Low expansion laser welding arrangement

4424435
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Inventors

Barnes, Jr., William P.

Application #

301266

Filed

Sep-11-1981

Published

Jan-3-1984

Current US Class

219/121.64
219/121.75

International Classes

B23K 027/00

Field of Search

219/121 65/43

Assignee

Itek Corporation (Lexington, MA)

Examiners

Albritton; C. L.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Blair; Homer O., Nathans; Robert L., Glanzman; Gerald H.

US Patent References

3966449   Sealing glass com...
3974016   Bonding of thermo...
4023005   Laser welding high...

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Citation

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Abstract
An arrangement for laser beam welding wherein at least one of the components being welded is formed of a material which is substantially transparent to radiation at the wavelength of the laser welding beam. A layer of welding material is placed over the surface area of the weld joint, and is a type of material which is substantially absorbent of radiation at the wavelength of the laser welding beam. The welding material is then irradiated by the laser beam through the component which is substantially transparent thereto for a sufficient period of time to cause melting of the welding material and fusion thereof to the two components being welded. The present invention has particular applicability to welding with a Nd-YAG laser of components formed of silica-containing material, such as fused silica or titanium silicate, and wherein the welding material placed at the weld surface area is a titanium based material. The present invention is also particularly attractive for weld locations which are physically inaccessible to direct irradiation, but can be irradiated through the material which is substantially transparent to the laser welding beam.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A method of laser beam welding of two components, comprising the steps of:

a. selecting the material of at least one of the two components to be welded to be substantially transparent to radiation at the wavelength of the laser welding beam;

b. placing over the surface area of the weld joint a layer of welding material which is substantially absorbent of radiation at the wavelength of the laser welding beam;

c. positioning the two components in the positions at which they are to be welded with the layer of welding material therebetween; and

d. irradiating the welding material with the laser welding beam, through the component constructed of a material which is substantially transparent thereto, for a sufficient period of time to cause melting of the welding material and fusion thereof to the two components being welded.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates generally to a welding arrangement for selected types of material, such as silica based materials, and more particularly pertains to a low expansion welding arrangement having particular applicability to normally inaccessible welding locations.

2. Discussion of the Prior Art

Laser welding arrangements of the prior art have employed carbon dioxide lasers for welding a large variety of materials including low expansion glasses such as fused silica and Ultra Low Expansion (ULE-ULE is a trademark of Corning Glass Works for their code 7971 titanium silicate glass) titanium silicate materials. However, the 10.6 um wavelength laser beam generated by a carbon dioxide laser is substantially entirely absorbed very close to the external surface of the weld area, and penetration of fusion at the weld joint is dependent primarily on conductive heat transfer into the glass.

The only other type of laser available in the present state of the art with a sufficient flux density for practical welding applications is a continuous wave or high duty cycle pulsed neodymium (Nd)-Yttrium Aluminum Garnet (YAG) laser which operates at a 1.06 um wavelength. Fused silica and ULE titanium silicate are highly transparent at this wavelength, however, and only absorb enough energy to cause a slight warming. Carbon dioxide and Nd-YAG lasers are currently commercially available with beam powers of 100 to 1000 watts which are generally sufficient for the laser beam welding.
 
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