The invention relates to a method for machining a transparent workpiece by generating non-linear absorption of laser radiation in a laser beam focus located in a volume of the workpiece.
The invention furthermore relates to a device for machining a transparent workpiece.
It is known from the prior art that workpieces made of transparent materials, such as glass or quartz, or also (non-pigmented) body tissue, can be machined in a highly precise manner by means of laser radiation. This is achieved by way of energy deposition by non-linear absorption in a laser beam focus, which can be located not (only) on the surface, but rather at any desired position in the volume of the workpiece. Multi-photon processes arise in the laser beam focus, e.g. in the form of multi-photon ionization or avalanche ionization, which lead to a plasma being formed. The plasma formation rate increases significantly above a threshold that depends on the material of the workpiece and the parameters of the laser radiation. Reference is therefore also made to an “optical penetration”. The modification brought about thereby, and thus machining of the material, is very high-precision, since it is possible to introduce small amounts of energy into the material in a spatially localized and reproducible manner. The good spatial localization is achieved primarily by focusing the laser radiation by means of coupling optics that is as aberration-free as possible and has a large numerical aperture. It is in particular also possible to adjust the position and shape of the energy deposition in a task-specific manner. For this purpose, it is possible for example to use lenses having a small numerical aperture, axicons or combinations thereof, as well as targeted aberrations, in order for example to generate extended focus volumes in the laser propagation direction.
In general, in this type of material machining by means of non-linear absorption, pulsed laser radiation consisting of short or ultrashort laser pulses, at a simultaneously high pulse power, is used. It is thus possible to achieve a low energy input at a high degree of reproducibility. Laser pulses having a pulse duration in the range of from a few femtoseconds to a few picoseconds are particularly advantageous. The pulse energy is generally in the region of a few microjoules, and, for extended focus volumes, in the range of a few 10-100 microjoules or even in the millijoule range.
Laser-based material machining is used in the prior art for example for generating separation planes or predetermined breaking points for the purpose of glass separation, i.e. for separating a plurality of connected glass workpieces. In this case, a uniform modification of the material over the entire thickness of the workpiece plays an important role. As a result, for example the frangibility is facilitated, production errors such as spalling or stress differences are minimized, and high edge strengths are achieved. In this case, the glass materials to be machined are generally transparent over a wide wavelength range of the laser radiation used. However, as soon as special glass (e.g. filter glass) or glass composite materials in which different types of glass are combined, or auxiliary layers (such as films or adhesive) are present in the workpiece, said materials can exhibit significant linear absorption for the laser radiation used. This can impede the desired non-linear interaction or prevent uniform energy deposition over the entire workpiece thickness (in accordance with the Beer-Lambert law).
Against this background, the object of the invention is that of providing a method of improved precision and quality, and a corresponding device, for laser machining of workpieces. In particular, it is also intended for it to be possible for workpieces made of composite materials or of other special materials, such as filter glass, to be machined at an improved level of quality.
The invention achieves this object by means of a method for machining a transparent workpiece by generating non-linear absorption of laser radiation in a laser beam focus located in a volume of the workpiece, said method comprising the following steps:
The invention furthermore achieves the object by means of a device for machining a transparent workpiece, comprising
According to the invention, prior to the actual machining, a spectroscopic measurement of the workpiece is carried out, in order to identify an ideal wavelength range for the working wavelength, in which there is minimum, but in any case as little as possible, linear absorption of the laser radiation used.
Suppressing or minimizing the linear absorption makes it possible to achieve a high intensity in the desired interaction range, by means of beam focusing. As a result, largely non-linear absorption occurs only in these ranges. In the case of corresponding beamforming, this allows for uniform, tailored energy deposition over the entire thickness of the workpiece. Undesired flaws such as stresses, cracks, voids, etc. are prevented or distributed over the substrate thickness in a uniform or specific manner.
Ideally, the linear absorption in the material of the workpiece should be below 20%, more preferably below 10%, over a length of one centimeter in the laser beam direction.
The result of the measurement can also be used, when selecting the working wavelength, such that the obtained transmission curve exhibits a maximum at the working wavelength.
Following the measurement, the workpiece is machined in the selected wavelength range.
For this purpose, it is possible for a corresponding laser, for example, to be selected and used, in which the fundamental laser wavelength is in the desired wavelength range. Alternatively, the desired working wavelength can be adjusted accordingly by means of frequency conversion (e.g. generation of the second or a higher harmonic, optical-parametric conversion, frequency mixing, supercontinuum generation, Raman conversion, etc.).
Laser systems that are suitable for the practical implementation of the invention and the wavelength of which can be tuned are commercially available.
