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- Conference Proceeding (2) (remove)
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- 2023 (2)
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Keywords
- Laser beam welding (1)
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- Tiefschweißen (1)
- optical coherence tomography (1)
- sensor technology (1)
For monitoring laser beam welding processes and detecting or actively avoiding process defects, acoustic based measurements can be used in addition to optical measurement methods such as pyrometry. To reliably detect process events, it is essential to position the respective sensors in such a way that specific signal characteristics are reproducible and significant. However, there are only few investigations regarding the positioning for airborne sound sensors, especially for the detection of process emissions in the ultrasonic range. Therefore, in this research, the influence of the process distance as well as the angle and orientation of the microphone to a laser beam deep penetration welding process is investigated with respect to the detectability of process emissions in different frequency bands. It is shown that for a wide ultrasonic range a flat sensor angle with respect to the sample surface leads to an increased signal strength of the acoustic emissions compared to steep angles.
Laser welding of hidden T-joints, connecting the web-sheet through the face-sheet of the joint can provide advantages like increased lightweight potential in manufacturing sandwich structures with thin-walled cores. However, maintaining the correct positioning of the beam relative to the joint is challenging. A method to reduce the effort of positioning is using optical coherence tomography (OCT), that interferometrically measures the reflection distance inside of the keyhole during laser deep penetration welding. In this study new approaches for targeted data processing of the OCT-signal to automatically detect misalignments are presented. It is shown that considering multiple components from the inference pattern and the respective signal intensities improve the detection accuracy of misalignments.