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Nitrogen-assisted gas generator reduces the cost of laser cutting stainless steel

by:Lxshow     2021-07-16

In the late 1980s, as laser cutting sheet metal technology entered the application field, the cutting quality of cutting stainless steel and the formation of oxides became significant problems. When oxygen is used as an auxiliary gas, an exothermic reaction occurs, especially when cutting carbon steel. This phenomenon is documented and widely recognized. In this process, oxygen obviously acts on the laser beam projection point on the metal surface to heat the steel, which brings about an exothermic reaction, causing the temperature of the area to rise to the melting point, and the molten liquid metal flows down the cutting wall and interacts with the beam. Disengagement from the affected area. As the metal melts and peels off, fresh metal is exposed to the surface, and the end result is a fairly smooth cut surface with an oxide layer.

On the other hand, stainless steel has a higher melting point and its characteristics are also different. When the quality and thickness of the cutting are factors that need to be considered, oxygen assist is usually a This is an unacceptable method because it will generate residual oxides on the metal surface. In order to solve this problem, in the early 1990s, people usually used low-pressure nitrogen auxiliary gas. With the emergence of high-pressure optical components in the later period, higher gas transmission pressures have become possible. This is an endothermic process, essentially an evaporation/melting process, without any residual oxides on the cut surface, thereby increasing The quality of the cut.

Because the auxiliary gas plays the role of removing molten metal from the cutting area in this process, gas pressure and purity become important factors. Higher pressure means greater gas consumption and higher operating costs. The nozzle diameter has a greater impact on gas consumption, because cutting thicker materials requires larger nozzles.

The history of people starting to use nitrogen instead of oxygen as auxiliary gas is not very long, and a business that supplies oxygen to laser cutting plants has begun to flourish. The use of small and large gas tanks (cylindrical tanks and dewars) to supply nitrogen has become an industry standard. Nowadays, there are very few tall liquid nitrogen storage devices connected to the production workshop. In the past, it was easy to judge through this device that this company must cut a large amount of stainless steel and other easily oxidized metals, which had to consume a lot of Nitrogen.

The most important component in the air is nitrogen (78%), and the air is free. A feasible and inexpensive way to obtain nitrogen is to use a nitrogen generator instead of buying large quantities of liquid or gaseous nitrogen. A nitrogen generator can take in air, separate nitrogen from it and use it in the processing of laser cutting equipment. Companies such as On Site Nitrogen have such equipment that can produce nitrogen with an oxygen content of only 0.0005% or 5PPM. The cost of using the nitrogen generator, in addition to the equipment cost, is the electricity cost used to run the air compressor. Compared with the traditional way of purchasing gas from local suppliers, most companies believe that the use of nitrogen generators saves a lot of money. Most factories already store compressed air on site, so you only need to pump it into the dryer, then into the nitrogen generator, and then into the storage cylinder and pressurize it. In this way, a cheaper auxiliary gas for stainless steel cutting is obtained.

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