1. Field of the Invention
This application relates to laser drilling a large number of precision holes. More particularly a method and apparatus is constructed to generate multiple laser beams, each being optically processed to form a narrow annular shaped beam for use in precision drilling small holes.
2. Brief Description of Related Developments
Laser beams have been used to drill holes for years. Because of the ability to focus a laser beam to a small spot, hole diameters less than 200 micrometers may be obtained without concern for breaking, dulling, or wearing out the very tiny, fragile drill bits. In addition, with sufficient irradiance incident on the target, any material may be drilled regardless of its hardness. Even diamonds have been drilled successfully with a laser beam.
Two methods are employed when using a laser beam to drill a hole. The first of these is referred to as percussion drilling. Here a laser beam is focused to a diameter roughly equal to, or slightly smaller than the diameter of the desired hole. Next, the laser is pulsed sufficiently many times to either drill a through hole, extending all the way through the subject material, or a blind hole which extends partly into the subject material, to a pre-specified depth. The primary advantage of laser percussion drilling is speed. A secondary advantage may be that this is often the only means of drilling holes with diameters less than 50 micrometers. However, the disadvantage of laser percussion drilling is that the resulting hole is often less precise than desired. Percussion laser drilled holes are subject to significant taper, eccentricity, hole-to-hole diameter variance, heat affected zone, or “HAZ”, and the accumulation of recast material at or near the hole entrance and exit. This recast involves material melted and often vaporized by the laser beam that either flows to, or condenses upon the surrounding surface, or the entrance and or exit surfaces of the hole.
The second method of laser drilling holes is known as trepanning. Here, a larger diameter hole is drilled using a series of overlapping smaller diameter holes arranged to be internally tangent to the perimeter of the larger hole. Conventional or “mechanical” trepanning may be accomplished by either moving the work-piece while keeping the laser beam fixed, or by moving the laser beam while keeping the work-piece fixed. An important advantage of trepanning is that it generally produces a higher quality hole with greater precision than percussion drilling, especially reducing diameter variance from hole to hole, taper, HAZ, and the extent of recast material. One disadvantage of trepanning is that in most cases it is significantly slower than percussion drilling. A second disadvantage is that it requires either a precise and expensive mechanical X-Y motion system to accurately position and move the substrate, or an equally precise and expensive galvanometer driven set of orthogonal mirrors to deflect sequential laser pulses in the desired final hole configuration. Another disadvantage is the need to program the trepanning motion itself.
In applications where it is necessary to drill thousands up to many millions of small holes to precise tolerances, neither of the above methods fills the current need. It is a purpose of this invention to increase the speed of laser drilling by the trepanning method, while also significantly reducing the need for mechanical movement of the target or laser system.
It has been found that, in general it is desirable to employ an optimum level of irradiance for a specific substrate material. If the local irradiance is below optimum, the hole will retain precision at the expense of extended laser drilling time. Conversely, if the local irradiance is significantly above optimum, the laser drilling time will be brief, but the precision of the drilling process will suffer, especially with respect to the accumulation of excessive recast material and an expanded HAZ. Thus, for a specific material, there exists an optimum local irradiance level (i.e. watts of incident laser power per square centimeter) that will produce the simultaneous combination of good hole-quality and high speed at optimum irradiance levels.
It has also been found that production lasers sufficiently rugged for “shop floor” applications are very expensive, and can often create local irradiance levels well in excess of the optimum value for a specific material. It is a purpose of this invention to obtain a laser beam array by optically processing a laser beam to obtain multiple beams, each capable of drilling precise holes.
In the system according to this invention, an optical beam-splitter sub-system is employed to generate multiple laser beams, each possessing sufficient irradiance to efficiently and optimally drill the desired hole. In this manner multiple beams are obtained, while avoiding the cost of multiple laser generating systems, thereby increasing production laser hole drilling speed in a cost effective manner.
To avoid the need for a system to precisely control the motion of either the work-piece or the laser beam to achieve trepanning with the required precision, a further optical subsystem is constructed to accomplish the equivalent of multiple small holes applied in trepanning.
In one embodiment of the invention this is accomplished by constructing an optical trepanning sub-system (“OT-SS”) to process each of the output beams of the optical beam-splitter sub-system. Rather than focusing the laser beam to a tiny circular spot, and then scanning this spot around in a larger circular path, to generate a cylindrical hole via conventional mechanical trepanning, special optics in the OT-SS are employed to generate a narrow annular shaped irradiance distribution. The outer diameter of the annular irradiance distribution would be adjusted to be equal to, or slightly smaller than the desired hole-diameter. Each of the split beams are then transmitted to an optical trepanning sub-system where they are formed into the correct annular irradiance distribution through specialized and adjustable optics.
The resultant annular output beam, when directed onto the target material would operate in a manner substantially similar to conventional mechanical laser trepanning. However, this action would be accomplished without the need for any motion of either the substrate or the laser beam. In this manner the system of this invention would provide superior long-term reliability and precision.
The use of an optical beam splitter to obtain multiple beams which are each individually optically processed to generate a hole-drilling beam of annular form will enable retention of the precision advantages of trepanning, with the speed advantages associated with drilling multiple holes simultaneously, while avoiding the long-term effects of reduced precision associated with repetitive motion over thousands to millions of cycles.
In another feature of this invention, Argon gas is also concurrently introduced through a nozzle that is positioned directly in line with the hole. Argon is an inert gas, and hence will not promote any chemical reaction with the material being drilled. Also, with proper adjustment of the nozzle to create the correct flow velocity, this technique can also reduce the amount of recast material condensing on the side-walls of the hole.
The system of this invention is described in more detail below with reference to the drawing attached hereto in which:
As shown in
In order to obtain the desired number of beams a laser generator is selected, according to one embodiment of this invention, that provides approximately four times the power required to drill a particular material Considering a material, such as Inconel 600, optimum irradiance requires only about ¼th of the full laser power available in existing industrial laser systems. The number of beams possible must take into account finite reflectivity and absorption losses in the beam-splitter sub-system 3. Allowing for finite losses, a system for obtaining sufficient power capable of drilling three holes essentially simultaneously is obtained using only one standard laser system 1.
As shown in
In a second embodiment of the invention, a shroud 21 is constructed to reduce the amount of recast material within and surrounding the drilled hole, the beams 10-12 are applied to target 20 through a shroud 21. Shroud 21 forms a confined space 22 that is capable of supporting a pressure that is reduced from the pressure of the ambient space 24. This allows the introduction of an inert gas such as Argon into the space 22 where drilling is occurring. A supply of Argon gas is provided to direct the inert gas, illustrated by arrow 23 in
In this manner apparatus is provided to perform a drilling operation by generating a laser beam 12 having a predetermined power and subjecting the beam to an optical processor for dividing the single laser beam into multiple beams, for example beams 4, 5, and 6, as shown in
It should be understood that the above description, with the referenced figures, is only intended to be illustrative of the invention. Various alternatives and modifications can be devised by those skilled in the art with out departing from the invention. Accordingly, the present invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variances which fall with the scope of the appended claims.
This application is a conversion of and claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/525,674, filed Dec. 1, 2003.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60525674 | Dec 2003 | US |