Hand maneuverable welding gun
10293432 ยท 2019-05-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Valentin Fomin (Burbach, DE)
- Anton Starovoytov (Burbach, DE)
- Andrey Abramov (Burbach, DE)
- Valentin GAPONTSEV (Worcester, MA, US)
- Artjom Fuchs (Burbach, DE)
- Ingo Schramm (Burbach, DE)
- Eugene Shcherbakov (Burbach, DE)
- Holger Mamerow (Burbach, DE)
- Andreas Michalzik (Wolfsburg, DE)
Cpc classification
B23K26/082
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/142
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/0096
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B23K26/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/082
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/142
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A hand displaceable laser welding gun is configured with an elongated support column extending along a longitudinal axis and made from lightweight material. A support plate is displaceably mounted to the column while supporting thereon an optical head axially which is provided with optics. The optics is configured to direct a laser beam along a path towards a welding zone through a protective window of the optical head. The laser welding gun further is structured with a first arm mounted to the support plate and extending along a longitudinal axis of the gun diametrically opposite to the optical head. The inner surface of the displaceable arm has an inner surface defining a tunnel which is aligned with the optical head and axially traversed by the laser beam, a first axially flowing stream of pressurized gaseous medium, and a second axially flowing stream of gaseous medium. The second stream, entering the tunnel at a pressure lower than that one of the first stream in response to a pressure gradient generated in the column, does not generate vortexes within the column. The first and second streams exit through the downstream end of the tunnel next to the welding zone. As the streams flow out, they carry out welding debris flowing within the tunnel to the optical head.
Claims
1. A hand maneuverable laser welding gun for joining two or more overlaid metal pieces, comprising: an elongated support column extending along a longitudinal axis; an optical head axially displaceable along the support column and provided with optics which are configured to focus a laser beam along a path through a protective window of the optical head on a welding zone, a first arm mounted to the support column along the path downstream from the protective window and coupled to the optical head to axially move between a home position and a welding position in which the arm presses against one of the metal pieces so as to enclose the welding zone to prevent laser emission from escaping outside the welding zone during welding, the first arm being configured with a hollow housing provided with an inner peripheral surface which defines an elongated tunnel traversed by the laser beam which axially propagates from an upstream to a downstream end of the housing, the housing having: a recess traversed by a first stream of a pressurized medium which enters the upstream end of the tunnel at a first pressure sufficient to prevent welding debris from reaching the protective window, an inlet traversed opening into the the upstream end at a distance from the recess, the inlet being traversed by a second stream of gaseous medium entering the upstream end of the tunnel at a second pressure which is lower than the first pressure and selected to prevent formation of air vortexes in the tunnel, and a suction outlet provided in the housing and opening into the downstream end of the tunnel, the suction outlet being under a third pressure creating a pressure gradient between the upstream and downstream ends sufficient for the first and second streams axially copropagate through the tunnel along with the laser beam and are extracted from the tunnel through the suction outlet.
2. The laser welding gun of claim 1 further comprising a second stationary arm detachably coupled to the support column, and first and second material supporting pressure ends aligned to one another and detachably mounted to respective first and second arms, the pressure ends pressing against respective metal pieces to be welded with a predetermined force during a welding operation with the laser beam.
3. The laser welding gun of claim 2, wherein the stationary arm is configured with first and second components which are coupled together to define an L-shape, the first component of the stationary arm being provided with a fastening unit configured to detachably couple the stationary arm to the column so that the first components extends parallel to the longitudinal axis.
4. The laser welding gun of claim 3, wherein the second component of the stationary arm extends perpendicular to the longitudinal axis in a mounted position of the stationary arm, the second component being configured with an inner surface defining a hollow interior.
5. The laser welding gun of claim 4 further comprising a vacuum unit in fluid communication with a free end of the second component of the stationary arm, the vacuum unit being operable to create a pressure differential within the interior sufficient to remove the welding debris therefrom.
6. The laser welding gun of claim 4 further comprising a photodetector removably nested in the second component of the stationary arm and configured to detect the light beam propagating through the pieces to be welded, wherein an intensity of the reflected light is matched to a reference value so that if the measured intensity does not match the value, a power of the laser beam is adjusted and a quality of the seam is improved.
7. The laser welding gun of claim 4, wherein the stationary arm is configured with a detachable bottom receiving welding debris which are removed therefrom upon displacing the bottom.
8. The laser welding gun of claim 1 further comprising a support plate displaceably mounted to and extending in a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis, the optical head and first arm being mounted to the support plate and extending in opposite axial directions therefrom.
9. The laser welding gun of claim 1, wherein the housing has a frustoconical shape tapering towards the downstream end of the tunnel; a flange provided with the recess and configured with a peripheral wall which narrows towards the downstream end and axially overlaps an upstream region of the housing; and a T-shaped tube received in the recess of the flange and extending axially into the housing to overlap the upstream end of the tunnel so as to define a large annular space with the flange and a narrow axial passage with the housing, the annular space and passage being in fluid communication so that the first stream of gaseous medium enters the space and further axially flows through the passage into the upstream end of the tunnel towards the downstream end of the tunnel.
10. The laser welding gun of claim 8 further comprising: a first actuator operable to displace the support plate along the column; a second actuator operable to provide a seam with the desired length; and a third actuator operative to provide the seam with a sinusoid shape, the actuators being movably coupled to the support plate.
11. The laser welding gun of claim 10, wherein the first actuator is operative to linearly displace the support plate among a plurality of spaced sequential positions including: a home position in which the displaceable arm is spaced from the welding zone at a first distance, an open position in which the displaceable arm is spaced from the welding zone at a second distance smaller than the first distance; a closed position with the displaceable aim located between the open position and the welding zone, and a gripping position in which the displaceable arm presses against the workpiece with a desired force.
12. The laser welding gun of claim 11, wherein the first actuator is operable to displace the support plate between the home and open positions at a linear speed higher than a linear speed of the support plate between the open and closed positions.
13. The laser welding gun of claim 1 further comprising a fiber laser emitting the laser beam having up to a kW-level power.
14. The laser welding gun of claim 1 further comprising a suspension system coupling a housing of the gun to an external guide and configured so that the gun is operable to: rotate about the longitudinal axis, rotate about a vertical axis extending transversely to the longitudinal axis, tilt about a pivot axis extending transversely to the longitudinal and vertical axes, and move linearly towards and away from the workpieces to be welded.
15. A welding gun for joining two or more metal pieces spaced from one another at a predetermined distance, comprising: an elongated support column extending along a longitudinal axis; an optical head axially displaceable along the support column and provided with optics which are configured to focus a laser beam along a path to a welding zone, a first arm mounted to the support column along the path and movable with the head to a welding position in which the arm presses against a front metal piece in the front of the emission zone with a predetermined force so as to prevent laser emission from escaping outside the welding zone during welding and preserve the predetermined distance between the pieces, a hollow second arm pressing a rear metal piece in the welding position and having an interior which defines a laser emission trap, the interior being configured to receive light emission, which propagates through the welding zone, and prevent exiting the received emission outside the trap; a sensor coupled to the trap and operative to detect the emission within the interior; and a controller operative to match a signal from the sensor with a reference and output a control signal to adjust the force so as to maintain the predetermine distance between the metal pieces.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The above and other features of the disclosed device will become more readily apparent from the following specific description accompanied by the drawings, in which:
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SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION
(19) Reference will now be made in detail to several embodiments of the disclosure that are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, same or similar reference numerals are used in the drawings and the description to refer to the same or like parts or steps. The drawings are in simplified form and are not to precise scale.
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(21) A laser system 16 is placed in any convenient location subject only to given requirements and is configured to output a high power beam, which may reach kW levels, preferably in substantially a single mode. While a high power fiber laser is preferred for reasons including high efficiency, small dimensions and high powers, laser 16 may have other, traditional configurations. A delivery fiber guides a laser beam from laser 16 to gun 12. At least part of the fiber, which goes through gun 12 to an optical laser head, is protected by a sleeve 18.
