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The
process Corning has developed uses a 10.6-µm
laser and precisely controlled heating and cooling
to thermally drive a vent across a sheet of glass.
This involves putting a nick in the edge of the glass,
heating the glass to just above the annealing point
and chilling the surface with water. The cooling step
puts the surface into tension so that the crack follows
the tensile zone across the glass.
The resulting vent
permits the mechanical separation of the sheet without
creating the chips or microcracks that occur with
conventional wheel scoring. Rectangular pieces can
be cut using a cross-vent pattern with the laser method.
Dimensional tolerances are excellent, and the laser-scored
glass strength can be higher than that of mechanically
scored glass.
Because the original
speed (125 mm/s) was too slow for production, Corning
has increased it by putting as much heat into the
glass as possible. The scoring speed is a function
of the beam width, length and depth, so Corning uses
two cylindrical lenses perpendicular to each other
to lengthen the beam into an elliptical shape. A dual
laser mode is also used to distribute energy uniformly.
By combining these methods, more heat penetrates deeper
into the glass, and the speed increases to 700 mm/s.
The laser
scoring method has been used on sheet glass that is
1.1 mm thick. The crack depth is typically 0.1 mm,
and the effective heating zone is 3 to 4 mm. This
method is applicable to other higher-expansion materials,
including silicon, according to Harrie J. Stevens,
manager of finishing research at Corning.
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