Lasers appear to be particularly well suited to drill and shape hard and brittle ceramics, which are almost impossible to netshape to tight tolerances, and are presently machined in industry only by diamond grinding. Unfortunately, the large, focussed heat fluxes that allow the ready melting and ablation of material, also result in large localized thermal stresses within the narrow heat-affected zone, which can lead to microcracks, significant decrease in bending strength, and even catastrophic failure. In order to assess the where, when, and what stresses occur during laser drilling, that are responsible for cracks and decrease in strength, elastic and viscoelastic stress models have been incorporated into our two-dimensional drilling code. The code is able to predict temporal temperature fields as well as the receding solid surface during CW or pulsed laser drilling. Using the resulting drill geometry and temperature fields as well as the receding solid surface during CW of pulsed laser drilling. Using the resulting drill geometry and temperature field, elastic stresses as well as viscoelastic stresses are calculated as they develop and decay during the drilling process. The viscosity of the ceramic is treated as temperature-dependent, limiting viscoelastic effects to a thin layer near the ablation front where the ceramic has softened.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Research Papers
Transient Elastic and Viscoelastic Thermal Stresses During Laser Drilling of Ceramics
M. F. Modest
M. F. Modest
Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802
Search for other works by this author on:
M. F. Modest
Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802
J. Heat Transfer. Nov 1998, 120(4): 892-898 (7 pages)
Published Online: November 1, 1998
Article history
Received:
December 30, 1997
Revised:
June 29, 1998
Online:
December 5, 2007
Citation
Modest, M. F. (November 1, 1998). "Transient Elastic and Viscoelastic Thermal Stresses During Laser Drilling of Ceramics." ASME. J. Heat Transfer. November 1998; 120(4): 892–898. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2825908
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Effect of Rib Blockage Ratio and Arrangements on Impingement Heat Transfer in Double-Wall Cooling
J. Heat Mass Transfer (September 2023)
Numerical Simulation of Mixed Convection Cooling of Electronic Component Within a Lid-Driven Cubic Cavity Filled With Nanofluid
J. Heat Mass Transfer (September 2023)
Experimental Analysis of the Influential Factors on Mixed Convection Flow in Horizontal Pipes
J. Heat Mass Transfer (September 2023)
The Effect of Biot Number on a Generalized Heat Conduction Solution
J. Heat Mass Transfer
Related Articles
Micromachining of Metals, Alloys, and Ceramics by Picosecond Laser Ablation
J. Manuf. Sci. Eng (February,2010)
Nanosecond Time-Resolved Measurements of Transient Hole Opening During Laser Micromachining of an Aluminum Film
J. Heat Transfer (September,2013)
Transient Elastic Thermal Stress Development During Laser Scribing of Ceramics
J. Heat Transfer (February,2001)
Nonlinear Inverse Heat Conduction With a Moving Boundary: Heat Flux and Surface Recession Estimation
J. Heat Transfer (August,1999)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
A Radio Frequency Antenna for Tumor Ablation
Electromagnetic Induction Imaging: Theory and Biomedical Applications
Drilling of Engineering Ceramics with Combination of Ultrasonic Vibrations and Abrasive Slurry
International Conference on Mechanical and Electrical Technology, 3rd, (ICMET-China 2011), Volumes 1–3
Novel and Efficient Mathematical and Computational Methods for the Analysis and Architecting of Ultralight Cellular Materials and their Macrostructural Responses
Advances in Computers and Information in Engineering Research, Volume 2