"Cold" laser beam improves arc welding.

PositionMechanical Engineering - Brief Article

While arc welding has been used for decades to join metal parts on everything from cars to boats to airplanes, the basic technology behind this multibillion-dollar industry has changed little since World War II. Now, though, engineers at Ohio State University, Columbus, have devised a way to improve the precision of arc welding and help manufacturers save energy and equipment costs. Charles Albright, professor of industrial, welding, and systems engineering, and his colleagues found a way to guide the position of welds with a special low-power laser beam. They call the newly patented technique Laser Assisted Arc Welding (LAAW).

Traditional arc welding is hard to control and sometimes damages metal parts. More precise welding is done today with inexpensive multikilowatt lasers in the automobile and aerospace industries. The LAAW system uses just seven watts--little more than a Christmas tree light bulb. Albright thinks that, once the technology is commercialized, a LAAW system could cost one-tenth of what today's typical laser welding systems do.

Since the late 1970s, researchers have known that laser beams could be used to create a path of electrons for arcs to follow, but generating enough electrons to attract a welding arc always required a high-power laser and a high-temperature laser beam path. A one-kilowatt laser, for instance, concentrates the power of a small space heater into a single, submillimeter-size spot. Such lasers are often used to manufacture electronics...

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