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1.
Beam Properties, Alignment, and
Polarization
2.
Thermal and Mechanical Mounting
of Shutters
3.
User Built Circuits
4.
Shutter Lifetime
5.
Contamination
6.
Jitter Considerations
1. Beam Properties, Alignment, and Polarization
Each
shutter has an optical rating that must be observed to
avoid damage. Factors include rated wavelength (for
dielectric mirrors) or range of wavelengths (for metal
mirrors), CW maximum power, peak energy density (fluence),
recommended beam diameter, polarization vector, and
alignment control.
Shutters
are designed for typical beams that use 50-80% of the
aperture diameter. This allows good thermal
dissipation on metal mirrors and keeps the damage
threshold at a high level. When a small beam is to be
used in a larger aperture, and the fluence or CW power
is high, consult our sales engineer for estimated
thresholds of optical damage.
Beams need
to be aligned entering the input aperture to ensure
the dumped energy is reflected to the proper location.
Dielectric optics requires good alignment practice to
provide the highest reflectivity and damage threshold.
As a rule, the entering beam should be orthogonal to
the input face within about 3 degrees.
Some
advantage can be achieved in exposure properties by
locating a smaller beam in a particular location
within the aperture, on the axis of mirror movement.
This can enhance the open or closing speed, by a small
amount, typically 20%. NEVER direct a beam into the
output aperture. Materials at this point are not
intended to be exposed to radiation.
Some
shutters use near-grazing incidence to achieve greater
reflection. If the laser is polarized, align the
polarization vector with the label on the input
aperture. This provides lower operating temperatures
on the mirror and less sensitivity to contamination.
Damage thresholds are increased. At lower power
levels, polarization alignment is not required.
2. Thermal and Mechanical Mounting of Shutters
Shutters
must be rigidly mounted to keep the beam aligned in
the aperture. Heat generated inside the shutter must
be conducted out with the mounting. Both can be
achieved with simple mounts.
There are
three basic principles to adhere to: the mount must
be made of high thermal conductivity material, there
must be a large cross section of material from the
shutter base all the way to the “infinite” large mass,
and the mount or hardware in close proximity must not
be ferromagnetic. This usually leads everyone to use
aluminum.
The
shutters deliver internal heat to the base-plate, so
you must mount here to achieve good thermal flow. We
don’t recommend any pads or grease, since the surfaces
are flat and large area. If an “infinite mass” such as
an optical table or frame is not available, consider a
water chiller plate, such as the
CPW1 shown
on our Accessories page.
The mass
you conduct to will become a thermal capacitor, so a
small block will heat up fast and then the shutter
will overheat. Depending on the duty cycle of the
shutter, solid mounting may not be mandated, but one
should plan for a worst case scenario where the
shutter is left on.
When
shutters exceed about 50 degrees C, performance is
degraded, and above 80 degrees C most shutters will
fail to open, signaling a thermal overload. We use
very low out-gassing materials, but out-gassing is
accelerated by temperature, so keep your shutter
temperature in control. Temperatures exceeding 110
degrees C will cause irreversible damage.
Keep away
from magnetic materials and devices. Farady rotaters
and other magnetic devices can modify the shutter
magnetic field. Mounting brackets must never be
ferromagnetic, which is also a poor heat conductor.
In
situations where you want to isolate the vibration and
shock from any experimental hardware, consider a water
chiller plate, or in some cases, air cooling. Then you
can “suspend” the shutter mechanically while still
receiving cooling. Sufficient air cooling for small
packages is not simple, so check with our staff before
attempting air cooling.
In vacuum
applications, the common mount is an aluminum bracket
from the shutter base to the vacuum vessel wall, or an
internally welded shelve.
3. User Built
Circuits
Many of our
laser shutter models can be driven from simple DC
circuits. Cost savings can be realized by designing
and building simple circuits for your specific
application. This is common for our OEM customers, who
usually have a DC power supply in their main
electronic system.
Our safety
shutter models were designed to be driven easily from
simple DC circuits. The high speed shutters require
sophisticated circuits, which are difficult to design.
Our
recommended circuit for the process and safety shutter
models is the
Capacitor Discharge Circuit
shown on our Controllers Tutorial page. The
benefits are lowest possible cost, easy layout, and
low part count, enhancing MTBF potential. The
disadvantage is power dissipation in the voltage
dropping resistor, and the associated heat. If
adequate heat sink surfaces are present, and the
electrical power budget is not near maximum, this
circuit should be given high consideration.
For an
electromechanical device such as a shutter, this
circuit provides a smooth, adiabatic transition from
the higher “Boost” voltage down to the long term
“hold” voltage. The exponential voltage and current
decay curve is also the “pulling force” curve of the
electromagnet. This force decays as the mechanical
flexing spring force increases, yielding a softer
opening stop and very little mechanical bounce recoil.
Alternative
circuit approaches usually apply a “Boost” voltage for
a timed period, then quickly drop then a lower voltage
for holding long term. This is usually more efficient.
The
lower voltage is achieved with Pulse Width Modulation
techniques, either using a separate inductor, or the
shutter electromagnetic winding itself as the
switching inductor.
There are
some practical limits, since the shutter can be of
high inductance, and most PWM are designed to operate
above audio frequencies (~30KHz). A variant is to use
two DC supplies, typically 24 V and 5 V, and switch
between the two for Boost and Hold voltages. Many OEM
systems have 24 and 5 V available.
