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All About Fiber Lasers

Author: Ruby

Sep. 30, 2024

All About Fiber Lasers

Advantages and Disadvantages of Using a Fiber Laser

In comparison to conventional laser heat sources, the fiber laser has a number of advantages as listed below:

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  1. A fiber laser creates a beam inside the fiber, eliminating the need for a separate optical medium for beam delivery. Therefore, it is incredibly stable and simple to maintain.
  2. Fiber lasers offer extremely high optical gain. They&#;re capable of generating a kilowatt of continuous output power. 
  3. Fiber lasers have a 30-50% power conversion rate compared to CO2 lasers' 10-15%, giving them a clear advantage in terms of energy efficiency. 
  4. Fiber lasers are highly accurate even in complex designs because of the focused narrow beams. Since cutting laser devices do not physically contact the workpiece material and only a limited area is affected by heat, the cut remains clean and free of burrs, rough edges, or thermal deformation. 
  5. The fiber's tiny core produces the beam. As a result, it is possible to create a high-quality, straight optical beam with less diffraction than with other methods.
  6. A fiber laser setup doesn't require routine maintenance like mirror replacement or adjustment. In contrast to CO2 lasers, fiber lasers have no blower or moving parts. 
  7. Fiber lasers use less power and require less maintenance than others, which results in lower operating costs.

Fiber lasers have some disadvantages; these are listed below:

  1. A fiber laser cutter typically has more expensive components.
  2. The delivery fiber cannot be separated from the source, making replacement a challenge.

Fiber Laser Applications

Fiber lasers are useful in a variety of applications due to the many power levels they can produce. Among them are:

  1. Laser Marking: nm emission wavelength ytterbium-doped fiber lasers are considered ideal for laser marking applications. These lasers may leave sharp, durable imprints on plastic and metal surfaces. They can be customized to accommodate quick production cycles and can be manual or automated. Fiber laser equipment can be used to anneal, etch, and engrave as well. 
  2. Laser Cleaning: Laser cleaning &#; the process of removing paint, oxide, and rust from metal surfaces &#; works best using fiber lasers. The procedure can be automated and customized for various manufacturing line conditions.
  3. Laser Welding: Fiber lasers play a significant role in the welding industry. In comparison to conventional methods, laser welding offers faster speeds, more precision, less distortion, higher quality, and greater efficiency.
  4. Laser Cutting: Fiber lasers have remarkably effective edge quality and can handle difficult cuts. They are ideal for items with tight tolerances. Due to the extensive list of advantages, fabricators have increasingly begun to favor fiber. 

How The Power of a Fiber Laser Scales

Fiber lasers' ability to scale in power is constrained by Brillouin and Raman scattering as well as the short length of the lasers themselves. Many components, including amplifiers, switches, and logic elements, require nonlinear fiber configurations. 

There are two classes of nonlinear effects in optical fibers. The first one is brought on by the Kerr effect, or the intensity dependence of the medium's refractive index. This phenomenon manifests as one of three effects, depending on the type of input signal: cross-phase modulation (CPM), self-phase modulation (SPM), or four-wave mixing (FWM). 

The second nonlinear effect occurs when the optical field transfers some of its energy to the nonlinear medium via inelastic scattering. Such inelastic scattering can result in phenomena like stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) and stimulated Raman scattering (SRS). 

Any form of stimulated scattering action can potentially be a source of gain for the fiber. In both processes, if the incident power rises above a specific threshold, the intensity of dispersed light increases exponentially. Because of the comparatively large frequency shift and the wider gain bandwidth, Raman amplification is more beneficial. The main distinction between them is that in Brillouin, the optical wave interacts with low-frequency acoustic phonons, whereas in Raman, the directed optical wave interacts with high-frequency optical phonons. Another key distinction is that SRS can happen in both directions while SBS only happens in the backward direction in optical fibers.

