Laser welder rapidly produces industrial tubing

May 1, 2013
A laser welder prototype made by an international team of researchers may give European manufacturers a competitive edge.

Dresden, Germany - Can lasers perform welds precisely and reliably in the midst of thundering machinery? The prototype of a new laser welder developed by an international team of researchers has now withstood the worst. At Integasa and Ensa, two Spanish companies that produce heat exchangers for heavy industry, the prototype proved itself precise and reliable under the difficult conditions of routine daily use.

"Manufacturers of heat exchangers [have been] skeptical of [anything laser] until now," confirms Patrick Herwig from the Fraunhofer Institute for Material and Beam Technology IWS in Dresden.

TIG-welding guns have traditionally been employed in assembly operations for welding thousands of tubes to perforated tube sheets. This process, which is based on arc-welding technology, is very time-intensive, however. The gun must be manually inserted into every hole and removed again after welding. As a result, the fabrication process is tedious, prolonged, and expensive. European manufacturers can hardly hold their ground today against competition from countries with low labor costs. Materials researchers, software specialists, production engineers, and numerous users joined forces in the EU ORBITAL Project to jointly search for a cost-effective alternative, and found one.

Instead of conventional TIG-welding guns, a laser does the job. Tube sheets and tubes are welded to one another rapidly, precisely and accurately. In seconds, the tube is circumferentially welded in place and the robotic arm transporting the welding head can move on to the next hole. The welding head is designed so it anchors itself in the holes and is seated there so firmly than not even vibrations of the shop floor can disrupt the welding process. Precise guidance of the optical beam is handled by software-controlled mirrors that continuously direct it to the right location. Engineers and users from Italy, Spain, France, and Germany have been fine-tuning the process for two years.

"The prototype we are exhibiting at Laser [World of Photonics] 2013 in Munich facilitates the production of heat exchangers, and not just through its speed, but through its flexibility as well. It can even melt materials together that were considered difficult to weld until now," according to Herwig, who was responsible for designing and testing the welding head during the EU project. LASER World of Photonics 2013 will be held from May 13 to 16.

It is exactly these exotic combinations of materials that are needed by manufacturers of heat exchangers. They have to withstand extreme conditions in actual use. Heat exchangers are used in the chemical industry, ship engines, and power plants to remove heat from high-temperature, aggressive solutions of liquids. The tubing these liquids are passed through must therefore be corrosion-resistant. However, the liquid in the tank outside the tubing that absorbs the heat is chemically inert. Cost-effective materials can be employed here. Where tank and tubing meet, differing materials must be joined.

"Traditional welding techniques hit their limits here, whereas the job can be handled with the laser," says Herwig. "The researchers are confident that laser welding can be implemented so effectively in production that European companies remain competitive internationally."

About the Author

Industrial Laser Solutions Editors

We edited the content of this article, which was contributed by outside sources, to fit our style and substance requirements. (Editors Note: Industrial Laser Solutions has folded as a brand and is now part of Laser Focus World, effective in 2022.)

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