scholarly journals An Analytical and Experimental Investigation of Average Laser Power and Angular Scanning Speed Effects on Laser Tube Bending Process

2017 ◽  
Vol 95 ◽  
pp. 05008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalil Ibraheem Imhan ◽  
B.T.H.T. Baharudin ◽  
Azmi Zakaria ◽  
Mohd Idris Shah b. Ismail ◽  
Nasser Mahdi Hadi Alsabti ◽  
...  
Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1123
Author(s):  
Mehdi Safari ◽  
Ricardo J. Alves de Sousa ◽  
Jalal Joudaki

The laser tube bending process (LTBP) process is a thermal non-contact process for bending tubes with less springback and less thinning of the tube. In this paper, the laser tube bending process will be studied experimentally. The length of irradiation and irradiation scheme are two main affecting process parameters in the LTBP process. For this purpose, different samples according to two main irradiation schemes (Circular irradiating scheme (CIS) and axial irradiating scheme (AIS)) and different lengths of laser beam irradiation (from 4.7 to 28.2 mm) are fabricated. The main bending angle of laser-bent tube, lateral bending angle, ovality, and thickness variations is measured experimentally, and the effects of the irradiating scheme and the length of irradiation are investigated. An 18 mm diameter, 1 mm thick mild steel tube was bent with 1100 Watts laser beam. The results show that for both irradiating schemes, by increasing the irradiating length of the main and lateral bending angle, the ovality and thickness variation ratio of the bent tube are increased. In addition, for a similar irradiating length, the main bending angle with AIS is considerably higher than CIS. The lateral bending angle by AIS is much less than the lateral bending angle with CIS. The results demonstrate that the ovality percentage and the thickness variation ratio for the laser-bent tube obtained by CIS are much more than the values associated with by AIS laser-bent tube.


2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. 2195-2211 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Kiemle ◽  
M. Quatrevalet ◽  
G. Ehret ◽  
A. Amediek ◽  
A. Fix ◽  
...  

Abstract. Methane is the third most important greenhouse gas in the atmosphere after water vapour and carbon dioxide. A major handicap to quantify the emissions at the Earth's surface in order to better understand biosphere-atmosphere exchange processes and potential climate feedbacks is the lack of accurate and global observations of methane. Space-based integrated path differential absorption (IPDA) lidar has potential to fill this gap, and a Methane Remote Lidar Mission (MERLIN) on a small satellite in polar orbit was proposed by DLR and CNES in the frame of a German-French climate monitoring initiative. System simulations are used to identify key performance parameters and to find an advantageous instrument configuration, given the environmental, technological, and budget constraints. The sensitivity studies use representative averages of the atmospheric and surface state to estimate the measurement precision, i.e. the random uncertainty due to instrument noise. Key performance parameters for MERLIN are average laser power, telescope size, orbit height, surface reflectance, and detector noise. A modest-size lidar instrument with 0.45 W average laser power and 0.55 m telescope diameter on a 506 km orbit could provide 50-km averaged methane column measurement along the sub-satellite track with a precision of about 1% over vegetation. The use of a methane absorption trough at 1.65 μm improves the near-surface measurement sensitivity and vastly relaxes the wavelength stability requirement that was identified as one of the major technological risks in the pre-phase A studies for A-SCOPE, a space-based IPDA lidar for carbon dioxide at the European Space Agency. Minimal humidity and temperature sensitivity at this wavelength position will enable accurate measurements in tropical wetlands, key regions with largely uncertain methane emissions. In contrast to actual passive remote sensors, measurements in Polar Regions will be possible and biases due to aerosol layers and thin ice clouds will be minimised.


2018 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
pp. 15-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalil Ibraheem Imhan ◽  
B.T.H.T. Baharudin ◽  
Azmi Zakaria ◽  
Mohd Idris Shah B. Ismail ◽  
Naseer Mahdi Hadi Alsabti ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 3545-3592 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Kiemle ◽  
M. Quatrevalet ◽  
G. Ehret ◽  
A. Amediek ◽  
A. Fix ◽  
...  

Abstract. Methane is the third most important greenhouse gas in the atmosphere after water vapour and carbon dioxide. A major handicap to quantify the emissions at the Earth's surface in order to better understand biosphere-atmosphere exchange processes and potential climate feedbacks is the lack of accurate and global observations of methane. Space-based integrated path differential absorption (IPDA) lidar has potential to fill this gap, and a Methane Remote Lidar Mission (MERLIN) on a small satellite in Polar orbit was proposed by DLR and CNES in the frame of a German-French climate monitoring initiative. System simulations are used to identify key performance parameters and to find an advantageous instrument configuration, given the environmental, technological, and budget constraints. The sensitivity studies use representative averages of the atmospheric and surface state to estimate the measurement precision, i.e. the random uncertainty due to instrument noise. Key performance parameters for MERLIN are average laser power, telescope size, orbit height, surface reflectance, and detector noise. A modest-size lidar instrument with 0.45 W average laser power and 0.55 m telescope diameter on a 506 km orbit could provide 50-km averaged methane column measurement along the sub-satellite track with a precision of about 1 % over vegetation. The use of a methane absorption trough at 1.65 μm improves the near-surface measurement sensitivity and vastly relaxes the wavelength stability requirement that was identified as one of the major technological risks in the pre-phase A studies for A-SCOPE, a space-based IPDA lidar for carbon dioxide at the European Space Agency. Minimal humidity and temperature sensitivity at this wavelength position will enable accurate measurements in tropical wetlands, key regions with largely uncertain methane emissions. In contrast to actual passive remote sensors, measurements in Polar Regions will be possible and biases due to aerosol layers and thin ice clouds will be minimised.


2013 ◽  
Vol 457-458 ◽  
pp. 160-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao Mei Xu ◽  
Zong Hai Hong

Milling of Al2O3 ceramic is affected by various factors. Combination of laser milling parameters was optimized based on orthogonal experiment in this study. The affect degree of the parameters on the milling depth was obtained by range analysis ,based on which process parameters were optimized and laser milling experiment was taken on circular cavity using optimized parameters. The results indicated that the sequence of the factors affecting on the milling depth was laser power,scanning speed, overlap amount,defocused quantity successively. By using optimized parameters,milling depth of 0.4mm was obtained for single layer experiment,and milling result was satisfactory. The roughness was increased because the molten on the specimen surface failed to be removed,thus the pressure of the assist huff gas should be increased to improve the surface quality.


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