National Research Council of Canada, Canada
Title: Surface structuring of optical tooling by laser remelting
Biography:
Evgueni Bordatchev is a Senior Research Officer and a Team Leader for Microfabrication and Surface Functionalization group at the National Research Council of Canada, in London, Ontario, Canada. He received Master, PhD, and Doctor of Technical Science degrees in electro-mechanical engineering from Don State Technical University, Rostov-on-Don, Russia, in 1982, 1989 and 1996, respectively. Since 1998, he is with National Research Council demonstrating his national and international recognition as an expert in laser- and cutting-based high-precision micromachining, surface functionalization, laser polishing, micro/nano-optics,micro-opto-electro-mechanical systems/sensors, and micro-moulds/dies. He has authored/co-authored over 280 publications, holds 6 patents, and has collaborated with researchers in Germany, United States, Taiwan, Brazil and in other countries. Evgueni Bordatchev is an Adjunct Professor at the Western University (London, Ontario, Canada) since year 2000, and he is also a member of Editorial Board for Springer’s Journal Lasers in Manufacturing and Materials Processing. Dr. Bordatchev is also a Sustaining Member of the American Society of Precision Engineering (ASPE) and a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IEEE).
Statement of the Problem: Functional performance of optical lighting and illumination products and components critically depends on advanced technologies for cost-effective fabrication of tooling with strict surface quality and form geometry accuracy. Recent advancements in laser material processing have resulted in developing fundamentals of a novel unique no-material additive/removal technology known as a surface structuring by laser remelting (SSLRM) process [1-3]. During SSLRM, laser beam moves over a workpiece surface with a constant speed and synchronously controlled laser power while desired surface geometry is defined as a function of a laser power control algorithm. Consequently, new surface geometry is formed due to redistribution and relocation of molten workpiece material. It is a complex, highly non-linear thermo-dynamic process where material rapid melting, reallocation and rapid solidification is controlled by the parameters of the applied continuous wave laser irradiation. The purpose of this study is to advance preliminary developments of SSLRM towards optical tooling applications [4, 5]. Methodology: A wedged edge-lit light guide (WELLG) was chosen as a typical element of automotive rear lighting. Initially, sine-shape WELLG was optically designed where its geometry parameters (e.g. period of 500 µm, amplitude of 40 µm, wedge angle of 2°, made from PMMA plastic) were found to ensure a light delivery efficiency of >50% while covering >80% of the illuminated area. A metal insert from DIN 1.2343 (AISI H11) tooling steel was fabricated using SSLRM process (fig. a), replicated into PMMA plastic by hot embossing as a functional WELLG prototype (fig. c), and its optical performance was evaluated (fig. d). Findings: A period of 498.2±3.8 µm and amplitude of 40.0±2.0 µm were achieved for fabricated tooling insert. Plastic WELLG prototype has demonstrated highly efficient light delivery performance while fully covering the illuminated area. Conclusion & Significance: This study demonstrates high potentials in applicability of the SSLRM process for efficient fabrication of optical tooling for light guiding, distribution and illumination functions and products especially for automotive, solar energy and biomedical industry.