Loading [MathJax]/extensions/tex2jax.js

Laser cutting of composites: Two approaches toward an industrial establishment

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Richard Staehr
  • Sven Bluemel
  • Peter Jaeschke
  • Oliver Suttmann
  • Ludger Overmeyer

External Research Organisations

  • Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V. (LZH)

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number022203
JournalJournal of Laser Applications
Volume28
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 31 May 2016
Externally publishedYes

Abstract

Carbon fiber reinforced plastics (CFRP) are of high interest as a lightweight material due to their high strength-to-weight ratio. Within industrial fields with a requirement on lightweight design and energy efficiency, the demand of CFRP increases continuously. Up to now, the cutting of CFRP, as a basic production step within the production of composite parts, is mainly performed by conventional cutting techniques such as milling and abrasive water jet cutting. These techniques are known to have drawbacks, e.g., force input, handling of auxiliaries, and tool wear. The laser cutting of CFRP has already shown high potential to be a practical alternative due to the wear-free and contactless processing. However, as a thermal technique, laser cutting has to overcome the challenge of heat input into the material. Two different approaches concerning deterioration free cutting will be examined and compared within this research. For that purpose, two different laser sources were used. Both laser sources have a maximum average laser power of PL = 1500 W, one emitting continuous wave and the other emitting pulsed wave. The first approach investigated is the laser cutting with a single mode fiber laser emitting continuous wave at high beam quality. A small focal diameter was achieved by the optical setup used, enabling narrow cutting kerfs and finely machined cutting contours. The relative movement of laser beam and material was realized by a combination of scanning optic and three precise linear stages. The second laser source is a high power thin-disk laser emitting nanosecond pulses. The optical setup consists of a fiber with a diameter of d = 600 μm and a galvanometer scanner by TRUMPF, called 3D programmable focusing optic (PFO-3D), leading to a focal diameter bigger than that of the single mode fiber laser. The relative movement was realized by the PFO-3D and a six-axis robot system. The required process strategies, differences, benefits, and drawbacks of both setups will be reviewed. The review will be completed by an examination of the complexity of the setups and introduction of efficient processing solutions. Comparative investigations with an identical material for both described setups were performed as a basis for discussion. Differences exist in appearance of the cuts and the choice of best parameters, while comparable qualities and efficiencies can be achieved for both setups.

Keywords

    CFRP, cutting, linear axis, process strategies, robot

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Sustainable Development Goals

Cite this

Laser cutting of composites: Two approaches toward an industrial establishment. / Staehr, Richard; Bluemel, Sven; Jaeschke, Peter et al.
In: Journal of Laser Applications, Vol. 28, No. 2, 022203, 31.05.2016.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Staehr, R, Bluemel, S, Jaeschke, P, Suttmann, O & Overmeyer, L 2016, 'Laser cutting of composites: Two approaches toward an industrial establishment', Journal of Laser Applications, vol. 28, no. 2, 022203. https://doi.org/10.2351/1.4943754
Staehr, R., Bluemel, S., Jaeschke, P., Suttmann, O., & Overmeyer, L. (2016). Laser cutting of composites: Two approaches toward an industrial establishment. Journal of Laser Applications, 28(2), Article 022203. https://doi.org/10.2351/1.4943754
Staehr R, Bluemel S, Jaeschke P, Suttmann O, Overmeyer L. Laser cutting of composites: Two approaches toward an industrial establishment. Journal of Laser Applications. 2016 May 31;28(2):022203. doi: 10.2351/1.4943754
Staehr, Richard ; Bluemel, Sven ; Jaeschke, Peter et al. / Laser cutting of composites : Two approaches toward an industrial establishment. In: Journal of Laser Applications. 2016 ; Vol. 28, No. 2.
Download
@article{de159f879b9f45fbaad453c039f31263,
title = "Laser cutting of composites: Two approaches toward an industrial establishment",
abstract = "Carbon fiber reinforced plastics (CFRP) are of high interest as a lightweight material due to their high strength-to-weight ratio. Within industrial fields with a requirement on lightweight design and energy efficiency, the demand of CFRP increases continuously. Up to now, the cutting of CFRP, as a basic production step within the production of composite parts, is mainly performed by conventional cutting techniques such as milling and abrasive water jet cutting. These techniques are known to have drawbacks, e.g., force input, handling of auxiliaries, and tool wear. The laser cutting of CFRP has already shown high potential to be a practical alternative due to the wear-free and contactless processing. However, as a thermal technique, laser cutting has to overcome the challenge of heat input into the material. Two different approaches concerning deterioration free cutting will be examined and compared within this research. For that purpose, two different laser sources were used. Both laser sources have a maximum average laser power of PL = 1500 W, one emitting continuous wave and the other emitting pulsed wave. The first approach investigated is the laser cutting with a single mode fiber laser emitting continuous wave at high beam quality. A small focal diameter was achieved by the optical setup used, enabling narrow cutting kerfs and finely machined cutting contours. The relative movement of laser beam and material was realized by a combination of scanning optic and three precise linear stages. The second laser source is a high power thin-disk laser emitting nanosecond pulses. The optical setup consists of a fiber with a diameter of d = 600 μm and a galvanometer scanner by TRUMPF, called 3D programmable focusing optic (PFO-3D), leading to a focal diameter bigger than that of the single mode fiber laser. The relative movement was realized by the PFO-3D and a six-axis robot system. The required process strategies, differences, benefits, and drawbacks of both setups will be reviewed. The review will be completed by an examination of the complexity of the setups and introduction of efficient processing solutions. Comparative investigations with an identical material for both described setups were performed as a basis for discussion. Differences exist in appearance of the cuts and the choice of best parameters, while comparable qualities and efficiencies can be achieved for both setups.",
keywords = "CFRP, cutting, linear axis, process strategies, robot",
author = "Richard Staehr and Sven Bluemel and Peter Jaeschke and Oliver Suttmann and Ludger Overmeyer",
year = "2016",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.2351/1.4943754",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
journal = "Journal of Laser Applications",
issn = "1042-346X",
publisher = "American Institute of Physics Inc.",
number = "2",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Laser cutting of composites

