SPATIO-TEMPORAL BEAM TAILORED FIBRE LASERS FOR ENERGY RESILIENT MANUFACTURING

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Title
SPATIO-TEMPORAL BEAM TAILORED FIBRE LASERS FOR ENERGY RESILIENT MANUFACTURING

CoPED ID
0a1b8cae-fcfe-40df-bddc-4239c274b5f7

Status
Closed


Value
£1,492,860

Start Date
March 1, 2015

End Date
Aug. 31, 2016

Description

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This innovative proposal seeks a ten-fold improvement in the energy efficiency and speed of laser based manufacturing. Exploiting the most recent advances in optical fibre communication technology we will develop a new generation of fibre lasers offering unprecedented levels of simultaneous control of the spatial, temporal and polarisation properties of the output beam. This will allow machinists to optimise the laser for particular light:matter interactions and to maximise the efficiency of each pulse in laser-based materials processing for the first time, enabling a step-change in manufacturing control and novel low-energy manufacturing processes.

We believe that order of magnitide reductions in energy usage should be possible for many laser processes relative to the current generation of fibre lasers used in manufacturing today, (which themselves are already at least x2 more efficient than other diode-pumped solid-state lasers, and more than x10 more efficient than other laser technologies still in use in laser machine shops (e.g. flash-lamp pumped YAGs)). Importantly, the new control functionalities enabled should also allow laser based techniques to replace highly energy-inefficient mechanical processes currently used for certain high value manufacturing tasks and in particular in ultrafine polishing which will represent the primary focus of the application work that we will undertake in collaboration with our project partners at Cambridge University.

Lasers offering such exquiste control of the beam parameters at high peak and average powers, have the potential to be disruptive in a number of application spaces beyond industrial laser processing - in particular in sensing, imaging, medicine, defence and high energy physics and we will look to investigate opportunities to exploit our technology in these areas as the project evolves.


More Information

Potential Impact:
The provision of a single MOPA fiber laser architecture allowing both broad and precise control of all key attributes (temporal pulse shape, spatial mode profile and polarization) as needed to establish effetive and efficient light:matter interactions will deliver to the industry the most sophisticated laser manufacturing solution seen to date and could revolutionize the way that lasers are used in industry. We anticipate that order of magnitude improvements in laser processing efficiency should be possible by exploiting such concepts. Ultimately it could lead to laser systems auto-tuning beam parameter to a particular process, laser systems with intelligence. This concept is breath-taking in its potential for delivering quantum leaps in manufacturing capability.

On the basis of the latest annual fibre laser sales and growth figures (and making a few bold but not unreasonable assumptions regarding laser usage and industrial uptake) we estimate that if successful we might ultimately save as much as 1-10 TWhrs of electricity per annum simply by replacing all future fibre laser sales with ERM-fibre lasers. Even greater energy savings should be possible if various mechanical processes can be replaced by laser based techniques by virtue of the new capabilities we develop.

The laser technology developed within the project should also be applicable to a range of other applications and we are already discussing aspects of potential interest with medical/biological researchers including Professor Paul Beard and Dr Ben Cox at the University College London on photoacoustic biomedical imaging (with who we have an existing EPSRC project - EPEP/J021970), Dr Holger Gerhard at Cancer Research UK on multi-photon imaging, and Dr Tom Lister at Oddstock Hospital on the use of lasers for treatment of various skin conditions. The fibre laser research also has potential to impact other important areas of fundamental science and engineering. For example, nanosecond pulsed fibre lasers are used as precision seed sources to drive the high power laser systems being used to investigate laser driven fusion.

David Richardson PI_PER
Jonathan Price RESEARCH_PER
Shaif-Ul Alam RESEARCH_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Lasers
  2. Laser technology
  3. Optimisation
  4. Materials (matter)
  5. Laser devices
  6. Fibre optics
  7. Welding
  8. Laser pulses
  9. Optics

Extracted key phrases
  1. Sophisticated laser manufacturing solution
  2. Late annual fibre laser sale
  3. Future fibre laser sale
  4. Fibre laser research
  5. FIBRE laser
  6. High power laser system
  7. Laser processing efficiency
  8. Laser process relative
  9. Industrial laser processing
  10. Laser technology
  11. Laser system auto
  12. Single mopa fiber laser architecture
  13. Laser machine shop
  14. Laser usage
  15. State laser

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations