Parametric Effect of Fiber Laser Cutting on Surface Roughness in 5 Mm Thick Mild Steel Sheet (IS-2062)

DOI : 10.17577/IJERTV1IS6034

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Parametric Effect of Fiber Laser Cutting on Surface Roughness in 5 Mm Thick Mild Steel Sheet (IS-2062)

Pradipkumar S. Chaudhari1, Prof. Dhaval M. Patel2

1. P. G. Student 2. Associate Professor, U. V. Patel College of Engineering, Ganpat

University, Kkerva, Mehsana.

ABSTRACT:

Mild Steel are widely used in the fabrication industry and nowadays have become of importance to other industry as well. This paper investigates experimentally the quality of laser cutting for the mild Steel IS-2062 Grade-A, with the use of a pulsed fibar laser 915,930 and 965 Watt laser cutting system. The quality of the cut has been monitored by measuring the edge roughness (Surface Roughness). This work aims at evaluating processing parameters, such as the laser power, the cutting speed and the gas pressure, for the laser cutting of mild Steel. Result revealed that good quality cuts can be produced in mild steel sheets, at a window of laser cutting speed 1450 mm/min and at a heat input of 915 watts under an assisting O2 gas pressure of 0.8 bar.

1.0 Introduction:

Laser cutting of metals has become a reliable technology for industrial production. Currently, it is considered as a feasible alternative to mechanical cutting and blanking due to its flexibility and ability to process variable quantities of sheet metal parts in a very short time with very high programmability and minimum amount of waste. Laser cutting does not need special

fixtures or jigs for the work piece because it is a non-contact operation. Additionally, it does not need expensive or replaceable tools and does not produce mechanical force that can damage thin or delicate work pieces.[1,2] . Laser cutting have many principles as the same as the conventional fusion cutting methods. But the laser cutting excels in applications requiring high productivity, a high edge quality and minimum waste, due to the fast and precise cutting process. Mild steel is a daily used material and dominantly used in the laser cutting industry. In the last few years, the rapid development of high power fiber lasers provides more efficient, robust new technologies for materials process.[3]

2.0 Experimental Procedures:

The experiments were performed on as received 5 mm thickness sheets of mild steel. Experiments were conducted using a continuous wave YLR 1000, ytterbium single mode fiber laser with the following specification: 1 kW maximum output power,

1.07 µm wavelength, 14 µm output fiber core diameter. The laser beam was focused using a 125 mm focal length lens, which achieved a beam diameter of nominally 50

µm. Surface roughness was inspected using

Mitutoyo SJ-201 surface roughness measuring instrument.

Fig. 1. YLR-1000 Laser Cutting Machine

    1. Fiber Laser Cutting:

      For a Fiber Laser the gain medium is an Ytterbium doped glass fibre, with the excitation energy being provided by laser diodes, operating around 950nm, coupled by various schemes into the core of the doped fibre. The laser beam wavelength is typically in range 1.07µm to 1.09µm. obviously the physical dimensions of the gain medium for the Fiber Laser are very different from other laser types. A Nd:YAG rod might be 200mm, a CO2 discharge around 2m, but the gain fibre in a Fiber Laser will be 10s of metres long.

      The reflectors used in the Fiber Laser are physically very different from traditional lasers. Typically the mirror will be formed from a dielectric coating on substrate; which will be transmissive at the laser wavelength for the output coupler. For the Fiber Laser, Bragg Gratings written into the core of a fibre are used. These Fibre Bragg Gratings (FBGs) consist of periodic refractive index variations. The longitudinal period of the grating determines the wavelength of the reflected light, and the magnitude of the variation controls the reflected percentage.

      Thus is it possible to manufacture the complete Fiber Laser so that the light is contained within fibre components all right up to the beam delivery point at the work piece. Figure 2 is a schematic of a typical Fiber Laser construction.[4]

      Fig. 2: Fiber Laser Schematic

    2. Fiber Laser Advantages:

      The advantages of the Fiber Laser for Industrial applications can be summarised as follows:

      Existing Advantages of Fiber Lasers:

      • Good reliability & lifetime

      • High stability of laser output leading to consistency of processing

      • Small size of overall unit

      • Generally longer Warranty than standard lasers.

