Efficient air flow control for remote laser beam welding
Autor: | Michael Hustedt, Eckhard Beyer, Stefan Kaierle, Alexander Brodeßer, Christoph Leyens, Achim Mahrle, Jürgen Walter, Christian Hennigs, Madlen Borkmann |
---|---|
Přispěvatelé: | Publica |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0209 industrial biotechnology
Materials science Airflow Biomedical Engineering Air pollution 02 engineering and technology Welding Computational fluid dynamics medicine.disease_cause air flow control law.invention 020901 industrial engineering & automation law medicine Process engineering Instrumentation welding fume business.industry Design of experiments Laser beam welding 021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology Laser computational fluid dynamics (CFD) Atomic and Molecular Physics and Optics Electronic Optical and Magnetic Materials Flow control (fluid) design-of-experiment (DoE) approach 0210 nano-technology business photon-particle interaction remote laser beam welding |
DOI: | 10.24406/publica-fhg-398517 |
Popis: | Efficient air flow control plays a crucial role for the reliability of remote laser beam welding applications. Local air flows are helpful to suppress unfavorable interactions between laser radiation and welding fumes as a result of absorption and/or scattering effects. On the other hand, local and additional global flows have to be applied for emission control to protect optical components and workpieces from contamination and to avoid harmful air pollution of the atmosphere. However, the appropriate design of complex air flow systems under the additional condition of preferably low overall gas consumption is still a challenging task because a high number of decisive factors and a multitude of possible interactions complicate the pure empirical selection and positioning of suitable flow components and the adjustment of the numerous control parameters. This paper presents the results of a combined and complementary approach of experimental and theoretical investigations to meet these challenges. The experimental work was focused on the aspects of interaction mechanisms between the laser beam and the welding fume. Besides the characterization of process emissions, some of the requirements of stable remote processing with maximum penetration depth are revealed. In contrast, the theoretical work describes a general methodology on how to support the optimization of the cabin air flow by means of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) models in combination with Design-of-Experiment (DoE) approaches.Efficient air flow control plays a crucial role for the reliability of remote laser beam welding applications. Local air flows are helpful to suppress unfavorable interactions between laser radiation and welding fumes as a result of absorption and/or scattering effects. On the other hand, local and additional global flows have to be applied for emission control to protect optical components and workpieces from contamination and to avoid harmful air pollution of the atmosphere. However, the appropriate design of complex air flow systems under the additional condition of preferably low overall gas consumption is still a challenging task because a high number of decisive factors and a multitude of possible interactions complicate the pure empirical selection and positioning of suitable flow components and the adjustment of the numerous control parameters. This paper presents the results of a combined and complementary approach of experimental and theoretical investigations to meet these challenges. The exper... |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |