In fiber laser cutting, the nozzle is an extremely critical and vulnerable consumable. Its loss directly affects the cutting quality, gas consumption and production costs. Common nozzle loss mainly has the following several situations:
Physical impact and wear (This is the most common and direct cause of wear and tear.)
1. Collision with plate: in the process of feeding and blanking, perforation (especially slag splashing during blasting and perforation of thick plate), or machine tool positioning/edge finding, the end face of nozzle directly impacts on the plate, resulting in deformation, scratch or notch.
2. Collision with fixture: During the movement of the cutting head, due to the wrong programming path or the zero drift of the machine tool, the nozzle may hit the fixture.
3. Long-term wear: Even if there is no violent collision, in the long-term high-speed cutting process, the high-speed flow of cutting gas (especially with tiny metal particles) will continue to scour the inner wall of the nozzle, resulting in the gradual expansion of the aperture, out of round, affecting the gas flow field.
Consequences: The cutting gas flow field is disordered, resulting in rough cutting surface, hanging slag, increased burrs at the bottom, and even unable to cut through.
Slag splashing and clogging
During the cutting process, molten metal spatter adheres to the inner wall or end face of the nozzle.
1. Inner wall adhesion: When cutting galvanized sheet, stainless steel or coated sheet, the viscous slag generated is easy to splash and adhere to the inner wall of the nozzle hole, gradually accumulating to reduce the aperture and asymmetric airflow.
2. End face adhesion: The slag accumulates on the lower end face of the nozzle, which changes the distance from the nozzle to the plate (nozzle height) and affects the gas dynamics effect.
3. Complete blockage: In severe cases, the slag may completely block the nozzle, and the airflow is interrupted, resulting in instantaneous cutting failure and may burn the nozzle.
Consequences: unstable cutting, poor section quality, frequent suspension of cleaning, reduce production efficiency.
Thermal Damage and Ablation
1. High temperature ablation:
2. Thermal deformation: Working in a high temperature environment for a long time, the nozzle material may undergo microstructure changes or deformation, especially the nozzle with poor quality.
Consequences: the nozzle aperture becomes larger or irregular in shape, the gas focusing ability is permanently reduced, and the cutting ability is drastically reduced.
Improper installation and use
1. The installation is not vertical/loose: the nozzle is not tightened or is not concentric with the cutting head, resulting in gas leakage and eccentric flow field. Slight looseness will also increase wear in cutting vibration.
2. Select the wrong nozzle type or size:
3. Cutting parameter setting error:
contamination and corrosion
1. Gas pollution: the use of cutting gas (oxygen, nitrogen, air) is not pure, containing oil, moisture or solid particles, these pollutants will accumulate in the nozzle or the nozzle corrosion.
2. Environmental dust: The environmental dust in the workshop is large, and the dust is sucked into the cutting head and attached to the nozzle and lens.
How to reduce nozzle wear and extend life?
1. Standard operation:
2. Optimization of process parameters:
3. Strengthen maintenance:
4.Security of the working environment:
Summary: Nozzle loss is the result of a combination of factors. Through standardized operation, process optimization, fine maintenance and selection of high-quality consumables, abnormal losses can be minimized, and production costs can be effectively controlled while ensuring cutting quality.