The invention concerns the precise cutting or separating of plate-shaped workpieces with few splinters or chips from mechanically brittle and nonmetal materials, such as panes of glass, for example.
The standard method for cutting or separating plate-shaped workpieces of nonmetal materials and brittle materials, in particular, is “scratching and breaking”. In this method, a superficial scratch that acts as a predetermined breaking point is produced by a scratching tool in the surface of the workpiece and the workpiece is subsequently mechanically broken by bending. The disadvantages of this method lie particularly in the breaking operation, since the break can be controlled only slightly due to its high velocity, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, during bending, in general, essentially more elastic energy is stored by the workpiece than is necessary for producing the cut edges. This excess energy can lead to uncontrolled breaks, for example, with splintering or shell-like chipping of the cut edge. In addition, a zone of compressive stress, into which the break is forcibly run, arises during bending, on the side of the plate-shaped workpiece that is turned away from the superficial scratch. The break front regularly rotates out from the cut edge because of this. The consequences include an irregular cut edge with shell-like chipping and lance-like cracks as well as a high tendency toward splintering.
In the standard method in the glass industry, the superficial scratches serving as predetermined breaking points are produced with hard materials such as diamonds or hard metal or carbide wheels. Alternatively, predetermined breaking points can be produced in glass objects by means of laser beams according to DE 35 37 434 A1, DE 43 00 730 C1, DE 42 14 159 C1 und DE 1 971 661 6 C2.
Offenlegungsschrift [Unexamined] patent document DE 197 15 537 and Patent Application EP 08 72 303 A2 describe methods and devices for separating flat plate-like workpieces from mechanically brittle and brittle materials by means of a symmetric heat radiation spot that has an increased radiation intensity in its edge region and is moved along a predetermined separating line, and the separating line segment along which it has moved is subsequently cooled. These methods are suitable in principle for cutting brittle materials with little splintering, but they are expensive. A method has been made known from WO 98/56722 for breaking glass articles, in which several laser beams are used. European Patent Application EP 08 39 597 A1 describes a method and the design of devices suitable for this purpose for the cutting of strip-form workpieces from brittle material. A pulsed, punctiform heat source is directed onto the workpiece in this case, and a crack along a predeterminable cut edge that separates the workpiece is “pulled” by the thermomechanical stresses that arise thereby. Patent Application EP 09 03 327 A2 describes a method for cutting nonmetal materials, in which a plate-shaped workpiece is heated on the underside by a linear heating element and is simultaneously cooled on the top side by blowing with a coolant.
It is a disadvantage in the above-named methods that the cut must proceed from an initial break site that must be generated in a special process step. This initial break site is produced with hard materials such as, e.g., diamonds or hard metal or carbide wheels. The positioning of the initial break site must thus be very precise relative to the heating/cooling zones. Another disadvantage is that the thermomechanical stresses that are produced are small and thus there is the danger that the cut will be truncated. Another disadvantage is that plates are heated through their entire thickness for the generation of sufficient thermomechanical stresses and they must be cooled again. Due to the small heat conduction in nonmetal materials such as glass, for example, this requires a long time, i.e., the cutting speed is very slow.
The object of the invention is to create a method for separating plate-shaped workpieces from mechanically brittle and nonmetal materials, which permits a separation with little splintering and allows a precise control of the vertical cutting contour. In addition, the separating will be conducted by simple means and at a sufficient velocity.
According to the invention, this object is solved in that the plate-form workpiece which is to be separated and is provided with a continuous superficial scratch is stimulated to bending vibrations with a vibration amplitude along a separating line, so that the plate-form workpiece is completely separated along the separating line. The bending vibrations can be stimulated preferably by a device transmitting vibrations, so that the separating process is conducted by means of a cyclical introduction of the load. The device transmitting vibrations, which is placed, for example, on a scratched glass plate at a suitable position and is coupled to it, stimulates the plate to vibrate at its intrinsic frequency. With a suitable mounting of the plate and with suitable vibration frequencies, the amplitude maxima lie in the region of the superficial scratch track and lead to a cyclical tensile loading perpendicular to this track. In this way, the superficial scratch track is widened differentially, perpendicular to the glass surface, so that a catastrophic and abrupt breakthrough is replaced by a continuous propagation of the crack. Particularly preferred, the method according to the invention is used for sound-induced breaking in the production of glass substrates for storage media, so-called hard disks. It is possible with the method according to the invention to propel the superficial scratch in a hard disk (HD) blank through a planar glass plate in such a way that the hard disk can be detached from the glass blank without damage and without another processing step, such as, for example, a subsequent edge processing of the inner and the outer edges.
The invention will be described below on the basis of examples of embodiment. Herein is shown:
a: The vibration modes for separating out the inner diameter
b: The vibration modes for separating out the outer diameter
The invention will be described on the basis of a special application, i.e., the production of glass substrates for electronic storage media, but without being limited thereto.
Generally, the process consists of detaching a hard disk (HD) glass blank from a planar glass plate and is comprised of three process steps independent of one another:
In
Based on the geometry of the planar glass plate 3 and the stress profile resulting therefrom during the superficial scratching, in the first process step, circular superficial scratches 5 are produced, which have as a consequence initial superficial cracks that typically do not run perpendicular to the glass surface 7. The initial superficial cracks 10 show offsets of 20 to 30 μm, which are oriented to the outer side of the plate. The surface and volume damage that arise in this process step represents a predetermined breaking point of the glass.