Alternatives to Fiber Lasers

Some alternative cutting technologies to fiber lasers include:

  1. Gas/CO2 Lasers: A CO2 laser's wavelength is 10.6 mm. Compared to a fiber laser with the same power output, a CO2 laser has more energy to cut through thicker materials and can produce a smoother finish. Materials that can be cut with CO2 lasers include acrylic, leather, some plastics and foams, glass, paper-based materials, and wood. 
  2. Crystal Laser Cutters: Crystal laser cutters operate at shorter wavelengths compared to CO2 lasers, meaning they have higher intensities, allowing them to cut through thicker and stronger materials. However, because of their high power, their parts deteriorate quickly. Crystal lasers are most often used to cut metals, ceramics, and plastics.

Materials that a Fiber Laser Can Cut

Fiber lasers can be used to cut the following materials:

  1. Metals such as: carbon steel, copper, brass, stainless steel, titanium, and aluminum. 
  2. Plastic such as: acrylic, polyoxymethylene, and lucite.
  3. Graphite

On the other hand, fiber laser cutters are not suitable for: glass fiber, leather, ceramics, polycarbonate, ABS, HDPE, polystyrene, and polypropylene foam. 

The Main Types of Fiber Lasers

The main types of fiber lasers are classified depending on the laser source (thulium-doped, erbium-doped, or ytterbium-doped), mode, mode of operation (multi-mode or single-mode), and laser power.

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How To Classify Fiber Laser Types

The following can be used to classify fiber lasers: 

1. Laser Source

The type of chemical used to dope the laser source impacts the light&#;s wavelength. Examples include thulium-doped, erbium-doped, and ytterbium-doped fiber lasers. The distinct wavelengths that each of these laser types produces allow them to be employed for different applications.

2. Mode of Operation

Differing laser configurations emit laser beams in different ways. For high peak strengths, laser beams may be "q-switched," "mode-locked," or "gain-switched." They can also be pulsed at a predetermined repetition rate (such as in pulsed lasers). Alternatively, if they were continuous (continuous wave fiber lasers), they might continuously transmit the same quantity of energy.

3. Mode

Mode describes the core size of an optical fiber, which is where the light travels. The two types of fiber laser modes are multi-mode and single-mode. Multi-mode laser core widths often range from 50 to 100 micrometers while single-mode laser core diameters typically come in between 8 and 9 micrometers. Single-mode lasers often provide better beams and more efficient laser light transmission.

4. Laser Power

The term "laser power" refers to the average power of the laser beam, which is given in watts. High-power lasers generate more energy and do so quicker than low-power lasers.

The Parts of a Fiber Laser Machine

A fiber laser machine is a device whose operation depends, at least in part, on a built-in fiber laser system. The core components of a fiber laser cutting machine, for example, include:

  1. Laser source 
  2. Laser cutting head
  3. Servo motor
  4. Cooling device
  5. Air cutting system
  6. Laser host (bed, beam, table, and Z-axis system)
  7. Control system
  8. Stabilizer 

What Are the Types of Fiber Laser Machines?

Table 1 lists some of the top fiber laser marker and engraving machines on the market:

The rise and rise of the fiber laser

JOHN POWELL

Way back in the mists of time, the laser cutting market was completely dominated by the carbon dioxide (CO2) laser. These had progressed from laboratory toys to industrial machines in the s and s, and by the s, they were multikilowatt plug-and-play devices with a high level of reliability. By the turn of the millennium, the laser cutting industry was generally considered to be mature and growing steadily. No one was expecting any major steps forward in the technology by that point.

So, around , I was not alone in being highly skeptical of the claims salesmen were starting to make about a revolutionary new laser cutting technology&#;the fiber laser.

Early results from these new lasers were interesting, but patchy&#;they were probably going to overtake CO2 lasers for cutting thin-section (3 mm and below) steel because they cut faster, but in thicknesses above ~5 mm, the surface quality was well below what we&#;d come to expect from the CO2 machines.

Experts like Dirk Petring1 got to work on why the cut quality on thicker sections was inferior and soon found the answer. In the case of CO2 lasers, the cut front was smooth and so the liquid metal flowed downwards in a very orderly way (FIGURE 1), leaving only minor ripple patterns on the cut edge.

Are you interested in learning more about Single-platform Fiber Laser Cutting Machine? Contact us today to secure an expert consultation!

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