Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications

The generation of controlled 3D micro-features by pulsed laser ablation in various materials requires an understanding of the material's temporal and energetic response to the laser beam. The key enabler of pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining is the prediction of the removal rate of the t...

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Main Authors: Cadot, G.B.J., Axinte, Dragos A., Billingham, John
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34693/
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author Cadot, G.B.J.
Axinte, Dragos A.
Billingham, John
author_facet Cadot, G.B.J.
Axinte, Dragos A.
Billingham, John
author_sort Cadot, G.B.J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The generation of controlled 3D micro-features by pulsed laser ablation in various materials requires an understanding of the material's temporal and energetic response to the laser beam. The key enabler of pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining is the prediction of the removal rate of the target material, thus allowing real-life machining to be simulated mathematically. Usually, the modelling of micro-machining by pulsed laser ablation is done using a pulse-by-pulse evaluation of the surface modification, which could lead to inaccuracies when pulses overlap. To address these issues, a novel continuous evaluation of the surface modification that use trenches as a basic feature is presented in this paper. The work investigates the accuracy of this innovative continuous modelling framework for micro-machining tasks on several materials. The model is calibrated using a very limited number of trenches produced for a range of powers and feed speeds; it is then able to predict the change in topography with a size comparable to the laser beam spot that arises from essentially arbitrary toolpaths. The validity of the model has been proven by being able to predict the surface obtained from single trenches with constant feed speed, single trenches with variable feed speed and overlapped trenches with constant feed speed for three different materials (graphite, polycrystalline diamond and a metal-matrix diamond CMX850) with low error. For the three materials tested, it is found that the average error in the model prediction for a single trench at constant feed speed is lower than 5 % and for overlapped trenches the error is always lower than 10 %. This innovative modelling framework opens avenues to: (i) generate in a repeatable and predictable manner any desired workpiece microtopography; (ii) understand the pulsed laser ablation machining process, in respect of the geometry of the trench produced, therefore improving the geometry of the resulting parts; (iii) enable numerical optimisation for the beam path, thus supporting the development of accurate and flexible computer assisted machining software for pulsed laser ablation micro-machining applications.
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spelling nottingham-346932020-05-04T17:58:11Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34693/ Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications Cadot, G.B.J. Axinte, Dragos A. Billingham, John The generation of controlled 3D micro-features by pulsed laser ablation in various materials requires an understanding of the material's temporal and energetic response to the laser beam. The key enabler of pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining is the prediction of the removal rate of the target material, thus allowing real-life machining to be simulated mathematically. Usually, the modelling of micro-machining by pulsed laser ablation is done using a pulse-by-pulse evaluation of the surface modification, which could lead to inaccuracies when pulses overlap. To address these issues, a novel continuous evaluation of the surface modification that use trenches as a basic feature is presented in this paper. The work investigates the accuracy of this innovative continuous modelling framework for micro-machining tasks on several materials. The model is calibrated using a very limited number of trenches produced for a range of powers and feed speeds; it is then able to predict the change in topography with a size comparable to the laser beam spot that arises from essentially arbitrary toolpaths. The validity of the model has been proven by being able to predict the surface obtained from single trenches with constant feed speed, single trenches with variable feed speed and overlapped trenches with constant feed speed for three different materials (graphite, polycrystalline diamond and a metal-matrix diamond CMX850) with low error. For the three materials tested, it is found that the average error in the model prediction for a single trench at constant feed speed is lower than 5 % and for overlapped trenches the error is always lower than 10 %. This innovative modelling framework opens avenues to: (i) generate in a repeatable and predictable manner any desired workpiece microtopography; (ii) understand the pulsed laser ablation machining process, in respect of the geometry of the trench produced, therefore improving the geometry of the resulting parts; (iii) enable numerical optimisation for the beam path, thus supporting the development of accurate and flexible computer assisted machining software for pulsed laser ablation micro-machining applications. Elsevier 2016-08-01 Article NonPeerReviewed Cadot, G.B.J., Axinte, Dragos A. and Billingham, John (2016) Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications. International Journal of Machine Tools & Manufacture, 107 . pp. 8-20. ISSN 0890-6955 Pulsed Laser Ablation; Modelling; Micro-machining; Graphite; Diamond and related materials http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0890695516300360 doi:10.1016/j.ijmachtools.2016.04.011 doi:10.1016/j.ijmachtools.2016.04.011
spellingShingle Pulsed Laser Ablation; Modelling; Micro-machining; Graphite; Diamond and related materials
Cadot, G.B.J.
Axinte, Dragos A.
Billingham, John
Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
title Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
title_full Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
title_fullStr Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
title_full_unstemmed Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
title_short Continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
title_sort continuous trench, pulsed laser ablation for micro-machining applications
topic Pulsed Laser Ablation; Modelling; Micro-machining; Graphite; Diamond and related materials
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34693/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34693/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34693/