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    Process limits for percussion drilling of stainless steel with ultrashort laser pulses at high average powers
    (2022) Brinkmeier, David; Holder, Daniel; Loescher, André; Röcker, Christoph; Förster, Daniel J.; Onuseit, Volkher; Weber, Rudolf; Abdou Ahmed, Marwan; Graf, Thomas
    The availability of commercial ultrafast lasers reaching into the kW power level offers promising potential for high-volume manufacturing applications. Exploiting the available average power is challenging due to process limits imposed by particle shielding, ambient atmosphere breakdown, and heat accumulation effects. We experimentally confirm the validity of a simple thermal model, which can be used for the estimation of a critical heat accumulation threshold for percussion drilling of AISI 304 steel. The limits are summarized in a processing map, which provides selection criteria for process parameters and suitable lasers. The results emphasize the need for process parallelization.
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    ItemOpen Access
    Analytical model for the depth progress of percussion drilling with ultrashort laser pulses
    (2021) Holder, Daniel; Weber, Rudolf; Graf, Thomas; Onuseit, Volkher; Brinkmeier, David; Förster, Daniel J.; Feuer, Anne
    A simplified analytical model is presented that predicts the depth progress during and the final hole depth obtained by laser percussion drilling in metals with ultrashort laser pulses. The model is based on the assumption that drilled microholes exhibit a conical shape and that the absorbed fluence linearly increases with the depth of the hole. The depth progress is calculated recursively based on the depth changes induced by the successive pulses. The experimental validation confirms the model and its assumptions for percussion drilling in stainless steel with picosecond pulses and different pulse energies.
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    Influence of pulse duration on X-ray emission during industrial ultrafast laser processing
    (2022) Holland, Julian; Weber, Rudolf; Sailer, Marc; Graf, Thomas
    Soft X-ray emissions during the processing of industrial materials with ultrafast lasers are of major interest, especially against the background of legal regulations. Potentially hazardous soft X-rays, with photon energies of >5 keV, originate from the fraction of hot electrons in plasma, the temperature of which depends on laser irradiance. The interaction of a laser with the plasma intensifies with growing plasma expansion during the laser pulse, and the fraction of hot electrons is therefore enhanced with increasing pulse duration. Hence, pulse duration is one of the dominant laser parameters that determines the soft X-ray emission. An existing analytical model, in which the fraction of hot electrons was treated as a constant, was therefore extended to include the influence of the duration of laser pulses on the fraction of hot electrons in the generated plasma. This extended model was validated with measurements of H (0.07) dose rates as a function of the pulse duration for a constant irradiance of about 3.5 × 1014 W/cm2, a laser wavelength of 800 nm, and a pulse repetition rate of 1 kHz, as well as for varying irradiance at the laser wavelength of 1030 nm and pulse repetition rates of 50 kHz and 200 kHz. The experimental data clearly verified the predictions of the model and confirmed that significantly decreased dose rates are generated with a decreasing pulse duration when the irradiance is kept constant.
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    Synchrotron X-ray analysis of the influence of the magnesium content on the absorptance during full-penetration laser welding of aluminum
    (2021) Wagner, Jonas; Hagenlocher, Christian; Hummel, Marc; Olowinsky, Alexander; Weber, Rudolf; Graf, Thomas
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    Adjustment of the geometries of the cutting front and the kerf by means of beam shaping to maximize the speed of laser cutting
    (2023) Lind, Jannik; Hagenlocher, Christian; Weckenmann, Niklas; Blazquez-Sanchez, David; Weber, Rudolf; Graf, Thomas
    The shape of the laser beam used for fusion cutting significantly influences the geometry of both the cutting front and the cutting kerf. The angle of the cutting front in turn impacts the local absorptivity, while the width of the kerf defines the amount of material, which has to be molten. The kerf’s geometry therefore determines the maximum possible cutting speed at which a successful cut is feasible with a given available laser power. The absorptivity, the width of the kerf, and the maximum possible cutting speed can be estimated from a simple model considering the conservation of energy and rough geometrical approximations. In order to verify the prediction of the model, the geometry of the cutting front and kerf resulting from different processing conditions was observed by means of online high-speed X-ray diagnostics. The geometry of the interaction zone was recorded with a framerate of 1000 Hz during fusion cutting of 10-mm-thick samples of stainless steel. Comparing the results obtained with different shapes of the laser beam, it was found that the absorptivity is increased when the beam’s longitudinal cross-section (parallel to the feed) is enlarged. Reducing the width of the beam in the transversal direction normal to the feed reduces the cross-sectional area of the cutting kerf. The findings show a good agreement with the geometric model which enabled the prediction of the absorptivity and the cross-sectional area of the cutting kerf and hence allows to reliably estimate the maximum cutting speed for different shapes of the laser beam, laser power, and sheet thicknesses.