      • Option of Air Cooled or Water Cooled up to a few hundred Watts output power.

      • Lower price than equivalent power traditional laser.

        Advantages of emerging industrial Fiber Lasers:

      • Integrated damage protection against backreflection issues

      • Control software offering full functionality and ability to be

        Parameter

        Range

        Laser Type

        Ytterbium Fiber

        Mode of Operation

        CW

        Polarization

        Random

        Normal Output Power

        1000 Watt

        Emission Wave Length

        1070-1080

        µm

        Switching ON/OFF

        80 µsec

        Output fiber core dia

        150 µm

        Fiber Length

        10 m

        Frequency

        50-60 Hz

        Laser source weight

        330 kg

        Laser cooling water flow rate

        6 Lit/min

        Laser cooling water temperature

        18-26 C0

        Operation voltage three phase

        400-460 volt

        Operating current

        8 A

        Starting current

        18 A

        Work Table

        3000 × 1500

        mm

        Nozzle

        1.5 mm

        integrated into system level controllers.

      • Fault diagnostics for improved Warning or Alarm identification

      • End of life warning for tracking diode lifetimes

      • Reliable, stable and linear Power Monitor integrated to laser.

      • Single sourcing for laser and Process Tools (cutting head, welding head or galvanometer based scanners)

      • Ability to increase processing performance of reflective materials through periodic enhancements to laser peak power.[4]

4.0 Material Composition of M. S. (IS-2062 GRADE-A)

Elements

% Compositions

Carbon

0.140

Sulphur

0.010

Phosphorous

0.025

Silicon

0.110

Manganese

0.850

Chromium

0.010

Nickle

0.004

Copper

0.004

Aluminium

0.020

Table 1 : Composition of Material

5.0 Major Laser Machine Specifications (YLR-1000 Laser Cutting Machine):

Table 2 : Parameter of YLR-1000 Laser Cutting Machine

NO.

CS

LP

GP

SR

10

1450

915

0.80

3.1470

11

0.90

4.1150

12

1.00

4.9150

13

930

0.80

5.3940

14

0.90

6.2430

15

1.00

5.5010

16

965

0.80

3.9830

17

0.90

5.3240

18

1.00

6.1770

19

1470

915

0.80

3.3890

20

0.90

3.4750

21

1.00

3.7870

22

930

0.80

3.7730

23

0.90

4.1910

24

1.00

5.1120

25

965

0.80

4.6320

26

0.90

4.5830

27

1.00

5.7840

    1. Parameter Considered for Experiment:

    2. Input Parameters:

      Here,

      CS = Cutting Speed (mm/min), LP = Laser Power (watt),

      GP = Gas Pressure (bar),

      No.

      Factors

      Levels

      Factor Levels Values

      1

      CS

      3

      1350, 1450, 1470

      2

      LP

      3

      915, 930, 965

      3

      GP

      3

      0.8, 0.9, 1.0

      Table 3 : Input Parameter of Experiment.

      Remaning all machine parameters are considering constant.

    3. Output Parameters:

      Here we are mesuring only one output parameter which is Surface Roughness = SR (Ra in µ).[

    4. Experimental Table:

NO.

CS

LP

GP

SR

1

1350

915

0.80

7.7700

2

0.90

8.5780

3

1.00

9.9150

4

930

0.80

8.7530

5

0.90

9.4610

6

1.00

12.7350

7

965

0.80

7.9030

8

0.90

8.5360

9

1.00

9.4630

Table 4 : Experimental Table.

7.0 Analysis of Results and Discussions:

Fig.- 4 Cutting Speed 1350 mm/min, Gas pressure and Laser power versus Surface Roughness.

Fig.- 5 Cutting Speed 1450 mm/min, Gas pressure and Laser power versus Surface Roughness.

Fig. 6 Cutting Speed 1470 mm/min, Gas pressure and Laser Power versus Surface Roughness.

The experimental condition used for cutting the 5 mm thick mild steel is above given Table3, summarizes (Table 4) the variation of surface roughness as a fuction of Laser Cutting Speed 1350, 1450,1470 mm/min,

Laser Power 915, 930, 965 Watt and Gas

pressure 0.8, 0.9 and 1.0 bar.

