Complete guide to digital image correlation

Digital Image Correlation (DIC) is an optical, non-contact measurement method that tracks the displacements and deformations of an entire part surface from camera images. Combined with finite element models, it lets you validate, update and build credibility for structural simulations. This guide gathers our resources, from fundamentals to test implementation and model updating.

DIC fundamentals

Before getting started, you need to understand what DIC measures, what it is for and which hardware to choose. These resources cover the basics: the measurement principle, camera selection, and the role of DIC in a digital-twin approach.

Principle of full-field measurement by digital image correlation

Speckle pattern: preparing the surface

DIC relies on a random texture applied to the part. A well-sized, well-made speckle pattern directly determines measurement quality; these guides explain how to design it and compute its ideal size.

Speckle pattern applied to an aerospace structure for digital image correlation

Camera calibration

A reliable metrological measurement requires properly calibrated cameras. From classic calibration to more robust methods (hybrid, synchronized), here is how to guarantee the accuracy of your multi-camera systems.

Pinhole camera model used for calibration

Methods and processing

Local or global DIC? How do you exploit the measured field and link it to the simulation mesh? These articles detail the correlation approaches and processing tools such as mechanical regularization.

Displacement field computed by DIC on a finite element mesh

Simulation validation and model updating

The core value of DIC: comparing tests and computations in the same reference frame to identify discrepancies and update models. From theory (sources of discrepancy, VVUQ) to industrial cases, here is how to build simulation credibility.

Simulation validation by DIC on an aerospace structure

Advanced measurements and specific cases

Multi-camera, high-speed, high-temperature, coupled environments… DIC adapts to complex tests. These industrial case studies show the method at work under demanding conditions.

Multi-camera DIC measurement on a turbine blade root

Errors and best practices

A DIC measurement must be prepared. Understanding error sources and following test best practices avoids unusable images and ensures reliable results.

Setting up a DIC test: camera positioning and lighting

Ecosystem and integrations

DIC fits into an engineering chain. Virtual test preparation with Blender, connection to solvers like Abaqus: here is how to embed it in your simulation environment.

Virtual test preview in Blender to prepare a DIC measurement

Go further with EikoTwin

EikoSim develops EikoTwin, the software suite connecting your DIC measurements to your finite element models. Discover EikoTwin DIC, or request a demo. For definitions of the terms used here, see the digital image correlation glossary.