When a
shutter is ordered without a controller, it is assumed
the user will build their own circuit. We provide
capacitor discharge circuit values with the shipment
documentation. There are several factors that can
affect the nominal values, and the user must adjust
accordingly.
Below are
common issues that affect electronic performance:
a. Thermal
mounting insufficient. The shutter electromagnet heats
up and cannot pull the flexure open. For safety
shutters, which dissipate from 1-10 W of electrical
power, the temperature rise is usually from the
optical load. DO NOT attempt to increase the hold
voltage significantly to compensate for poor mounting.
Stay away from magnetic sources or ferromagnetic
material.
b. Shutters
must receive specified voltage/current. The forces are
non-linear, so it is very important to make sure both
boost and hold voltage are of proper value. If not,
inconsistent opening will occur, much like a
temperature problem. Check that your DC supply does
not load down, the switch element such as bipolar or
FET transistor are not a large voltage drop, and cable
lengths should be of proper gauge to reduce voltage
drops. On the capacitor discharge circuit you can
increase the capacitor for more opening assurance
margin.
c. Heat,
vibration and shock from the external environment the
shutter is mounted to will all affect performance. Use
more holding voltage in higher shock and vibration
environments. This also true when the ambient
temperature is high.
d. Watch
tolerances on electrical circuits. It’s real easy to
watch a 24 V supply drop down to 20 V through
connectors, cables, switches, and semiconductors. You
need to maintain recommended voltage values.
e.
Two-level circuits must be calibrated correctly for
proper hold. If the boost signal is too short the
shutter will not fully open. If marginal, the fast acceleration of the flexure and
resulting velocity may cause a recoil instead of a
latch to the open state. Of course a very long boost
period will eventually settle, regardless of recoil.
The ideal circuit switches from boost level (typically
24V) to hold level (typically 5 V) when the flexure is
about 75% through it’s excursion to open. There should
be no significant dropout in voltage between boost and
hold, unless properly accounted for.
4. Shutter Lifetime
Shutter
lifetime is measured by mechanical failure and optical
failure. When operated correctly, the optical elements
can have near infinite life if kept clean.
Some models
allow for cover removal and optics cleaning
procedures. Mechanical lifetime is controlled by
elastomer and polymer bonding techniques, and stresses
from impacts, both from opening and closing the
shutter. This can be controlled by the electronic
controller waveform.
We
manufacture a wide variety of products, drawing
compromises for intended markets. The Safety and
Process shutters are designed to provide over 100
million cycles with recommended control circuits, and
some are designed for over 1 billion cycles. We have
tens of thousands of products produced that
demonstrate the lifetime performance.
Some of our
high speed shutters operate at very high velocities (6
m/s) and are designed with finite lifetimes in the
100-500 million cycle range. Controllers can be set to
compromise speed vs. lifetime. The standard settings
represent the general market’s desired level of
compromise.
Optical
damage can be avoided if kept clean and if operated at
proper wavelengths. Severe optical damage can affect
mechanical elements. Most can be replaced if damaged.
Electrical
damage can occur if thermal management is poor. This
is irreversible damage, but does not occur under
proper temperatures. Our wet-wound electromagnets have
the highest reliability.
This
technology represents the highest reliability in a
mechanical shutter product. In applications where
lifetime is much more important then speed, consult
our sales engineers to assure your control product is
delivering the ideal waveform to the shutter.
Many of the
shutter models are routinely used beyond 1 billion
cycles in OEM equipment, primarily high speed
processing. The inherent nature of this technology
allows us to demonstrate such performance over the
course of just a month or two of life testing.
We are able
to offer life test results to OEM customers once the
electrical drive has been chosen and the shutter
model, with all options, is chosen. They are a pair,
and the life time performance is dependent on each
other.
5. Contamination
We use low
out-gassing materials, so make sure not to add any
contaminants to your optical system. Both temperature
related out-gassing and photochemical reactions can
create films that will degrade optics.
We do not
recommend silicone grease for mounting or the use of
any tapes on the shutter or beam containment tubes. In
manufacturing and processing environments, take
measures to keep the shutter clean from ejected
materials while cutting or welding.
Never
use compressed air to clean shutter; it is full of
water and oil vapor. Use either a clean room vacuum or
dry, laboratory dusting gas, such as nitrogen. Large
particles can inhibit shutter flexure motion. This can
occur if not properly packaged when shipping.
ALWAYS bag
and seal the shutter in plastic before shipping to
avoid contamination into apertures.
6. Jitter
Considerations
Jitter is
not a hard spec on our shutter models, since it varies
with controller choices.
The maximum
repetition rate that the high speed shutters are rated
for is generated partly due to increased jitter. Above
the maximum repetition rate, the jitter can start to
become large compared to the exposure length.
Centering the beam in the aperture will reduce jitter.
There are
some dynamic processes in the flexure movement that
create some very low jitter “sweet spots” at high rep
rates, but in general one should evaluate jitter for
the application. At low rep rates, the high speed
shutters yield about 5 microseconds of jitter,
increasing to about 50 microseconds in the 200 Hz
range.
It is
somewhat controllable with the controller waveform, so
if critical to your application, let our staff know.
An alternate model or carefully calibrated controller
may be a solution.
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