknotes 2 in the form of respective matrixes
of dots or so-called pixels P, each of which is assigned
a value Vb related to the grey level, i.e. luminance, of
pixel P. In other words, image memory 5 acquires, for
each banknote 2, a succession of luminance values Vb
relative to each pixel P of banknote 2. As shown clearly
in Figures 4a and 4b, each pixel P corresponds to a
0.125 mm square surface portion of banknote 2, and value
Vb of each pixel P represents a mean value of the
luminance of the respective surface portion. Figure 4a
shows a banknote portion corresponding to a given pixel
P1 of the image of a banknote 2, and which, as can be
seen, is occupied partly by an intaglio print T and
partly by an offset print O; and, similarly, Figure 4b
shows a portion corresponding to the same pixel P1 of
the image of another banknote 2. That is, the two
portions relate to pixels with the same coordinates in
two images of respective banknotes 2. As can be seen, on
account of the deviations involved, the parts of the two
portions occupied by the intaglio and offset prints T
and O differ widely, thus resulting in a considerable
variation in the luminance value Vb relative to pixel P1
of two separate, both acceptable, banknotes 2.
Memory 5 is connected to a processing unit 6, which
comprises an image processing section, i.e. an image
processor, and a logic section, and which provides for
processing and comparing the image of banknote 2 with
acceptance ranges I. For which purpose, processing unit
6 is connected to a specimen memory 7 which supplies the
elements by which to determine ranges I. Processing unit
6 also comprises an input 8 by which processing unit 6
receives external data or commands, and an output 9 by
which processing unit 6 supplies a signal indicating
acceptance or rejection of the controlled banknote 2.
Unit 6 also supplies specimen memory 7 with the
luminance values Vb of the accepted banknotes 2, which
are entered to form part of the specimens.
Banknotes 2 are produced using a known method
comprising the steps of advancing sheet 3, which is
sized to contain a number of banknotes 2; printing, in
one printing step, the graphic portion of the image
representing the coloured background of each banknote 2,
and which is commonly referred to as the offset print O;
printing, in one printing step, the portion representing
the dark image and value figures of each banknote 2, and
which is commonly referred to as the intaglio or
copperplate print T; controlling the quality of the
printing; printing the serial numbers on the accepted
banknotes 2; and cutting sheet 3 to separate each
banknote 2 in said number of banknotes 2 from the
others.
In actual use, the device comprises a so-called
control operating mode, whereby, as described
previously, the acquired luminance values Vb are
compared with respective acceptance ranges I; and an
automatic learning mode, whereby banknotes 2 are not
controlled, and device 1 acquires the luminance values
Vb of pixels P of banknotes 2 solely to determine
respective acceptance ranges I.
In control mode, as shown in Figures 1 and 2, in a
block 10, camera 4 stores the images in memory 5 in the
form of values Vb relative to respective pixels P; and
memory 5 transfers values Vb to a block 11 where the
acquired value Vb of each pixel P is compared with a
respective acceptance range I ranging between values Vb1
and Vb2 supplied to processing unit 6 by specimen memory
7 corresponding to block 12 in Figure 2. In block 13, if
at least one of values Vb is outside range I, a reject
signal is emitted via output 9 of unit 6, and banknote 2
is rejected as shown in block 14. Conversely, if values
Vb are all within respective ranges I, an accept signal
is emitted via output 9, and banknote 2 is accepted as
shown in block 15. The new values Vb transmitted to
specimen memory 7 are used, together with values Vb
already in specimen memory 7, to determine a new mean
value Vbm and new values Vb1 and Vb2 defining the limits
of respective ranges I. Once defined in block 16, the
new ranges I are transferred to block 12.
In other words, the luminance values Vb of the
controlled and accepted banknotes 2 serve to define the
mean value Vbm of each range I and the widths of ranges
I, and, alongside the control mode, device 1 continues
to acquire information by which to determine ranges I.
As shown in the Figure 3 diagram, automatic
learning mode provides for determining ranges I of each
pixel P relative to banknotes 2 which have never been
controlled by device 1 and for which no historical data
exists by which to calculate mean values Vbm and
respective limit values Vb1 and Vb2. That is, in a block
17, a television camera acquires the images, i.e. the
values Vb of each pixel P in N number of banknotes 2
which have never been controlled in any way, either
manually or automatically; values Vb are stored in image
memory 5; a reject signal is emitted for all N number of
banknotes 2 (block 18); and, at the same time, mean
values Vbm and values Vbmin and Vbmax defining a
reference range Is for each pixel P are calculated as a
function of the acquired values Vb (block 19). With
reference to block 20, values Vbmax and Vbmin define for
each pixel P the limits of ranges Is, which serve to
subsequently define ranges I according to the equation I
= Is * k, where k is an experimentally defined
coefficient of less than 1. The range I so determined is
placed exactly about respective mean value Vbm according
to the limit equation:
Vb1 = Vbm - 1/2
and
Vb2 = Vbm + 1/2
Once defined, ranges I are transferred together
with values Vb1 and Vb2 to specimen memory 7 (block 21).
At this point, device 1 is set to control mode, and the
N banknotes 2 used to determine ranges Is are controlled
by device 1 to determine whether values Vb are within
respective ranges I, and are rejected if the above
condition is not met.
In control mode, device 1 acquires values Vb of all
the accepted banknotes 2 from specimen memory 7 to
determine, at each control cycle, a mean value Vbm of
values Vb of all the accepted banknotes 2, and so
recalculate limits Vb1 and Vb2 according to the above
equation. Specimen memory 7 retains the mean values Vbm
of each cycle to determine the existence of a systematic
drift in value Vbm possibly caused by defects involving
the printing devices (known and not shown). When the
difference between the first and last mean value Vbm
exceeds a given value A determined experimentally,
processing unit 6 emits an emergency signal via output 9
to call for a check of the printing device (known and
not shown) and for a manual check of banknotes 2 to
determine the extent of the drift.
In a variation not shown, device 1 comprises a
learning mode whereby memory 5 acquires values Vb of N
previously, e.g. manually, controlled banknotes 2 to
determine mean values Vbm, maximum values Vbmax and
minimum values Vbmin of respective pixels P. In this
case, in view of the fact that banknotes 2 are all
accepted banknotes, maximum and minimum values Vbmax and
Vbmin correspond to respective values Vb1 and Vb2, and
the range between maximum and minimum values Vbmax and
Vbmin corresponds to range I.
In a further variation, values Vb1 and Vb2 are
determined as follows:
Vb1 = Vbm - sigma Vb2 = Vbm + sigma
where sigma is the mean square deviation of luminance
values Vb of accepted banknotes 2.
In a further variation not shown, device 1
comprises a purely control mode whereby values Vb of the
accepted banknotes 2 are not acquired, and ranges I are
determined solely as a function of the first N banknotes
2.