Cooling of laser cutting machines with compressed air
The Horstmann GmbH & Co. KG, domiciled in Verl near Gütersloh, Germany. has applied itself to top-quality and superior metal working for well-known customers from numerous industrial sectors, including the automobile and shipbuilding industry, and the machine-, plant- and tool construction branch.
The laser cutting machines which are indefatigably in operation at Horstmann would nevertheless react extremely allergically even to this minimal oil introduction, namely with a noticeable reduction in efficiency and quality. Because their razor-sharp laser beams would literally be reduced to a slack and unsteady old "oil lamp". Different from what one may assume, the compressed air at the Horstmann laser cutting machines is not used for the pneumatics but exclusively for the cooling of the laser beam path.
In principle, a cutting plant with a CO2 laser consists of a laser beam source and movable focussing optics which, in most cases, is a concave mirror or a collecting lens. From the source, the laser beam is led to the processing optics via deflecting mirrors. There, the laser beam is focussed to generate the power density required for cutting. At Horstmann, where primarily stainless-steel plates are cut, this comes up to a beam power of up to six kW. By the way, this is enough to easily penetrate the human body entirely