Terminal Manufacturing Apparatus and Welding Apparatus
US-2015364891-A1 · Dec 17, 2015 · US
US10195689B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10195689-B2 |
| Application number | US-201615206856-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 11, 2016 |
| Priority date | Jul 11, 2016 |
| Publication date | Feb 5, 2019 |
| Grant date | Feb 5, 2019 |
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Official abstract text for this publication.
A method of laser welding a workpiece stack-up that includes at least two overlapping metal workpieces is disclosed. The method includes advancing a beam spot of a laser beam relative to a top surface of the workpiece stack-up and along a beam travel pattern to form a laser weld joint, which is comprised of resolodified composite metal workpiece material, that fusion welds the metal workpieces together. And, while the beam spot is being advanced along the beam travel pattern, between a first point and a second point, which may or may not encompass the entire beam travel pattern, at least one of the following laser beam parameters is repeatedly varied: (1) the power level of the laser beam; (2) the travel speed of the laser beam; or (3) the focal position of the laser beam relative to the top surface of the workpiece stack-up.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method of laser welding a workpiece stack-up that includes at least two overlapping metal workpieces, the method comprising: providing a workpiece stack-up that includes overlapping metal workpieces, the workpiece stack-up comprising at least a first metal workpiece and a second metal workpiece, the first metal workpiece providing a top surface of the workpiece stack-up and the second metal workpiece providing a bottom surface of the workpiece stack-up, wherein a faying interface is established between each pair of adjacent overlapping metal workpieces within the workpiece stack-up; directing a laser beam at the top surface of the workpiece stack-up, the laser beam impinging the top surface and creating a molten metal weld pool that penetrates into the workpiece stack-up from the top surface towards the bottom surface and that intersects each faying interface established within the workpiece stack-up, the laser beam having a beam spot oriented along the top surface of the workpiece stack-up; and forming a laser weld joint that fusion welds the overlapping metal workpieces together by advancing the beam spot relative to the top surface of the workpiece stack-up and along a beam travel pattern and, additionally, periodically increasing and decreasing over time at least one of a power level of the laser beam to produce a series of recurring power pulses, a travel speed of the laser beam to produce a series of recurring speed surges, or a focal position of the laser beam to produce a series of recurring focal position runs while the beam spot is being advanced along the beam travel pattern. 2. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein the first metal workpiece has an exterior outer surface and a first faying surface, and the second metal workpiece has an exterior outer surface and a second faying surface, the exterior outer surface of the first metal workpiece providing the top surface of the workpiece stack-up and the exterior outer surface of the second metal workpiece providing the bottom surface of the workpiece stack-up, and wherein the first and second faying surfaces of the first and second metal workpieces overlap and confront to establish a first faying interface. 3. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein the first metal workpiece has an exterior outer surface and a first faying surface, and the second metal workpiece has an exterior outer surface and a second faying surface, the exterior outer surface of the first metal workpiece providing the top surface of the workpiece stack-up and the exterior outer surface of the second metal workpiece providing the bottom surface of the workpiece stack-up, and wherein the workpiece stack-up comprises a third metal workpiece situated between the first and second metal workpieces, the third metal workpiece having opposed faying surfaces, one of which overlaps and confronts the first faying surface of the first metal workpiece to establish a first faying interface and the other of which overlaps and confronts the second faying surface of the second metal workpiece to establish a second faying interface. 4. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein periodically increasing and decreasing at least one of the power level of the laser beam, the travel speed of the laser beam, or the focal position of the laser beam comprises at least one of the following: (a) pulsing the power level of the laser beam periodically between a minimum power level and a maximum power level to produce the series of recurring power pulses, and wherein the maximum power level of the laser beam is at least 0.1% greater than the minimum power level; (b) fluctuating the travel speed of the beam spot of the laser beam periodically between a minimum travel speed and a maximum travel speed to produce the series of recurring speed surges, and wherein the maximum travel speed of the laser beam is at least 1% greater than the minimum travel speed; or (c) oscillating a focal point of the laser beam along a longitudinal axis of the laser beam between a minimum focal position and a maximum focal position relative to the top surface of the workpiece stack-up to produce the series of recurring focal position runs, and wherein the maximum focal position is at least 5% greater than the minimum focal position. 5. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein a keyhole is produced underneath the beam spot and within the molten metal weld pool. 6. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein all of the overlapping metal workpieces of the workpiece stack-up are steel workpieces, aluminum workpieces, or magnesium workpieces. 7. The method set forth in claim 6 , wherein the overlapping metal workpieces of the workpiece stack-up are steel workpieces, and wherein at least one of the steel workpieces includes a surface coating comprised of a zinc-based material or an aluminum-based material. 8. The method set forth in claim 7 , wherein at least one of the steel workpieces includes a surface coating comprised of zinc. 9. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein the overlapping metal workpieces of the workpiece stack-up are aluminum workpieces, and wherein at least one of the aluminum workpieces includes a surface coating comprised of a refractory oxide material. 10. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein the overlapping metal workpieces of the workpiece stack-up are magnesium workpieces, and wherein at least one of the magnesium workpieces includes a surface coating comprised of a refractory oxide material. 11. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein the laser beam is a solid-state laser beam. 12. The method set forth in claim 1 , wherein advancing the beam spot of the laser beam along the beam travel pattern is performed by a scanning optic laser head having tiltable scanning mirrors whose movements are coordinated to maneuver the laser beam and thus advance the beam spot relative to the top surface of the workpiece stack-up and along the beam travel pattern. 13. A method of laser welding a workpiece stack-up that includes at least two overlapping metal workpieces, the method comprising: providing a workpiece stack-up that includes overlapping metal workpieces, the workpiece stack-up comprising at least a first metal workpiece and a second metal workpiece, the first metal workpiece providing a top surface of the workpiece stack-up and the second metal workpiece providing a bottom surface of the workpiece stack-up, wherein a faying interface is established between each pair of adjacent overlapping metal workpieces within the workpiece stack-up, and wherein all of the overlapping metal workpieces of the workpiece stack-up are steel workpieces, aluminum workpieces, or magnesium workpieces; advancing a beam spot of a laser beam relative to the top surface of the workpiece stack-up and along a beam travel pattern using a remote laser welding apparatus, such advancement of the beam spot of the laser beam translating a molten metal weld pool, which penetrates into the workpiece stack-up and intersects each faying interface established within the stack up, along a corresponding route to form resolidified composite metal workpiece material derived from each of the metal workpieces penetrated by the molten metal weld pool; and varying repeatedly a power level of the laser beam, a travel speed of the laser beam, and a focal position of the laser beam while the beam spot is being advanced along the beam travel pattern from a first point to a second point, wherein varying repeatedly the power level of the laser beam comprises pulsing the power level of the laser beam between a minimum power level of 0.5 kW to 9.5 kW and a maximum power level of 1.0 kW to 10 kW a
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