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Laser pulses as subtle machining tools

03.03.2021 - Industrial-grade materials processing on the sub-micron scale is enabled by spatially structured ultrashort laser pulses.

If light is strongly concen­trated in time and space, resulting in extreme photon densities, it can enable interaction with all conceivable materials. By using these ultrashort laser foci, even transparent materials can be modified, even though they ordinarily would not interact. Short, focused laser pulses can overcome this transparency and allow energy to be deposited completely contact-free. The exact response of the material to the radiation can be very diverse, ranging from marginal refractive index changes to destruc­tive microscale explosions that evacuate entire areas. Using the laser pulses for optical machining allows for equally diverse material modi­fication, such as separating or joining using the same laser system. Due to the extremely short exposure time and low degree of thermal diffusion, neighboring areas remain completely unaffected, enabling true micron-scale material processing.

Daniel Flamm and his colleagues from the German company Trumpf Laser- und System­technik present various concepts for manipulating the spatial distribution of laser light at the focus in such a way that particularly efficient and, thus, industrially suitable processing strategies can be applied. For example, customized nondif­fracting beams, generated by holo­graphic axicons, can be used to modify glass sheets up to milli­meter scales using single-passes and feed rates of up to a meter per second. The appli­cation of this concept to curved substrates and the development of a laser-based glass tube cutting is a ground­breaking advance. This capability has long been needed by the medical industry for the fabrication of glass items such as syringes, vials and ampoules. The machined surfaces produce excellent edge quality and are free from micro debris, to meet the demands of the consumer and medical industry.

The scientists demons­trate the potential of a newly introduced 3D-beam-splitter concept. Here, 13 identical copies of the original focus are distri­buted across the three-dimensional working volume using a single focusing objective, serving to increase the effective volume of a weld seam. The material's response to the pulse is directly measured using transverse pump-probe micro­scopy confirming a successful energy depo­sition with 13 individual absorption zones. The conducted experiment represents a prime example of three-dimensional parallel processing based on structured light concepts and demons­trates increased throughput scaling by exploiting the performance of high-power, ultrashort pulsed laser systems.

The broad accessi­bility of liquid crystal displays and their application to beam shaping using holo­graphy has also led the materials processing community to adopt structured light concepts. However, these approaches have not yet been translated into industrial processing, mainly because such displays cannot handle high optical powers and energies as well as the high programming effort required to construct digital holograms. 

With the presented double illu­mination concept, the liquid crystal display modulates both ampli­tude and phase of the illu­minating optical field. By applying digital amplitude masks, arbi­trary intensity profiles can be generated, offering benefits for formation of high spatial frequency, fine metal masks. The adapted flat-top intensity profiles depicted in the manu­script are generated without using complex Fourier coding strategies, making the concept a promising candidate for future digital optical processing heads. (Source: SPIE)

Reference: D. Flamm et al.: Structured light for ultrafast laser micro- and nanoprocessing, Opt. Eng. 60, 025105 (2021); DOI: 10.1117/1.OE.60.2.025105

Link: TRUMPF Laser- und Systemtechnik GmbH, Ditzingen, Germany

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