In the second process step, the predetermined breaking points produced in the first process step are loaded under tensile stress via a symmetrical introduction of force with a suitable support of the glass plate. The initial cracks 10 are thus controlled as much as possible when they are propagated through the glass plate. Typical is a break 12 running in the center of the plate, perpendicular to the surface, this break being angled out again about 20 to 30 μm, but this time inwardly, in the region of the head of the crack on the plate side 14 lying opposite the superficial scratch. Barrel-shaped geometries of the hard disk result from the standard breaking methods.
In the third step of the process, the HD blanks are detached from the glass plate by means of a bending process under the effect of a centrally acting mechanical load. In order to support the detaching process, the HD which has been broken in the second process step is cooled with suitable coolants, since a cylinder-shaped structure with the named geometric deviations basically cannot be detached from a glass plate without damage.
Glass is a mechanically brittle material and has a relatively low thermal expansion of typically 3.5-11 ppm/K. If commonly used geometries of 2.5″ HD form the basis for the process, then with commonly used coolants (e.g., N2), it is assumed that with complete cooling of the broken HD, maximum geometric tolerances of 50 to 60 μm can be equilibrated. The detaching step of the described process is thus necessarily combined with a mechanical contacting of the edges of the HD blank with the glass support. As a consequence of this contacting, breaks occur at the edges. The edge breaks require another processing step, such as, for example, a subsequent edge processing of the inner and the outer edges.
It is possible with the method according to the invention to avoid these disadvantages and to achieve a defined crack propagation without offset, perpendicular to the surface of the glass plate. A suitable cylindrical or slightly conical contour of the inner and outer edges of the HD results from the breaking process, which makes possible a damage-free separation of the HD from the glass substrate.
Standard breaking processes are based on exceeding the physical limit of strength of a material, characterized by the fracture toughness K1C, which leads to an abrupt, catastrophic break along predetermined superficial fracture lines. The mathematical relationship of the values relevant to the break is given by the fracture criterion of the K concept. Here, σ indicates the mechanical stress, a the depth of the superficial fracture or crack and C0 is a constant.
K1=C0·σ·√{square root over (a)} for K1≧K1C results in a break.
Reaching K1C, for example, by a bending process results in an abrupt release of the stored elastic energy, with the undesired concomitant phenomena of uncontrollable propagation of the crack and damage of the glass edges.
The inventors have now recognized that in order to widen a superficial crack through a brittle material such as glass, it is basically not necessary to exceed K1C. Cracks also propagate slowly in the glass under the action of stresses. This is physically denoted stress crack corrosion. The propagation of the crack in the glass can be controlled in a defined manner, depending on the level of the mechanically introduced loads and the time duration of the load action.
According to the invention, the separation results by stimulating the plate-shaped workpiece to bending vibrations, with which a superficial crack introduced in the glass is driven through the glass in a defined manner.
The cyclical introduction of the load can be produced, for example, via a sound generator 9. The sound generator 9, which is placed on the scratched glass plate at a suitable position and is coupled to it, stimulates the glass plate to vibrate at its intrinsic frequency. With a suitable mounting of the glass plate and with suitable vibration frequencies, the amplitude maxima lie in the region of the superficial scratch tracks and lead to a cyclical tensile loading perpendicular to this track. Then the superficial scratch tracks are widened differentially, perpendicular to the glass surface, so that a continuous propagation of the crack is produced.
In
The geometrical data were as follows:
The glass plate from which the hard disk was to be broken out, was concentrically clamped using a suitable clamping device 2 shown in
In
In
It is possible with the method according to the invention to separate out, for example simultaneously, the inner and outer radii of a hard disk from a glass plate without damage to the edges by a suitable stimulation to intrinsic vibrations.
The required amplitudes for the separation according to the method of the invention are dependent on the constraints, the geometric data and on the material data of the material to be separated.
The bending stresses acting on the superficial crack are adjusted via the vibration amplitudes of the device transmitting vibrations in such a way that these stresses make possible a subcritical propagation of the crack with a cracking velocity of up to 1 mm/s, so that a separation of the material takes place essentially perpendicular to the surface of the workpiece.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 035 342 | Jul 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/006389 | 6/15/2005 | WO | 00 | 2/22/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/007907 | 1/26/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2219698 | William | Oct 1940 | A |
3116862 | De Gorter | Jan 1964 | A |
3532260 | Augustin et al. | Oct 1970 | A |
4347958 | Wood | Sep 1982 | A |
4585152 | Sager | Apr 1986 | A |
5154334 | Dekker et al. | Oct 1992 | A |
5297710 | Juras | Mar 1994 | A |
5551618 | Shinozaki et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
6202530 | Cawley | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6478206 | Shimotoyodome et al. | Nov 2002 | B2 |
6577804 | Murakami et al. | Jun 2003 | B2 |
7699200 | Ueyama et al. | Apr 2010 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
35 37 434 | Apr 1987 | DE |
42 14 159 | Nov 1993 | DE |
43 00 730 | Mar 1994 | DE |
1 97 16 616 | Apr 1997 | DE |
1 97 15 537 | Oct 1997 | DE |
08 39 597 | May 1998 | EP |
08 72 303 | Oct 1998 | EP |
09 03 327 | Mar 1999 | EP |
14 22 201 | May 2004 | EP |
95 83 46 | Sep 1982 | SU |
99 63 47 | Feb 1983 | SU |
WO 9856722 | Dec 1998 | WO |
WO 0198368 | Dec 2001 | WO |
Entry |
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International Preliminary Report on Patentability dated Sep. 14, 2006 based on PCT/EP2005/006389. |
International Search Report dated Aug. 12, 2005 based on PCT/EP2005/006389. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090001118 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |