LASER WELDING APPARATUS AND LASER WELDING METHOD
20220362880 · 2022-11-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B23K26/082
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A laser welding apparatus includes a laser medium, an excitation light source and a control unit. The control unit supplies drive power to the excitation light source to inject excitation energy to the laser medium. The control unit supplies preliminary excitation power, which is smaller than pulsed drive power, to the excitation light source over a preliminary supply time, which is longer than a pulse width of the drive power before welding the first weld to be welded. After the preliminary supply time elapses and then an interval, the pulsed drive power is supplied to the excitation light source to weld the first weld.
Claims
1. A laser welding apparatus for sequentially welding a plurality of welds of a workpiece by laser beams output in a pulse form, the apparatus comprising: a laser medium which emits the laser beam for the welds while excitation energy is injected thereto; in excitation light source which injects the excitation energy to the laser medium while drive power is supplied thereto; and a control unit which supplies the drive power of a pulse form for the excitation energy to the excitation light source, wherein the control unit, before welding the first weld to be welded, of the plurality of welds, injects energy less than the excitation energy to the laser medium by supplying a preliminary excitation power, which is lower than the drive power, to the excitation light source over a preliminary supply time that is longer than a pulse width of the drive power, and allows a predetermined interval to elapse before welding the first weld after the preliminary supply time elapse.
2. The laser welding apparatus of claim 1, further comprising: a scanning mechanism including a galvano scanner which scans the plurality of welds and irradiates the laser beams in the pulse form emitted by the laser medium to the plurality of welds in sequence.
3. The laser welding apparatus of claim 2, further comprising: a workpiece support portion on which a plurality of workpieces each identical to the workpiece are placed; and a moving mechanism which moves the workpieces placed on the workpiece support portion toward a welding stage and stops a workpiece to be welded at the welding stage, wherein the control unit supplies the preliminary excitation power to the excitation light source while the workpiece to be welded is being moved toward the welding stage.
4. A laser welding method for sequentially welding a plurality of welds of a workpiece by laser beams output in a pulsed manner, the method comprising: injecting, before welding the first weld to be welded, of the plurality of welds, energy less than the excitation energy to the laser medium by supplying a preliminary excitation power, which is lower than the drive power and creates excitation energy, to an excitation light source over a preliminary supply time that is longer than a pulse width of the drive power; allowing a predetermined interval to elapse before welding the first weld after the preliminary supply time elapse; injecting the excitation energy to the laser medium by supplying the drive power to the excitation light source after the interval elapses; and emitting the laser beam for the first weld from the laser medium by the excitation energy.
5. The laser welding method of claim 4, wherein the interval is greater than or equal to a pulse width of the drive power, and the interval is shorter than the preliminary supply time.
6. The laser welding method of claim 4, further comprising: supplying the drive power of a same magnitude for each of the plurality of welds to the excitation light source and welding the plurality of welds by high-speed pulse welding with over 100 pulses per second.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
[0016] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
[0017]
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[0020]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0026] Laser welding apparatus and laser welding method according to one embodiment will now be described with reference to
[0027]
[0028] The first plate 11 and the second plate 12 are each formed of stainless steel having springiness. The first plate 11 and the second plate 12 are fixed to each other by a plurality of welds 13. The welds 13 are formed with the laser welding apparatus 20 and by the laser welding method described below.
[0029] The first plate 11 is made of stainless steel to have a thickness of 200 μm or less. The thickness of the first plate 11 is greater than the thickness of the second plate 12. The second plate 12 is made of stainless steel to have a thickness of 100 μm or less. The thickness of the first plate 11 is, for example, 30 μm. The thickness of the second plate 12 is, for example, 18 μm. Along one surface of the second plate 12, a wiring portion 15 is formed. The wiring portion 15 incudes an insulating layer made of an insulating resin such as polyimide and a conductor made of copper.
[0030] The second plate 12 is made of a metal common to that of the first plate 11 (for example, austenitic, stainless steel such as SUS304). The chemical composition of SUS304 is 0.08 or less of C, 1.00 or less of Si, 2.00 or less of Mn, 8.00 to 10.50 of Ni, 18.00 to 20.00 of Cr and the remainder of Fe.
[0031]
[0032] As shown in
[0033] As shown in
[0034] The moving mechanism 22 moves the workpieces 1 placed on the workpiece supporting portion 21 towards the welding stage 25. The moving mechanism 22 moves the workpieces 1 in the direction indicated by an arrow M1 in
[0035] As shown in
[0036]
[0037]
[0038] When the power for oscillating the laser beam is supplied to the excitation light source 51, the excitation energy 57 radiated by the excitation light source 51 is injected to the laser medium 50. When the excitation energy 57 is injected into the laser medium 50, light 60 emitted from the laser medium 50 resonates between the high-reflectivity mirror 55 and the low-reflectivity mirror 56 so as to be amplified.