  1. From Fig. 4 As the Cutting Speed is 1350 mm/min, Laser Power is 915 Watts the Gas Pressure is increases from 0.8 to

    1.0 bar then the Surface Roughness is increases from 7.7700 to 9.9150 µm. Similarly for same Cutting Speed the Laser Power is taken 930 Watts the Gas Pressure increases 0.8 to 1.0 bar then Surface Roughness is increases from 8.7530 to 12.7350 µm and same Cutting Speed the Laser Power is taken 965 Watts the Gas Pressure increases 0.8 to

    1.0 bar then Surface Roughness is increases from 7.9030 to 9.4630 µm.

  2. From Fig. 5 As the Cutting Speed is 1450 mm/min, Laser Power is 915 Watts the Gas Pressure is increases from 0.8 to

    1.0 bar then the Surface Roughness is increases from 3.1470 it is best result of this experiment to 4.9250 µm. Similarly for same Cutting Speed the Laser Power is taken 930 Watts the Gas Pressure increases 0.8 to 0.9 bar then Surface Roughness is increases from 5.3940 to 6.2430µm and when the Gas Pressure increases 0.9 to 1.0 bar then Surface Roughness is decreases from 6.2430 to 5.5010 µm and same Cutting Speed the Laser Power is taken 965 Watts the Gas Pressure increases 0.8 to 1.0 bar then Surface Roughness is increases from 3.9830 to 6.1770 µm.

  3. From Fig. 6 As the Cutting Speed is 1470 mm/min, Laser Power is 915 Watts the Gas Pressure is increases from 0.8 to

1.0 bar then the Surface Roughness is increases from 3.3890 to 3.7870 µm. Similarly for same Cutting Speed the Laser Power is taken 930 Watts the Gas Pressure increases 0.8 to 1.0 bar then Surface Roughness is increases from 3.7730 to 5.1120 µm and same Cutting

Speed the Laser Power is taken 965 Watts the Gas Pressure increases 0.8 to

1.0 bar then Surface Roughness is increases from 4.6320 to 5.7840 µm.

As per ANOVA Analysis we can find the percentage contribution of input parameters for Srface Roughness as shon in below Table- 5.

Sources of Variation

Percentage Contribution

(%)

Factor A Cutting Speed

80.24

Factor B Laser Power

5.12

Factor C Gas Pressure

7.54

Error

7.10

Total

100

Table : 5 Percentage contribution of Process Parameter for Surface Roughness

8.0 Conclusions:

The effects of Cutting Speed, Gas pressure and Laser Power on quality characteristics of laser cut mild Steel specimens have been studied in this work. As per ANOVA Analysis we can found that the Factor A Cutting Speed is most signeficant factor for Surface Roughness of Mild Steel 5 mm thickness sheet.

Results revealed that good quality cuts can be produced in mild steel sheets, at a window of laser cutting speed 1450 mm/min and at a heat input of 915 Watts

under an assisting O2 gas pressure of 0.8 bar the surface roughness is 3.1470 µm.

9.0 References:

  1. P. Milonni, J. Eberly, Lasers, Wiley- Interscience Publication, USA, 1991.

  2. M.Bass, Laser materials processing Materials Processing Theory and Practices, vol. 3, North-Holland Publishing Company, 1983.

  3. Non-conventional machining processes byvP. K. Mishra, Published by Naroja publishing house, 3rd reprint, 2005.

  4. Book Introduction to Fiber Lasers and their Applications, By Dr Mark Richmond (Product Manager JK Fiber Lasers) & Dr Mo Naeem (Worldwide Applications Expert, GSI Group, Laser Division, Cosford Lane, Rugby, Warwickshire, CV21 1QN, UK)

  5. R.Neimeyer, R. N. Smith, D. A. Kaminski, 1993,Effect of Operating Parameter on CO2 Laser Cutting on Mild Steel, Journal of Engineering for Industries, 115, pp. 359 362.

  6. Avinash Dubey, Vinod Yadav, 2008, Laser Bam Machining- A Review, Journal of machine tools & manufacturing technology,48,pp. 609 628.

  7. FiberLaser@gsig.com.

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