Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10335644 | Computer-Aided Design | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
While scanning a complex part in reverse engineering, it is not possible to acquire all part of the scanned surface. Data are inevitably missing due to the complexity of the scanned part or imperfect scanning process. Missing scanned data cause holes in the created triangular mesh, so that a hole-free mesh model is prerequisite for fitting watertight surfaces. Although a number of hole filling algorithms have been investigated, they enable to fill holes only on the smooth regions of a model. They are not always robust in the regions of high curvature. This paper proposes a novel methodology that can automatically fill complex polygonal holes with a piecewise manner. It incrementally splits a complex hole into several simple holes with respect to the 3D shape of the hole boundary, and then it consecutively fills each divided simple hole with planar triangulation method until the entire complex hole is firmly closed. Finally smoothing and subdivision techniques are applied for enhancing the hole triangles. The newly created vertices and triangles are added to their respective lists and the topology information is updated. The method has proven to be robust and effective from the result of test with a variety of complex holes. Examples are given and discussed to validate the methodology.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design
Authors
Yongtae Jun,