[0039] When the energy of the light 60 thus amplified exceeds the loss energy of the laser medium 50, laser oscillation occurs, emitting a laser beam 42 from the low-reflectivity mirror 56. The energy to be injected to the laser medium 50 can be varied according to the power supplied to the excitation light source 51. The wavelength of the laser oscillator 40 is, for example, 1.06 μm.
[0040] The laser welding method of this embodiment will now be described with reference to a time chart shown in
[0041] In step ST1 in
[0042] In step ST2, just before welding the first weld 13 to be welded, energy for preliminary excitation is injected. In this specification, the power that makes the laser medium 50 to produce the excitation energy is referred to as drive power Pw1 (as shown in
[0043] Step ST2 may be carried out while the workpiece 1 is being moved towards the welding stage 25 in step ST1. In this case, step T2 functions as a means of supplying the preliminary excitation power Pw2 to the excitation light source 51 while the workpiece 1 is being moved towards the welding stage 25. Thus, in step ST2, the preliminary excitation power Pw2 is supplied to the excitation light source 51 for a preliminary supply time T2, which is longer than the pulse width T1 prior to welding the first weld to be welded.
[0044] In step ST3 shown in
[0045] After the preliminary supply time T2 has elapsed in step ST2, and just before welding the first weld, the control unit 24 allows to elapse a predetermined interval T3 in step ST4. The interval T3 is the same as the pulse width T1 of the drive power Pw1 or longer than the pulse width T1. Further, the interval T3 is shorter than the preliminary supply time T2 and shorter than a pulse interval T4 of the drive power Pw1. Step ST4 functions as a means of allowing the predetermined interval T3 to elapse before welding the first weld.
[0046] After the interval T3 has elapsed, in step ST5 shown in
[0047] In step ST7, it is determined whether welding of all welds of one workpiece has been completed. If welding of all welds has not been completed (“NO” in step ST7), then the process proceeds to step ST8 to prepare for the second weld and subsequent ones.
[0048] In step ST8, the scanning operation of the galvanometer scanner 30 is controlled so as to direct the laser beam to be output from laser irradiation device 23 towards the second and subsequent welds. After that, by steps ST5 and ST6, the second and subsequent welds are formed.
[0049] In step ST7, if it is determined that all the welds of one workpiece have been welded (“YES” in step ST7), the process proceeds to step ST9. In step ST9, it is determined whether welding of all workpieces has been completed.
[0050] If it is determined in step ST9 that welding of all workpieces has not been completed (“NO” in step ST9)), the process returns to step ST1 in
[0051] In the above-described embodiment, a drive power Pw1 of a common magnitude is supplied to the excitation light source 51 for each of the welds. But, one workpiece from another, the thickness and material of the welds may differ. In such cases, the output (energy value) of the laser beam may be adjusted by changing the magnitude of the drive power Pw1 according to the thickness and material of the workpiece.
[0052] The inventors of the present invention conducted experiments on four examples in which the preliminary excitation power Pw2 and the preliminary supply time T2 were changed.
[0053] The black circle in
[0054] The white circle in
[0055] The white triangle in
[0056] The black square in
[0057] The inventors of the present invention further conducted experiments on four examples in which the number of shots per unit time differs from one case to another when carrying out welding without applying the preliminary excitation energy.
[0058] The black circle in
[0059] The white triangle in FI. 9 indicates the sixth example, in which the number of pulses per second was 100. The energy value of the first shot in the sixth example was 0.0599 J. Here, as compared to the energy values of from the second shot on, there was decrease observed in energy. Therefore, in the sixth example, the quality of the first weld may be problematic.
[0060] The white square in
[0061] The white circle in
[0062] As described above, in the case of high-speed pulse welding with 100 or more shots per second, the decrease in the energy value of the first shot was problematic. The high-speed pulse welding has the advantage of high productivity because a large number of welds can be welded in a relatively short time, whereas the quality of the first weld becomes problematic.
[0063] From the above results, the following specific items have been found to be effective in preventing weld errors in the first weld without lowering the efficiency of the laser welding. That is, in high-speed pulse welding with 100 or more shots per second, a preliminary excitation power Pw2 of 25 W or higher is supplied to the excitation light source 51 in a preliminary supply time T2 of 10 ms or more.
[0064] When implementing the present invention, it is only natural that the specific configuration of the laser irradiation device, control unit, workpiece support unit, etc., can be changed in various ways. The invention can also be applied to welding of workpieces other than suspensions for disk devices.
[0065] Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details and representative embodiments shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.