One of the newest laser technologies of note is the Yb:YAG disk laser, with commercial systems currently capable of delivering up to 1 kW of laser power through a 150-µm-diameter fiber. End users can expect to see 4-kW systems, such as the one shown by TRUMPF Inc. at IMTS 2004 in Chicago, by next year. The technology can offer both higher beam quality and improved electrical efficiency compared to lamp pumped rod Nd:YAG lasers. The higher beam quality allows higher energy densities, which in many applications translate directly into faster processing speeds and/or higher precision for both welding and cutting applications. As an example, cutting of 1-mm mild steel with the 1 kW disk laser was accomplished at nearly twice the speed achieved by a conventional 1 kW Nd:YAG lasers.
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ICALEO 2004: 23rd International Congress on Laser Materials Processing and Laser Microfabrication
October 4–7, 2004
San Francisco, California, USA
ISBN:
978-0-912035-77-2
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Disk laser enables application advancements Available to Purchase
Timothy Morris;
Timothy Morris
1
TRUMPF Inc., Laser Technology Center
, 47711 Clipper Street, Plymouth, MI 48170, USA
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Kurt Mann
Kurt Mann
2
TRUMPF Laser GmbH + C0.KG
, Aichhalder Strasse 39, Schramberg, Germany
D-78713
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Published Online:
October 01 2004
Citation
Timothy Morris, Kurt Mann; October 4–7, 2004. "Disk laser enables application advancements." Proceedings of the ICALEO 2004: 23rd International Congress on Laser Materials Processing and Laser Microfabrication. ICALEO 2004: 23rd International Congress on Laser Materials Processing and Laser Microfabrication. San Francisco, California, USA. (pp. 305). ASME. https://doi.org/10.2351/1.5060267
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