Going
with the FLO
CO2 welding with flexible laser optic technology
presents a viable alternative to resistance spot welding
Stefan Heinemann
Visotek Inc. (Plymouth, MI), Fraunhofer USA Center
for Laser Technology (Plymouth, MI), and Bender Shipbuilding & Repair
Co. (Mobile, AL) teamed up to develop the first autogenous laser
welding application in a U.S. shipyard in a program sponsored by
the Office of Naval Research through its Small Business Innovation
Research program. The goal was to develop and qualify laser welding
as a cost-effective method for producing tab-and-slot sandwich panels.
It was also required to use Bender’s existing large laser cutting
gantry, and the time for converting from cutting to welding should
be less than 30 minutes.
Tab-and-slot sandwich panels use the laser to cut
the stiffeners with twist tabs and to cut the mating slots in the
face sheets. In a second operation the stiffeners are assembled with
the faceplates and the twist tabs are turned to hold the assembly
together. In another operation laser welding is performed through
the faceplates into the stiffener. This concept allows fixtureless
manufacturing of large sandwich panels, representing dramatic cost
savings. It also enables sandwich panels where the thickness and
location of the stiffener can be designed for optimum load bearing
and load distribution. A well-known analogy in automotive industry
is (non-linear) tailored blanks. Three-dimensional tailored blanks
are also possible through cutting curved stiffeners and rolling the
faceplate to the form of the stiffeners. The process, weld cross
section, and product are shown in Figure 1.

FIGURE 1. Laser welding (upper left), a typical
cross section (upper right), and the final sandwich panel (bottom).
The laser beam is scanned across the thickness of
the stiffener to achieve full fusion at the interface between the
stiffener and the faceplate. The resulting weld nugget shows no porosity
and a convex shape in the edges, which indicates high strength and
high fatigue life. Single path laser welding was also investigated,
but much higher porosity and incomplete fusion at the interface were
found. To achieve full fusion the individual single path weld lines
had to overlap significantly resulting in increased weld time compared
to the weave weld.
In the spring of this year, a Flexible Laser Optic
(FLO) was installed on Bender’s Tanaka 6kW CO2 laser cutter.
Cutting accuracies of 0.001 in. are achieved over the entire 20-ft.
width and 160-ft. length. Changing to this optic allowed Bender to
become the first shipyard in the United States to successfully laser
weld a structural steel sandwich panel on the shipyard’s production
equipment. Sandwich panels were welded, using 6 kW of power, with
a speed of 30 ipm for 1/8 in. and 15 ipm for 3/8 in. thickness (see
Figure 2).

FIGURE 2. Flexible Laser Optic (FLO) mounted to
the arm of a robot. The laser welding of sandwich panels is shown
to the upper right and a typical cross section of the weld is shown
to the lower right.
Through further development and higher laser power,
the FLO system will be used for welding up to 1⁄2-in. thick
sandwich panels. Future work includes additional process development
for materials such as aluminum and high strength and stainless steel
to enable the fabrication of panels for lightweight ship construction.
Integration of seam tracking and weld monitoring will also be pursued
to meet the 100 percent weld inspection that is now required for
all new naval construction. The technology has opened the door for
cost effectively manufacturing a wide variety of sandwich panels
with complex geometries using the tab-and-slot design together with
laser welding of the stiffeners through the face sheets.
Remote Welding
In parallel, Visotek and Fraunhofer have been pursuing robotic remote welding
with the FLO system. The first remote welding systems used fast scanning
mirrors instead of gantries or robots to move the laser beam quickly from
one weld line to the next, a benefit, if multiple short welds have to be
performed on different locations of the work piece, such as welding reinforcements
in place. The scanning mirrors can move the laser beam quickly, in a matter
of tens of milliseconds, across the working envelope, while conventional
motion systems require seconds for repositioning. Dramatic increases in productivity,
up to ten times higher, and a laser on-time of more than 95 percent result.
State-of-the-art systems use a high beam quality CO2 laser with up to 6kW
output power and a stationary scanning system, limiting the part geometry
to two dimensions in one plane. The working envelope of a single scanner
system with fixed optic is mainly determined by the beam quality of the laser,
limiting the maximum laser power to currently 6 kW and thus the maximum welding
speed and material thickness.
Three-dimensional remote welding was recently introduced
by putting the scanner on the arm of a robot. This combines the capabilities
and cost effectiveness of robotics with the fast beam steering capabilities
of the scanner. The robotic path can be planned with minimum accelerations
and large radii, while the scanner compensates for kinked or sharply
curved weld lines. Multiple weld patterns are possible, such as a
spot with about 10 mm diameter in analogy to the size of a resistance
spot weld, staples, or straight stitches. The actual weld pattern
is tailored to the strength and fatigue requirements of the part.
Nd:YAG or fiber lasers with up to 4 kW power and good beam quality,
typically delivered through a 0.2mm optical cable, are used in combination
with special high-power scanning systems. About 50 robotic remote
welding systems are now used in production at various automotive
plants and their suppliers.
CO2 lasers represent a much more cost effective laser
system than Nd:YAG or fiber lasers, however, their long wavelength
does not allow the use of dielectric, lightweight mirrors as they
are deployed in conventional high-speed scanners. The FLO optic with
water-cooled mirrors and proprietary drives is mounted at the end
of a robot. The beam from a 6kW PRC laser is delivered through an
articulated arm. The motion of the scanner is synchronized with the
motion of the robot to produce a circular weld line with 8mm diameter.
Test coupons with 1mm thickness of the upper sheet and 2mm thickness
of the lower sheet were used for the initial welding trials. At a
robot speed of about 6 m/min, 240 spots per minute could be welded
(see Figure 3).

FIGURE 3. Experimental set-up for robotic remote
welding with FLO optic. 240 spots per minute were welded in a 1mm/2mm
set-up using 6 kW of power from a standard CO2 laser (PRC). The
spots have a diameter of 8 mm.
Clear heat marks were visible at the bottom side of
the coupons, indicating the potential for even higher welding speeds.
The coupons were arranged in a different level (see Figure 3) to
prove the functionality and response time of the integrated autofocus.
No difference in weld quality and penetration depth could be detected
in the two spots next to the step. The system is currently benchmarked
against a conventional remote welding system, an automotive application,
welding reinforcements to a fender.
The use of cost-effective CO2 lasers and the high
power handling capabilities of FLO optics can increase productivity
through higher welding speeds or welding of thicker materials. Because
it can be easily retrofit to conventional laser systems and robots
found in many manufacturing facilities, the system offers a viable
alternative to resistance spot welding at minimum capital equipment
costs.
Industrial Laser Solutions June, 2005
Author: Stefan Heinemann
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