Türkçe

Coherent Unifies Ultrafast Laser Business at the Glasgow Center of Excellence

829
2023-09-22 14:21:53
Çeviriyi gör

Recently, Coherent, an American laser system solution provider, announced that all of the company's ultra fast laser business, including the manufacturing of all picosecond and femtosecond lasers, will be unified in one place: the Ultra Fast Center of Excellence in Glasgow, Scotland.

Previously, Coherent's Ultra Fast Center of Excellence located in Glasgow was already a state-of-the-art mass production facility focused on lean production. After recent expansion and renovation, it will accommodate all of the company's ultra fast laser businesses - flagship femtosecond lasers (such as the Coherent Monaco) and picosecond lasers (such as the Rapid and HyperRapid series), which will now be produced at this factory.

Chris Dorman, Executive Vice President of Coherent Laser Business, said, "Creating this extended Center of Excellence will achieve incredible cross product collaboration and standardization of components and processes, and will enable integrated resource planning.

Most importantly, this will translate into some key advantages for Coherent customers, especially their bulk OEMs, including:
-Single point concentration and diffusion achieved in the production of all ultra short pulse (USP) lasers
-Accelerate product development
-Shorten delivery time
-Faster batch production increase
-Flexibility of operation

He added, "This significant transformation in the company's structure demonstrates the maturity of the development of femtosecond lasers. Femtosecond lasers are comparable to picosecond lasers in terms of stability and long-term reliability, operational simplicity, and compact and sturdy packaging. This maturity is reflected in the lasers themselves and their usage: for example, in high-throughput 24/7 industrial applications such as cutting flexible displays, and in life science applications (such as cancer cell analysis), as well as in scientific research in the 'hard core' laboratory (such as attosecond physics).

Chris Dorman pointed out that in all of these fields, femtosecond lasers have become super simple, reliable, and have become tools that can be operated with just one click - much different from engineering innovation a few years ago. They are smaller and more powerful than ever before, and now most types can provide the most advanced and convenient performance.

These characteristics enable femtosecond lasers to be "deeply embedded" in production tools and machines in the display and semiconductor industries, where uninterrupted operation 24/7 is a prerequisite. Laser is also widely used for precision cutting in medical equipment manufacturing departments, such as next-generation coronary artery stents.

The power of femtosecond lasers has also been improved, with the latest Coherent Monaco model providing up to 150 watts of infrared output or up to 50 watts of ultraviolet output. The latter is an important performance indicator for achieving volume cutting of flexible displays.

Fabian Sorensen, Product Line Manager for Industrial Ultra Short Pulse Lasers, explained that the development of this application is occurring simultaneously with changes in laser manufacturing methods. He said, "A key aspect of ultra short pulse lasers nowadays is their maturity as turnkey material processing tools, despite their incredible unique functions.

Customers from large manufacturers to small processing workshops no longer need internal laser engineers. The mass production of our picosecond industrial lasers and scientific femtosecond lasers (such as Chameleon) has fully demonstrated efficient methods. Now, all of our USP/ultrafast lasers will benefit from exactly the same lean manufacturing method.

Sorensen added that another factor behind this unification is the rapidly growing OEM demand for Monaco lasers in the display and semiconductor industries. He explained, "These lasers are very popular in both industries, combining femtosecond pulse width with tens of watts of ultraviolet power or up to 150 watts of near-infrared power to keep up with upstream and downstream processes with the highest quality requirements in high-throughput applications.

Sorensen concluded: So far, we have achieved great success in manufacturing these lasers in Santa Clara, California. Now is the right time to shift production to Scotland, where we have the technology and expertise to increase production and have extremely high unit to unit collaboration. We are able to provide OEM customers with the flexibility they require, while improving product reliability and overall performance, making it better for science Curiosity has transformed into the cornerstone of today's industry.

Source: OFweek

İlgili öneriler
  • Unsupervised physical neural network empowers stacked imaging denoising algorithm

    In view of the reconstruction problem of stack imaging technology in noisy environment, Lin Nan's team from Shanghai Institute of Optics and Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, proposed an innovative method ProPtyNet based on unsupervised physical neural network, which is expected to be applied to chip CD measurement and defect detection. The article was published in Optics and lasers in engin...

    03-25
    Çeviriyi gör
  • Sweden's powerful laser system generates ultra short laser pulses

    For the first time, researchers at Umeå University, Sweden, have demonstrated the full capabilities of their large-scale laser facility. The team reports generating a combination of ultrashort laser pulses, extreme peak power, and precisely controlled waveforms that make it possible to explore the fastest processes in nature.Umeå’s laser is 11 m long and generates very short pulses László Vei...

    08-20
    Çeviriyi gör
  • Laser ablation helps to trace the origin of medieval metals

    Archaeologists have long wondered why the people of Anglo Saxon England began using more silver coins and fewer gold coins between 660 and 750 AD. Researchers in Europe now say they have developed a method to help find the answer. This technology combines laser ablation with traditional trace element analysis to match the isotopic abundance of silver bars in coins with known sources of metal ores ...

    2024-04-13
    Çeviriyi gör
  • The physicist who built the ultrafast "attosecond" laser won the Nobel Prize

    Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz, and Anne L'Huillier won the award for their ultra short optical pulses, which made close research on electrons possible.Ferenc Klaus, Anne Lullier, and Pierre Agostini (from left to right)Image sources: BBVA Foundation, Kenneth Ruona/Lund University, Ohio State UniversityThis year's Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to three physicists - Pierre Agostini of Ohio St...

    2023-10-09
    Çeviriyi gör
  • The research team from the School of Engineering at Columbia University in the United States has broken through the "bandwidth bottleneck" of high-performance computing in new photonic chips

    When running various artificial intelligence programs such as large language models, although data centers and high-performance computers are not limited by the computing power of their individual nodes, the amount of data transmitted between nodes is currently the root cause of the limitations on the performance and bandwidth transmission of these systems.Because some nodes in the system are more...

    2023-10-31
    Çeviriyi gör