When a tunable laser is used, said laser can simultaneously also be used for measuring the linear absorption. In this case, simply the transmission of the laser radiation is measured, for different wavelength settings, and specifically as far as possible without focusing the laser radiation in the volume of the workpiece.
In a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, the working wavelength is selected in accordance with the secondary condition that the non-linear absorption should be as high as possible, at the working wavelength. This means, in other words, that the workpiece measurement according to the invention prior to the actual machining can additionally be used for also selecting a particularly suitable wavelength for the non-linear absorption. For this purpose, the working wavelength is expediently set, on the basis of the transmission curve, in such a way that the absorption is minimal at the working wavelength itself, but assumes a higher value at a harmonic of said wavelength (i.e. at a fraction of the working wavelength: e.g. ½, ⅓, ¼, etc.). As a result, selecting the working wavelength accordingly makes it possible for the degree of non-linearity in the absorption to be selected, and thus for the non-linear machining to be adjusted. If for example at a particular working wavelength twelve photons are required for overcoming a band gap of the material, in order to generate free electrons (ionization), the likelihood of such multi-photon absorption is relatively low. Adjusting the working wavelength, still in the range of low linear absorption of the material of the workpiece, results in a higher likelihood of ionization, if, in the changed working wavelength, for example only six, four or two photons are required for ionization.
The method according to the invention is suitable in particular for separating glass workpieces, wherein the position of the laser focus is guided, during the machining, between two or more connected glass workpieces, along a separation plane or a predetermined breaking point. The glass workpieces may for example be optical filter glass or also motor vehicle (front) windows (e.g. having a light-absorbing tint or laminated intermediate layers), or other special glass in the optics industry. The method according to the invention facilitates subsequent breaking, and minimizes production errors.
Further features, details and advantages of the invention can be found from the wording of the claims and from the following description of an embodiment with reference to the figure, in which:
The device shown in
The workpiece 4 consists for example of a special glass. This can for example be an optical filter glass. A separation plane 5 is intended to be introduced into the workpiece 4 by means of laser machining. The objective 3 focuses the laser radiation 2 such that the focus position inside the volume of the workpiece 4 is located on the separation plane 5. In this case, a controllable optical assembly 6 is provided, in order to vary the beam position in a plane perpendicular to the direction of the laser beam 2 (i.e. in the x- and y-direction). The objective 3 and the assembly 6 together form a coupling optics that couples the laser beam 2 into the volume of the workpiece 4. The focal length of the objective 3 is also variably controllable. Overall, it is thus possible for the focus position to be varied in three dimensions, i.e. in the x-, y- and z-direction. In an alternative embodiment, it is possible to move the position of the workpiece 4 relative to the optics. The coupling optics is connected to a program-controlled controller 7. The program-controlled controller 7 actuates the objective 3 and the deflection device 6 in order to vary the focus position during the machining. In this case, the program-controlled controller 7 is designed to generate a specified modification profile within the workpiece 4 by means of non-linear absorption of the laser beam 2 in the focus, said profile specifically being along the separation plane 5. The program-controlled controller 7 also actuates the laser 1 in order to switch it on and off, respectively, for generating the laser radiation. Furthermore, the device comprises a photo detector 8 as a measuring device, which photo detector is connected to the controller 7. The controller 7 can actuate the objective 3 such that the laser beam 2 is not focused inside the workpiece 4, but is instead transmitted through the workpiece 4. The transmitted laser beam 2 then strikes the photo detector 8. Varying the wavelength of the laser 1, by means of corresponding actuation using the controller 7, makes it possible to record a transmission curve of the workpiece 4, in order to carry out a spectral measurement of the linear absorption of the laser radiation in the material of the workpiece 4 prior to the actual machining, in a manner according to the invention. The controller 7 then adjusts the working wavelength of the laser 1, i.e. the wavelength to be used during the machining, in accordance with the measured transmission curve, to a value at which the linear absorption is less than 10% per centimeter, in the direction of the laser beam 2. For the purpose of spectroscopic measurement of the linear absorption, the laser 1 can be actuated so as to emit in a manner having reduced intensity, e.g. by reducing the power of a pump light source. In an alternative embodiment, the spectroscopic measurement is carried out ex situ, e.g. by means of a separate white light spectrometer. During the machining, the laser 1 then emits the laser beam 2 at a higher intensity, at which non-linear absorption, in particular ionization, occurs in the laser beam focus.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2017 120 187.4 | Sep 2017 | DE | national |
10 2017 121 140.3 | Sep 2017 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/073604 | 9/3/2018 | WO | 00 |