Laser Surface Engineering: Processes and Applications: Woodhead Publishing Series in Metals and Surface Engineering
Editat de Jonathan R. Lawrence, David Waughen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 aug 2016
- Provides an overview of thermal surface treatments using lasers, including the treatment of steels, light metal alloys, polycrystalline silicon and technical ceramics
- Addresses the development of new metallic materials, innovations in laser cladding and direct metal deposition, and the fabrication of tuneable micro- and nano-scale surface structures
- Chapters also cover laser structuring, surface modification, and the chemical and biological applications of laser surface engineering
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780081014028
ISBN-10: 0081014023
Pagini: 718
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 37 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE
Seria Woodhead Publishing Series in Metals and Surface Engineering
ISBN-10: 0081014023
Pagini: 718
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 37 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE
Seria Woodhead Publishing Series in Metals and Surface Engineering
Cuprins
- List of contributors
- Woodhead Publishing Series in Electronic and Optical Materials
- Dedication
- Preface
- Part One: Thermal surface treatments using lasers
- 1. Structures, properties and development trends of laser-surface-treated hot-work steels, light metal alloys and polycrystalline silicon
- Abstract
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Laser treatment of hot-work alloy tool steels
- 1.3 Laser treatment of light metal casting alloys
- 1.4 Texturization of polycrystalline silicon for the purpose of photovoltaics
- 1.5 Development trends of selected laser-treated engineering materials determined using new computer-integrated prediction methodology
- 1.6 Conclusion
- 1.7 Comments
- 2. Laser nitriding and carburization of materials
- Abstract
- Acknowledgment
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 Overview on surface alloying of materials by laser irradiation
- 2.3 Laser nitriding of titanium
- 2.4 Laser carburization of materials
- 2.5 Future trends
- 2.6 Sources of further information and advice
- 3. Mechanical properties improvement of metallic rolls by laser surface alloying
- Abstract
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Mechanical properties improvement of metallic rolls by laser surface alloying: experimental procedures
- 3.3 Laser surface alloying of C-B-W-Cr nano-powders on nodular cast-iron rolls (NCIR)
- 3.4 Laser surface alloying of NiCr-Cr3C2 powders on semisteel rolls
- 3.5 Laser surface alloying of NiCr-Cr3C2 powders on cast steel rolls
- 3.6 Wear behavior of the three kinds of alloyed layers and three roll substrates
- 3.7 Conclusions
- 4. Laser surface treatment of AISI 304 steel with the presence of B4C particles at the surface
- Abstract
- Acknowledgment
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 Experimental producers
- 4.3 Results and discussion
- 4.4 Conclusion
- 5. Characterization and modification of technical ceramics through laser surface engineering
- Abstract
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Background of laser surface treatment of technical ceramics
- 5.3 Materials and experimental procedures
- 5.4 Establishment of laser processing parameters and associated issues
- 5.5 Modifications of Si3N4 and ZrO2 technical ceramics through laser surface treatment
- 5.6 Compositional changes
- 5.7 Microstructural modifications
- 5.8 Fracture toughness (K1c) modifications
- 5.9 Temperature distribution and phase transition
- 5.10 Conclusions
- 1. Structures, properties and development trends of laser-surface-treated hot-work steels, light metal alloys and polycrystalline silicon
- Part Two: Laser additive manufacturing in surface treatment and engineering
- 6. Compositional modification of Ni-base alloys for laser-deposition technologies
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Microstructural design to improve toughness
- 6.3 Selection of the refining element
- 6.4 Experimental procedure
- 6.5 Microstructures and phases
- 6.6 Analysis of crack growth paths
- 6.7 Microstructural evolutions
- 6.8 The microstructural refinement–cracking relationship
- 6.9 Conclusions
- 7. New metallic materials development by laser additive manufacturing
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 Selective laser melting of TiC/Ti nanocomposites parts with novel nanoscale reinforcement and enhanced wear performance
- 7.3 Development of porous stainless steel with controllable microcellular features using selective laser melting
- 7.4 Conclusion
- 7.5 Future trends
