Abstract

The great potential to scale the productivity of laser micromachining processes offered by the development of ultrafast lasers with average powers exceeding 1 kW comes at the cost of new physical and technical challenges. The large number of adjustable parameters, the different physical process limits, and the various possible optimization strategies complicate the design of suitable laser micromachining processes that enable high quality and high throughput. In this contribution, a comprehensive model is proposed that helps to identify the optimization strategies and process parameters required for the scaling of laser micromachining to high throughput at high average laser power without exceeding the process limits to ensure high surface quality. The model was experimentally verified on the example of laser micromachining of pockets in metals and silicon using an ultrafast laser with an average power of 1.01 kW, a pulse duration of 600 fs, different pulse energies, pulse bursts, and beam diameters. As a result, high material removal rates exceeding 120 mm3/min were achieved for silicon, stainless steel, copper, and aluminum, which exceed previously achieved removal rates by one to two orders of magnitude. The machined surfaces exhibit high quality as confirmed by the low measured roughness of about 1 µm.

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