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Contents
Superior Sorter Selects Stain-Free
Nuts

For better quality nuts, an experimental machine-vision sorter removes
discolored pistachios up to one-and-a half times faster than present commercial
equipment.
(K7504-1)
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Pistachios with clean, light-colored shells might now be easier to
distinguish from stained, lower grade nuts, says ARS agricultural engineer
Thomas C. Pearson. The high-speed, bichromatic sorters popular in packinghouses
today, he reports, can be augmented with machinevision systems.
The system Pearson devised is about one-and-one-half times more accurate
than bichromatic equipment in deciding whether a pistachio sports an
attractive, stain-free shell. Thats according to his preliminary tests
with more than 2,000 pounds of the buttery-flavored nuts. He did the work in
his laboratory at the ARS Western Regional Research Center in Albany,
California, and at a California packinghouse. Two other packinghouses also
contributed freshly harvested pistachios for the tests, which Pearson ran under
the supervision of Thomas F. Schatzki, a chemist at the Albany center.
When an automated sorter misjudges a nut, workers further along the
production line can catch the error. But correcting machine-made errors takes
time. That costs money and cuts profits, despite the fact that blemished nuts
usually make up no more than 5 percent of the harvest. Dark stains sometimes
indicate insect damage or, rarely, the presence of the Aspergillus flavus mold
that forms aflatoxina contaminant.
The machine-vision system relies on line-scan video cameras outfitted with
microprocessors called DSPs, or digital signal processors. Pearson and
Venitia W. Lee, formerly at Albany, wrote new software that instructs the
high-tech DSPs how to interpret the images of the pistachios as they whiz
past the cameras.
And Pearson created other customized software that tells a desktop computer,
also part of the system, how to decide whether a pistachio has unacceptable
stains on its shell. The machine-vision sorter can keep the same pace as the
bichromatic sorters impressive rate of 144,000 pistachios per hour.
A sorter outfitted with DSPs, says Pearson, peers at the nut surfaces
in greater detail than a bichromatic device and sidesteps errors that the
conventional sorter might make. Thats because the DSPs
independently analyze pixelsthe pinhead-sized bits of image sent to them
by the cameras.
An example: Pistachios open their shells as they ripen. A bichromatic
sorter, which gauges the average color of a nut, might perceive an
unstained pistachio as dark brown if much of the nuts brown-skinned
kernel is peeping from the opened shell. When that happens, this premium
pistachio ends up in the same processing line as nuts with sizable stains.
As the machine-vision sorter collects images all the way around the
perimeter of that same nut, however, it finds very few regions where pixel
color changes from dark to light. In this instance, pixel color changes only
where the light shell borders the dark kernel. The computer, explains Pearson,
determines that this pattern of few transitions from dark-tolight is
characteristic of a clean, partially opened pistachio. A stained pistachio, in
contrast, would have several more transitions where clean areas met with a dark
stain.
Machine-vision systems that use digital signal processors are relatively
new. The Albany work, according to Pearson, is the first application of this
technology to pistachio sorting. He is seeking a patent for his invention.
By Marcia Wood, ARS.
For more information on patent application number 08/550,310,
Machine-Vision Apparatus and Method for Sorting Objects, contact
Thomas
F. Schatzki, USDA-ARS Western Regional Research Center, 800 Buchanan St.,
Albany, CA 94710; phone (510) 559-5672.
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