Recent developments in digital high-speed photography allow us to directly observe the surface topology and flow conditions of the melt surface inside a laser evaporated capillary. Such capillaries (known as keyholes) are a central feature of deep penetration laser welding. For the first time, it can be confirmed that the liquid capillary surface has a rippled, complex topology, indicative of subsurface turbulent flow. Manipulation of the raw data also provides quantitative measurements of the vertical fluid flow from the top to the bottom of the keyhole. © 2010 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation.
CITATION STYLE
Eriksson, I., Gren, P., Powell, J., & Kaplan, A. F. (2010). New high-speed photography technique for observation of fluid flow in laser welding. Optical Engineering, 49(10), 1. https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3502567
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