- 8. Innovations in laser cladding and direct laser metal deposition
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.2 Fundamentals of laser cladding and direct laser metal deposition
- 8.3 High precision 2D- and 3D-processing
- 8.4 High productivity processing
- 8.5 Process control
- 8.6 Conclusions and future trends
- 9. Laser-enhanced electroplating for generating micro/nanoparticles with continuous wave and pulsed Nd-YAG laser interactions
- Abstract
- Acknowledgment
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 Experimental setup
- 9.3 Results and discussion
- 9.4 Conclusions
- 10. Laser hybrid fabrication of tunable micro- and nano-scale surface structures and their functionalization
- Abstract
- 10.1 Introduction
- 10.2 Fabrication of nanoporous copper structures
- 10.3 Fabrication of 3D manganese-based nanoporous structure (3D-Mn-NPS)
- 10.4 Fabrication of micro-nano hierarchical Cu/Cu2O structure
- 10.5 Functionalization of tunable micro-nano surface structures
- 10.6 Conclusion
- 11. Laser-controlled intermetallics synthesis during surface cladding
- Abstract
- Acknowledgment
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 Laser control of self-propagated high-temperature synthesis (SHS) as synergism of the two high-tech processes
- 11.3 Overlapping of laser cladding and SHS processes for the fabrication of the functional graded (FG) iron, nickel, and titanium aluminides in the surface layers
- 11.4 Temperature distribution during the layerwise surface laser remelting of exothermal powder compositions
- 11.5 Theoretical and numerical modelling of selective laser sintering/melting (SLS/M) and SHS hybrid processes
- 11.6 Conclusion
- 12. Deposition and surface modification of thin solid structures by high-intensity pulsed laser irradiation
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 12.1 Introduction
- 12.2 Thin films with patterned surfaces obtained by laser deposition methods
- 12.3 Direct femtosecond laser surface processing in far- and near-field
- 12.4 Resources
- 12.5 Conclusions
- 6. Compositional modification of Ni-base alloys for laser-deposition technologies
- Part Three: Laser struturing and surface modification
- 13. Tailoring material properties induced by laser surface processing
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 13.1 Introduction
- 13.2 Laser texturing of silicon for improving surface functionalities
- 13.3 Femtosecond laser interactions with polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA)
- 13.4 Nd:YAG laser melting of magnesium alloy for corrosion resistance and surface wettability improvement
- 13.5 Conclusions
- 14. Femtosecond laser micromachining on optical fiber
- Abstract
- 14.1 Introduction
- 14.2 Femtosecond laser micromachining of optical fibers
- 14.3 Optical fiber microstructures fabricated by femtosecond laser micromachining
- 14.4 Optical sensing devices based on optical fiber microstructures
- 14.5 Current and future trends
- 15. Spatiotemporal manipulation of ultrashort pulses for three-dimensional (3-D) laser processing in glass materials
- Abstract
- Acknowledgment
- 15.1 Introduction
- 15.2 Tailoring the focal spot by spatiotemporal manipulation of ultrashort laser pulses
- 15.3 Three-dimensional (3-D) istropic resolutions at low numerical apertures (NAs) using the combination of slit beam shaping and spatiotemporal focusing methods
- 15.4 Visualization of the spatiotemporally focused femtosecond laser beam using two-photon fluorescence excitation
- 15.5 Enhanced femosecond laser filamentation using spatiotemporally focused beams
- 15.6 Conclusion and future trends
- Appendix: derivation of the angular chirp coefficient
- 16. Tribology optimization by laser surface texturing: from bulk materials to surface coatings
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 16.1 Introduction
- 16.2 Laser ablation behaviors of different materials
- 16.3 Tribological application of laser surface texturing (LST) to bulk materials
- 16.4 Tribological application of LST to surface coatings
- 16.5 Conclusion and future trends
- 17. Fabrication of periodic submicrometer and micrometer arrays using laser interference-based methods
- Abstract
- 17.1 Introduction
- 17.2 Multibeam interference patterns
- 17.3 Laser interference lithography
- 17.4 Direct laser interference patterning
- 17.5 Laser interference patterning systems
- 18. Ultrashort pulsed laser surface texturing
- Abstract
- 18.1 Introduction
- 18.2 Physics of thermal versus nonthermal ultrashort pulsed laser surface texturing
- 18.3 Nanosecond pulsed surface texturing
- 18.4 Picosecond pulsed surface texturing
- 18.5 Femtosecond pulsed laser surface texturing
- 18.6 Attosecond pulsed laser surface texturing: would it reasonably be applicable to surface modifications?
