Zivid
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Industrial automation (hardware and software) |
Founded | 2015 |
Founders | Henrik Schumann-Olsen, Øystein Skotheim |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Thomas Embla Bonnerud (CEO) |
Products | 3D Vision Systems, Vision Sensors, Vision Software |
Number of employees | 40 (2020) |
Website | www |
Zivid is a Norwegian machine vision technology company headquartered in Oslo, Norway. It designs and sells 3D color cameras with vision software that are used in autonomous industrial robot cells, collaborative robot (cobot) cells and other industrial automation systems.
The company's primary hardware product is the Zivid One+ 3D color camera. It is supported by companion software products: the Zivid Software Development Kit (SDK) and the Zivid Studio, a graphical user interface (GUI).
The Zivid company (originally named Zivid Labs) was founded in 2015, by Henrik Schumann-Olsen and Øysten Skotheim, who were colleagues at SINTEF, Norway's largest independent research organization.
History[1]
2000–2011: Research
Henrik Schumann-Olsen and Øystein Skotheim worked together at SINTEF, conducting research into machine and robot vision solutions covering a range of different 3D imaging techniques.
2011–2014: Prototype
In 2010, Microsoft had launched the Kinect motion sensor add-on for Xbox, integrating a new form of 3D depth camera. Kinect enabled researchers and tech-enthusiasts to modify an off-the-shelf 3D camera, and at SINTEF the vision team's concept of a ‘Kinect for Industry’ was born. By the end of 2014, a prototype product named ShapeCrafter 3D, was introduced, showcasing 3D vision capabilities and color point clouds. ShapeCrafter was demonstrated for the first time at VISION 2014 in Stuttgart, Germany.
2015: Foundation
The Research Council of Norway provided 6M NOK for further research into 3D industrial machine vision cameras. Henrik Schumann-Olsen and Øystein Skotheim founded Zivid Labs as a spin-out from SINTEF.
2017: First product
In March 2017, Zivid Labs introduced its first mass-produced product, the Zivid One 3D color camera. The camera was rated IP65 for industrial use.
2018: Second product and success
An upgraded version of Zivid One, the Zivid One+ was launched in November 2018 at VISION 2018 in Stuttgart, Germany. The Zivid One+ product portfolio included three 3D color cameras spanning working distances from 30 cm to 3 m.[2] In September 2018, logistics company DHL installed its first fully automated e-fulfilment robot in its Behringe, Netherlands warehouse. The robotic system integrated the Zivid One 3D color camera and was used for de-palletizing, picking, and order-fulfilment operations.[3][4] The Zivid One 3D camera received Red Dot's "Product Design" award, Vision System Design's "Gold Innovators Award" and inVISION Magazine's "Top Innovation Award".[5][6][7] Zivid appointed Thomas Embla Bonnerud as CEO.[8][9] The company changed its name from Zivid Labs to Zivid.
2019: Enhancement and expansion
Zivid introduced new software development kit and graphical user interface in March 2019. The SDK provided Windows and Linux support, and included a re-engineered API and a second-generation vision engine.[10] The Zivid Studio GUI provided developers with a ready-to-use application for 3D point cloud capture, visualization and exploration. Zivid opened sales offices in China, South Korea, and North America, and appointed first distributors in Canada, China, Japan and USA.[11]
2020–present: Major updates
Zivid announced a major update of its software development kit in June 2020. The SDK 2.0 provided filtering to correct contrast distortion artifacts, enhanced HDR image capture sequencing, and multi-camera calibration. Zivid introduced a range of precision accessories designed to simplify on-robot and stationary mounting of its Zivid One+ high-definition color camera. For robot arm mounting, Zivid provides a camera mount, bracket, and optional extender, initially to the ISO 9409-1-50-4-M6 coupling plate standard.[12] [13]
Technology
To obtain a machine-readable 3-dimensional image of a target object, the Zivid camera technology uses a technique known as structured light, or fringe projection, to arrive at a high-definition point cloud, a highly-accurate set of data points in space. A defined grid pattern is projected onto an object in white LED light, and a 2D color image sensor captures any distortion of the pattern as is strikes the surface.[14] By merging multiple images, complete object depth and surface data are acquired and used to create a full-color 3D point cloud. The Zivid 3D color camera integrates a 1920 pixel x 1200 pixel image sensor to produce a high-quality 2.3 Mpixel point cloud resolution, with XYZ coordinate, native RGB and contrast data for each individual pixel in the point cloud. A good point cloud is characterized by a high density of points and no missing data, yielding a lifelike 3D model of the captured scene.
Products
The Zivid One+ 3D color camera has three variants, named Small, Medium and Large. They are each supported by the Zivid Software Development Kit and the Zivid Studio software.