(22) Referring to
(23)
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(25) The rear side 32 of proximal housing 28 is configured as a control panel supporting a lever 34 with a start/end welding button 35, a control electronics housing 36, a plurality of connectors coupling laser welding gun 12 to respective outside supply sources and an interface for manual introduction of the desired parameters. In particular, a connector 38 receives sleeve 18 surrounding the fiber and made from material which protects the fiber from external mechanical loads. A connector 40 engages a pipe guiding a gaseous medium under high pressure into gun 12 from an external source. A pair of connectors 42 is structured to receive respective tubes carrying cooling medium in and out of the gun. Still another connector receives an electrical power cable. The control panel is ergonomically configured to facilitate the operator to maneuver gun 12 in such a way that none of the cables and tubes interferes with the operator.
(26) During welding, the operator engages lever 34 with one hand while holding the other hand on one of handles 44 which are mounted to bearing assembly 24. The latter has a cut-out 25 configured to couple gun 12 to gun support 20 (
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(28) The opposite elongated sides of column 50 are provided with one broad rail or a pair of separate guiding rails 52 bridged by a support plate 54 which slides along axis AA and moves arm 46 among a plurality of predetermined arm positions, as will be discussed below.
(29) Referring briefly to
(30) Returning to
(31) The wobbling mechanism or actuator 66 for producing a sinusoidal weld, a linear motor or actuator 67 for providing the weld with the desired length are also mounted on plate 54 along with the optical head and electromechanical means.
(32) The opposite side of plate 54 supports displaceable arm 46 terminating with a pressure end piece 68 which is detachably mounted to the downstream of the arm. The pressure end piece 68 is structured to press against one of the workpieces to be welded and surround a laser beam such that the laser is qualified as a Class 1 laserthe safest under all conditions in the normal use. The plate 54 along with arm 46 move along multiple predetermined positions discussed immediately below.
(33) Referring to
(34) Referring to
(35) Turning specifically to
(36) The flange 71, as shown in
(37) The relative position of the above-discussed housing, flange and tube defines a first relatively large annular space 88 and a relatively narrow axially extending passage 90 which opens into annular space 88 by one of its ends and into the interior of housing 82 by the other end.
(38) The annular space 88 receives a jet of pressurized gaseous medium, such as air, through radially extending inlet 85 (
(39) Referring to
(40) A suction outlet 96, better seen in
(41) Referring to
(42) In particular, mechanism 105 includes two pre-stressed axially displaceable contacts 107 extending along respective sides of pressure piece 68. In the initial prestressed condition, both contact 107 extend beyond the edge 113 (
(43) The electrical circuitry on
(44) The wire 111 is mounted at a short distance from edge 113 (
(45) Referring to
(46) During welding, debris may penetrate into the interior of arm's component 102 through bottomless pressure end piece 68 and, if not removed, the accumulated debris can damage this component and generally negatively affect the quality of a weld. To prevent the accumulation, the hollow interior of component 102 is in fluid communication with an outside pump. The latter may be pump 100 (
(47) Referring to
(48) In a particular realization of
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(50) In response to pressing on-button 35 (
(51) In the welding position, the contact between end pressure piece 68 and the surface of the workpiece is verified as shown at 134. Either after the contact control or somewhere before, pump 10 (
(52) The disclosed gun may be configured with the following parameters which are given as an example.
(53) TABLE-US-00001 Weight 35 kg Adjustable Clamping Force (Z-hub) 0.6-3.0 kN Opening Width C-gun 130 mm Welding Seam Length max. 40 mm Wobble Amplitude (Wobble) ?1 mm Frequency (Wobble Frequency) 3-25 Hz Welding Speed max. 80 mm/s Focal Length 250 or 300 mm Compressed Air Consumption 250 l/min at 5 bar
2.0 Technical Specifications: Laser/Controller
(54) TABLE-US-00002 Operation Mode CW, modulated Wavelength 1070 nm Nominal Output Power max. 4 kW Spot Size 0.5 mm Power Consumption 12 kW (without chiller) Dimensions Controller L ? B ?H 806 ? 856 ? 1508 mm Weight 400 kg
(55) Although shown and disclosed is what is believed to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is apparent that departures from the disclosed configurations and methods will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art and may be used without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not restricted to the particular constructions described and illustrated in regard to, for example, fiber lasers, but should be construed to cohere with all modifications that may fall within the scope of the appended claims.