- 18.7 Conclusion
- 19. Laser-guided discharge surface texturing
- Abstract
- 19.1 Introduction
- 19.2 Mechanisms of laser-guided discharge texturing (LGDT)
- 19.3 Experiments of LGDT
- 19.4 Comparison with Nd:YAG laser-textured surfacing (YAGLT) and electrical discharge surfacing (EDT)
- 19.5 Conclusions
- 20. Laser surface treatment to improve the surface corrosion properties of nickel-aluminum bronze
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 20.1 Introduction
- 20.2 Solid-state laser treatment and development of laser-processing parameters
- 20.3 Experimental procedure
- 20.4 Characterization of laser-processed microstructure
- 20.5 Corrosion performance
- 20.6 Conclusion
- 21. Laser surface engineering of titanium and its alloys for improved wear, corrosion and high-temperature oxidation resistance
- Abstract
- 21.1 Introduction
- 21.2 Titanium and its alloys
- 21.3 Physical metallurgy of titanium and its alloys
- 21.4 Alloy classification
- 21.5 Surface dependent engineering properties
- 21.6 Surface engineering
- 21.7 Laser surface engineering
- 21.8 Laser surface engineering of titanium and its alloys
- 21.9 Conclusion and future trends
- 22. Laser-initiated ablation of materials
- Abstract
- 22.1 Introduction
- 22.2 Mechanisms involved in ablation
- 22.3 Demagnified image ablation machining using excimer laser beams
- 22.4 Issues arising from ablation
- 22.5 Possible solutions to such issues
- 22.6 Methods of examining ablation mechanisms
- 22.7 Conclusion
- 13. Tailoring material properties induced by laser surface processing
- Part Four: Chemical and biological applications of laser surface engineering
- 23. Luminescence spectroscopy as versatile probes for chemical diagnostics on the solid–liquid interface
- Abstract
- 23.1 Introduction
- 23.2 Chemical analysis of lanthanide and actinide ions by time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy (TRLFS)
- 23.3 Analysis of TRLFS data
- 23.4 Recent progress in chemical analysis of actinides by laser spectroscopy
- 23.5 Recent trends in chemical analysis of actinides by laser spectroscopy
- 23.6 Future trends in laser spectroscopy
- 24. Ablation effects of femtosecond laser functionalization on surfaces
- Abstract
- 24.1 Introduction
- 24.2 Laser techniques and materials
- 24.3 Topographical effects
- 24.4 Chemical and microstructural effects
- 24.5 Potential applications
- 24.6 Conclusions
- 25. Laser surface engineering in dentistry
- Abstract
- 25.1 Introduction
- 25.2 Effect of lasers on soft tissues
- 25.3 Effect of lasers on hard tissues
- 25.4 Future trends
- 26. Laser-assisted fabrication of tissue engineering scaffolds from titanium alloys
- Abstract
- Acknowledgments
- 26.1 Introduction
- 26.2 Influence of the selective laser sintering (SLS)-technique-obtained 3-D porous matrix for tissue engineering on the culture of multipotent mesenchymal stem cells
- 26.3 Preclinical testing of SLS-obtained titan and nitinol implants’ biocompatibility and biointegration
- 26.4 Finite-elemental optimization of SLS-obtained implants’ porous structure
- 26.5 The SLS-assisted functional design of porous drug delivery systems based on nitinol
- 26.6 Future remarks
- 27. Laser melting of NiTi and its effects on in vitro mesenchymal stem cell responses
- Abstract
- 27.1 Introduction
- 27.2 Experimental details
- 27.3 Results and discussion
- 27.4 Conclusions
- 23. Luminescence spectroscopy as versatile probes for chemical diagnostics on the solid–liquid interface
- Index