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Telecentric Laser Systems Print

Telecentric Laser System Operation

  1. [1] A laser source, tuned to the application, is selected.  Telecentric laser systems are capable of supporting four lasers in the housing. Wavelengths from
              442 nm (blue) to
              830 nm (infrared)
    are available.
     

  2. The laser is directed to a rotating polygon [2], which creates the required "scanning” frequency to ensure 100% inspection (coverage of the product) at the highest line speed.
      

  3. The beam is folded onto the plane of inspection by a spherical mirror [3]. This mirror forces the beam to maintain a constant profile and orientation as it travels across the product width.  This “telecentric” scanning feature is essential for reliable and repeatable results in metallizing, coating and laminating applications.
     

  4. A lens [4] focuses the beam onto the plane of the product [5].  The laser spot traverses the product, at speeds to 36 KHz (36,000 scans per second).

  1. After interacting with the product, the laser light is transmitted and/or reflected and is then captured by special optical receivers.  The receiver shown is a focused receiver and is a mirror image of the projection optics.  The high-speed laser spot is “descanned” by the internal mirrors [6] creating a stationary laser spot, which is focused on the photomultiplier(s) (PMT’s) [7]
     
  2. The PMT’s [7] convert the laser light energy into electrical video signals, which are processed in the electronics and software of the system. Depending on the application, multiple optical fields (i.e., bright field, dark field, polarity shift, optical power, etc.) can be generated.  These signals are analyzed by the system.  If defects occur, the light energy changes (becomes brighter, dimmer, changes direction, coherence, etc.).   These changes are seen in the electrical signals.

 

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