T2 - Two approaches toward an industrial establishment

AU - Staehr, Richard

AU - Bluemel, Sven

AU - Jaeschke, Peter

AU - Suttmann, Oliver

AU - Overmeyer, Ludger

PY - 2016/5/31

Y1 - 2016/5/31

N2 - Carbon fiber reinforced plastics (CFRP) are of high interest as a lightweight material due to their high strength-to-weight ratio. Within industrial fields with a requirement on lightweight design and energy efficiency, the demand of CFRP increases continuously. Up to now, the cutting of CFRP, as a basic production step within the production of composite parts, is mainly performed by conventional cutting techniques such as milling and abrasive water jet cutting. These techniques are known to have drawbacks, e.g., force input, handling of auxiliaries, and tool wear. The laser cutting of CFRP has already shown high potential to be a practical alternative due to the wear-free and contactless processing. However, as a thermal technique, laser cutting has to overcome the challenge of heat input into the material. Two different approaches concerning deterioration free cutting will be examined and compared within this research. For that purpose, two different laser sources were used. Both laser sources have a maximum average laser power of PL = 1500 W, one emitting continuous wave and the other emitting pulsed wave. The first approach investigated is the laser cutting with a single mode fiber laser emitting continuous wave at high beam quality. A small focal diameter was achieved by the optical setup used, enabling narrow cutting kerfs and finely machined cutting contours. The relative movement of laser beam and material was realized by a combination of scanning optic and three precise linear stages. The second laser source is a high power thin-disk laser emitting nanosecond pulses. The optical setup consists of a fiber with a diameter of d = 600 μm and a galvanometer scanner by TRUMPF, called 3D programmable focusing optic (PFO-3D), leading to a focal diameter bigger than that of the single mode fiber laser. The relative movement was realized by the PFO-3D and a six-axis robot system. The required process strategies, differences, benefits, and drawbacks of both setups will be reviewed. The review will be completed by an examination of the complexity of the setups and introduction of efficient processing solutions. Comparative investigations with an identical material for both described setups were performed as a basis for discussion. Differences exist in appearance of the cuts and the choice of best parameters, while comparable qualities and efficiencies can be achieved for both setups.

AB - Carbon fiber reinforced plastics (CFRP) are of high interest as a lightweight material due to their high strength-to-weight ratio. Within industrial fields with a requirement on lightweight design and energy efficiency, the demand of CFRP increases continuously. Up to now, the cutting of CFRP, as a basic production step within the production of composite parts, is mainly performed by conventional cutting techniques such as milling and abrasive water jet cutting. These techniques are known to have drawbacks, e.g., force input, handling of auxiliaries, and tool wear. The laser cutting of CFRP has already shown high potential to be a practical alternative due to the wear-free and contactless processing. However, as a thermal technique, laser cutting has to overcome the challenge of heat input into the material. Two different approaches concerning deterioration free cutting will be examined and compared within this research. For that purpose, two different laser sources were used. Both laser sources have a maximum average laser power of PL = 1500 W, one emitting continuous wave and the other emitting pulsed wave. The first approach investigated is the laser cutting with a single mode fiber laser emitting continuous wave at high beam quality. A small focal diameter was achieved by the optical setup used, enabling narrow cutting kerfs and finely machined cutting contours. The relative movement of laser beam and material was realized by a combination of scanning optic and three precise linear stages. The second laser source is a high power thin-disk laser emitting nanosecond pulses. The optical setup consists of a fiber with a diameter of d = 600 μm and a galvanometer scanner by TRUMPF, called 3D programmable focusing optic (PFO-3D), leading to a focal diameter bigger than that of the single mode fiber laser. The relative movement was realized by the PFO-3D and a six-axis robot system. The required process strategies, differences, benefits, and drawbacks of both setups will be reviewed. The review will be completed by an examination of the complexity of the setups and introduction of efficient processing solutions. Comparative investigations with an identical material for both described setups were performed as a basis for discussion. Differences exist in appearance of the cuts and the choice of best parameters, while comparable qualities and efficiencies can be achieved for both setups.

KW - CFRP

KW - cutting

KW - linear axis

KW - process strategies

KW - robot

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84963599533&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2351/1.4943754

DO - 10.2351/1.4943754

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:84963599533

VL - 28

JO - Journal of Laser Applications

JF - Journal of Laser Applications

SN - 1042-346X

IS - 2

M1 - 022203

ER -