Jiang, GuiminZhu, PengfeiGai, YonggangJiang, TingyiYang, DazhiSfarra, StefanoWaschkies, ThomasOsman, AhmadFernandes, HenriqueAvdelidis, Nicolas P.Maldague, XavierZhang, Hai2024-05-312024-05-312024-05-24Jiang G, Zhu P, Gai Y, et al., (2024) Non-invasive inspection for a hand-bound book of the 19th century: numerical simulations and experimental analysis of infrared, terahertz, and ultrasonic methods. Infrared Physics & Technology. Volume 140, August 2024, Article number 1053531350-4495https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infrared.2024.105353https://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/21741Due to fungal growth and mishandling in the book, there are various types of defects as they age such as foxing, tears, and creases. It is important to develop novel non-invasive inspection techniques and defect recognition algorithms. In this work, three non-invasive inspection techniques, including infrared thermography (IRT), terahertz time-domain spectroscopy (THz-TDS), and air-coupled ultrasound (ACU), were employed for the detection of defects in an ancient book cover. To improve the image quality and defect contrast, principal component analysis, fast Fourier transform, and partial least squares regression algorithms are used as the post-processing methods. Furthermore, the YOLOv7 network is deployed for defect automatic detection. Finite element analysis and finite-difference time-domain methods were employed for generating training dataset of YOLOv7 network. Experimental results demonstrate that IRT and THz-TDS has excellent detection capability for surface and subsurface defects, respectively. By employing YOLOv7 network with simulation datasets, defects can be effectively identified.en-UKAttribution 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Hand-bound bookInfraredNumerical simulationTerahertzUltrasoundNon-invasive inspection for a hand-bound book of the 19th century: numerical simulations and experimental analysis of infrared, terahertz, and ultrasonic methodsArticle