www.euronews.com A Danish company has developed a series of machines that can quite literally see the unseen. Joergen Rheinlaender, the Director at InnospeXion explains: "We have developed a low energy x-ray system. The application area for this is to be able to inspect things that are of low density or low thickness." The silver machines use low-energy x-rays to peer inside a product, and highlight faults that other scanners fail to spot. "A typical application area (is) food packaging where we are looking into the integrity of the packaging, and the main application area is the sealing of the packaging," Joergen continues. The x-rays can also see small differences inside natural materials like wood. "This is a knot that resembles just a small imperfection, but in reality the x-ray image here unveils it to be quite a large internal flaw," he adds. Another application is in pharmaceutical products where seals must be perfect to ensure the contents are safe, according to Joergen: "Sometimes the packaging mechanism goes wrong, and we can actually check whether these individual items are lying out here in the so-called 'not allowed area'." The machines can highlight changes of just a few microns in depth. That is because the low energy x-rays use a longer wavelength that is sensitive to tiny changes in density or thickness. So what's inside? Joergen showed us around: "Basically the system design is based on a series of powerful computers which aquire the images." "We open ...
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