Paper
6 March 2014 IR and green femtosecond laser machining of heat sensitive materials for medical devices at micrometer scale
Klaus Stolberg, Susanna Friedel, Bert Kremser, Markus Roehner
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Abstract
In medical device manufacturing there is an increasing interest to enhance machining of biocompatible materials on a micrometer scale. Obviously there is a trend to generate smaller device structures like cavities, slits or total size of the device to address new applications. Another trend points to surface modification, which allows controlling selective growth of defined biological cell types on medical implants. In both cases it is interesting to establish machining methods with minimized thermal impact, because biocompatible materials often show degradation of mechanical properties under thermal treatment. Typical examples for this effect is embrittlement of stainless steel at the edge of a cutting slit, which is caused by oxidation and phase change. Also for Nitinol (NiTi alloy) which is used as another stent material reduction of shape-memory behavior is known if cutting temperature is too high. For newest biodegradable materials like Polylactic acid (PLA) based polymers, lowest thermal impact is required due to PLA softening point (65°C) and melting temperature (~170 °C ). Laser machining with ultra-short pulse lasers is a solution for this problem. In our work we demonstrate a clean laser cut of NiTi and PLA based polymers with a high repetition-rate 1030 nm, 400-800 fs laser source at a pulse energy of up to 50 μJ and laser repetition rate of up to 500 kHz.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Klaus Stolberg, Susanna Friedel, Bert Kremser, and Markus Roehner "IR and green femtosecond laser machining of heat sensitive materials for medical devices at micrometer scale", Proc. SPIE 8968, Laser-based Micro- and Nanoprocessing VIII, 89680E (6 March 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2040665
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Laser cutting

Laser ablation

Femtosecond phenomena

Pulsed laser operation

Absorption

Biopolymers

Polymers

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