Zivid One+ 3D color cameras
The cameras share a common hardware platform:[15]
- 3D imaging technology: structured light, 3D color HDR merge
- Image sensor: 1920 pixels x 1200 pixels (2.3Mpixels)
- 3D image acquisition time: Min. 80ms
- Point cloud output: 3D (XYZ) + color (RGB) + Contrast (C)
- Aperture: f/1.4 to f/32
- Shutter speed: 1/154s to 1/10s
- Rating: IP65, 15G shock, 10 to 40 °C
- Weight: 1980 g
- Dimensions: 226 mm x 165 mm x 86 mm
The three Zivid cameras are designed with overlapping range, precision, and field-of-view:
Model | Applications | Optimal range | Maximum range | Field of view | Spatial resolution | Point precision |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Zivid One+ Small | Tiny and small objects, trays and boxes | 300 mm - 800 mm | 1000 mm | 164 mm x 132 mm @ 300 mm | 0.12 mm @ 300 mm | 30 µm @ 300 mm |
Zivid One+ Medium | Small to medium-sized objects, totes and bins | 600 mm - 1600 mm | 2000 mm | 433 mm x 271 mm @ 600 mm | 0.23 mm @600 mm | 60 µm @ 600 mm |
Zivid One+ Large | Medium to large sized objects, standard EU/USA pallets | 1200 mm – 2600 mm | 3000 mm | 843 mm x 530 mm @ 1200 mm | 0.45 mm @ 1200 mm | 300 µm @ 1200 mm |
Zivid Software Development Kit
The Zivid SDK aids the development of machine vision applications using the Zivid One+ 3D color cameras. Built on a GPU framework, it ensures efficient, scalable 3D point cloud generation. A core API provides access to the Zivid Vision Engine, camera controls, and hardware drivers. The Software Development Kit is designed to be cross-platform and supports both Windows and Linux operating systems. It can be programmed using C++, .NET, ROS, Python and GenICam. A shared code library, tools and utilities are included.
Zivid Studio
Zivid Studio software provides a ready-made graphical user interface for exploring the Zivid One+ 3D color cameras. It enables developers to visualize the 3D point cloud, 2D image and depth data, to view the 3D point cloud in real-time, and to save the point cloud to disk.
Application
The Zivid One Plus 3D color cameras and software are being used as the machine vision sub-system for a variety of autonomous industrial robot cells, collaborative robot cells and other industrial automation systems.
Covering the range from 300 mm to 3,000 mm, the cameras are applied to tasks including random bin picking, pick-and-place, de-palletizing, assembly, packaging and quality inspection in a range of different manufacturing and logistics sectors.
Corporate identity
The company name Zivid was derived by combining the English word ‘Vivid’, meaning very bright, clear and detailed, with the letter ‘Z’, the depth parameter in a 3D image.
Board of directors[16]
- Geir Førre (Chairman)
- Henrik Schumann-Olsen, (Executive Director and CTO)
- Øystein Skotheim (Non-executive Director)
- John Torvik (Non-executive Director)
- Dieter Donis (Non-executive Director)
- Fabio Tampalini (Non-executive Director)
Executive management[17]
- Thomas Embla Bonnerud (CEO)
- Henrik Schumann-Olsen (Co-founder & CTO)
- Arild Ulfeng (SVP Engineering)
- Mikkel Orheim (SVP Sales & Business Development)
- Dara Doherty (VP Supply Chain)
- Øyvind Borgan (SVP Marketing)
Accolades
- inVISION Magazine: Top Innovation Award[7]
- Vision Systems Design Innovators Award: Gold[6]
- Red Dot: Product Design award[5]
- The Research Council of Norway: Innovation Award 2018[18]
- Teknisk Ukeblad, NITO, Tekna, Polyteknisk Forening: Tech Award[19]
References
- ^ Journalist, Johannes Jakobsen (2018-04-10). "Selger robotøyne for millioner: Vil bygge 3D-eventyr ved Akerselvas bredder". shifter.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Zivid One Plus 3D camera lineup covers an even broader spectrum of industrial automation applications". News Powered by Cision. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "3D vision system enables DHL's e-fulfillment robot". The Robot Report. 2018-12-12. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "3D machine vision guides robotic system for logistics e-fulfillment". www.vision-systems.com. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ a b "Eker Design – Press Release – Red Dot Award". Eker Design. 2018-04-17. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ a b "2018 Innovators Awards: Gold-level honorees". www.vision-systems.com. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ a b GmbH, TeDo Verlag. "Top Innovations". inVISION | Bildverarbeitung - Embedded Vision - 3D Messtechnik (in German). Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Zivid names Thomas Embla Bonnerud as CEO". News Powered by Cision (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Zivids nye hjelpere - Elektronikknett". elektronikknett.no. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ Zivid. "SDK for 3D vision developers - Zivid". www.zivid.com. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Zivid ramps expansion in East Asia". News Powered by Cision. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Zivid SDK 2.0 solves fundamental challenges in 3D machine vision". News Powered by Cision. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
- ^ Borgan, Øyvind. "Zivid introduces 3D camera mounts". blog.zivid.com. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
- ^ "Structured-light 3D scanner", Wikipedia, 2020-03-03, retrieved 2020-03-29
- ^ Zivid. "Zivid One Plus 3D cameras". www.zivid.com. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Nøkkelopplysninger fra Enhetsregisteret - Brønnøysundregistrene". w2.brreg.no. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ Zivid. "Management". www.zivid.com. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ "Forskningsrådets innovasjonspris til Zivid – utvikler og produsent av "robotøyne"". www.forskningsradet.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2020-03-29.
- ^ Jensen, Adrian Broch (2018-11-28). "Zivid er vinner av Norwegian Tech Award 2018". Tu.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2020-03-29.
Further reading
- Range imaging
- Structured light
- Structured-light 3D scanner
- Blog: Why 3D machine vision? What’s wrong with 2D machine vision?