Micro-machining of metals, ceramics and polymers using nanosecond lasers

被引:167
作者
Knowles, M. R. H. [1 ]
Rutterford, G. [1 ]
Karnakis, D. [1 ]
Ferguson, A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Oxford Lasers Ltd, Unit 8, Didcot OX11 7HP, Oxon, England
关键词
laser; ablation; micro-machining; metal; ceramic polymer; drilling; micro-milling;
D O I
10.1007/s00170-007-0967-2
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Laser micro-processing is an enabling technology that facilitates component miniaturisation and improved performance characteristics. It is being applied across many industries, including semiconductors, electronics, medical, automotive, aerospace, instrumentation and communications. The laser ablation of metals, ceramics and polymers is a complex process and the exact nature of the interaction is specific to the material and laser processing parameters used. Ablation is usually a combination of evaporation and melt expulsion. In order to achieve the highest quality results, it is often desirable to minimise the degree of melting involved and short-pulse lasers show certain advantages in this respect. We discuss the benefits of high laser intensity (GW/cm(2)) on the target for efficient laser micro-fabrication in metals and ceramics. At such high irradiance conditions, material properties are approaching their critical limits and ablation mechanisms are becoming even more complicated, but this can be exploited to our advantage, in particular, for high-aspect-ratio micro-drilling and micro-cutting. Laser micro-milled 2.5D structures were generated in alumina, tungsten, steel and polyimide. Volume removal rates are presented for the different materials for different laser fluences.
引用
收藏
页码:95 / 102
页数:8
相关论文
共 11 条
[1]   Fundamental aspects in machining of metals with short and ultrashort laser pulses [J].
Breitling, D ;
Ruf, A ;
Dausinger, F .
PHOTON PROCESSING IN MICROELECTRONICS AND PHOTONICS III, 2004, 5339 :49-63
[2]   Precision micromachining with pulsed green lasers [J].
Chang, JJ ;
Warner, BE ;
Dragon, EP ;
Martinez, MW .
JOURNAL OF LASER APPLICATIONS, 1998, 10 (06) :285-291
[3]   Micromachining of a piezocomposite transducer using a copper vapor laser [J].
Farlow, N ;
Galbraith, W ;
Kowles, M ;
Hayward, G .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ULTRASONICS FERROELECTRICS AND FREQUENCY CONTROL, 2001, 48 (03) :639-640
[4]  
FLEISCHER J, 2005, P 1 INT C MULT MICR, P9
[5]   NANOSECOND AND FEMTOSECOND EXCIMER LASER ABLATION OF FUSED-SILICA [J].
IHLEMANN, J ;
WOLFF, B ;
SIMON, P .
APPLIED PHYSICS A-MATERIALS SCIENCE & PROCESSING, 1992, 54 (04) :363-368
[6]   Comparison of glass processing using high repetition femtosecond (800nm) and UV (255nm) nanosecond pulsed lasers [J].
Karnakis, DM ;
Knowles, MRH ;
Alty, KT ;
Schlaf, M ;
Snelling, HV .
Microfluidics, BioMEMS, and Medical Microsystems III, 2005, 5718 :216-227
[7]  
KNOWLES MRH, 1998, P ICALEO, V85, pE112
[8]  
OESTENDORF A, 2005, P SPIE C, V5713, P1
[9]   PULSED ULTRAVIOLET-LASER ABLATION [J].
PETTIT, GH ;
SAUERBREY, R .
APPLIED PHYSICS A-MATERIALS SCIENCE & PROCESSING, 1993, 56 (01) :51-63
[10]   Laser milling as a 'rapid' micromanufacturing process [J].
Pham, DT ;
Dimov, SS ;
Ji, C ;
Petkov, JV ;
Dobrev, T .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PART B-JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING MANUFACTURE, 2004, 218 (01) :1-7