Linking physical objects to their digital twins via fiducial markers designed for invisibility to humans

Mathew Schwartz (Corresponding author), Yong Geng, Hakam Agha, Rijeesh Kizhakidathazhath, Danqing Liu, Gabriele Lenzini, Jan P.F. Lagerwall (Corresponding author)

Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftArtikel recenserenpeer review

13 Citaten (Scopus)
127 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

The ability to label and track physical objects that are assets in digital representations of the world is foundational to many complex systems. Simple, yet powerful methods such as bar-A nd QR-codes have been highly successful, e.g. in the retail space, but the lack of security, limited information content and impossibility of seamless integration with the environment have prevented a large-scale linking of physical objects to their digital twins. This paper proposes to link digital assets created through building information modeling (BIM) with their physical counterparts using fiducial markers with patterns defined by cholesteric spherical reflectors (CSRs), selective retroreflectors produced using liquid crystal self-assembly. The markers leverage the ability of CSRs to encode information that is easily detected and read with computer vision while remaining practically invisible to the human eye. We analyze the potential of a CSR-based infrastructure from the perspective of BIM, critically reviewing the outstanding challenges in applying this new class of functional materials, and we discuss extended opportunities arising in assisting autonomous mobile robots to reliably navigate human-populated environments, as well as in augmented reality.

Originele taal-2Engels
Artikelnummer022002
Aantal pagina's19
TijdschriftMultifunctional Materials
Volume4
Nummer van het tijdschrift2
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - jun. 2021

Bibliografische nota

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.

Financiering

We thank Dr Jose Luis Sanchez-Lopez and Professor Holger Voos for valuable discussions concerning the implementation of CSR fiducials in robotic navigation. We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the European Research Council (ERC, Proof of Concept project VALIDATE, Grant Code 862315), the Office of Naval Research Global (Project LAB’RINTH), and the Luxembourg National Research Fund (C17/MS/11688643/SSh).

FinanciersFinanciernummer
European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme862315
European Research Council

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