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TIRF Laser Drill/Cutter

Because we need more lasers.
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TIRF, or total internal reflection microscopy <link> is a technique that allows a microscopist, like me, to illuminate a sample in a very specialized way. By carefully controlling the angle of light, usually a laser, hitting the back of an objective lens. When you get the angle right, the lens surface emits an "Evanescent wave". The cool thing is, that beyond a few hundred nanometers, this wave stops existing. You get VERY localized illumination. You can control X,Y and Z of the laser.

Laser cutters are all very much fun. <link> but they're a bit of a one trick pony. They're great at cutting holes in sheets of material, but because they rely on a beam emitting from the objective to effectively infinity, you either cut all the way through or nothing. If you want to cut half way through something, you're back to good old drills/milling machines. Although I appreciate things can be done with focal points and lensing...

This is where the TIRF laser drill comes in. Your great big CO2 laser is now powering an evanescent wave that propagates only say 100-200nm from the lens or so. So now you can remove material nanometers at a time in successive passes. There are also benefits for safety, you're not going to have anyone's eye out with this, at least without considerable set up, and.... clamping.. probably better just to use a pointy stick if eye damage is your game.

The TIRF lens will have to be quite temperature-stable, what with it being within almost no distance from laser-ablated steel for example, but quartz should handle it. Anyhow, "precision" engineers often cite 0.005" tolerances as a standard and 0.001" as a "ooooh, that's gonna cost you" tolerance. Laser cutters only normally get to 0.002". TIRF gets you to 0.000008", which means your company gets to add the extra zeros to the bill.

bs0u0155, Feb 27 2017

TIRF https://www.microsc...nce-tirf-microscopy
[bs0u0155, Feb 27 2017]

LASER Cutting https://en.wikipedi.../wiki/Laser_cutting
[bs0u0155, Feb 27 2017]

EDM https://i.imgur.com/EohVuL0.gifv
Electrical discharge machining allows for a perfect fit between metal pieces [xaviergisz, Jan 25 2019]

US20150351841A1 https://patents.goo.../US20150351841A1/en
Guided wave ablation and sensing. For medical uses rather than machining, but tangentially relevant. [xaviergisz, Jan 25 2019]

[link]






       [bs], this is a bloody brilliant idea which probably would have made billions for somebody if it weren't posted here.   

       The lens would not only have to withstand the heat, it would also have to not get gunked up by the vaporized material. But presumably any material deposited on the lens would just get re-vaporized. You might have problems getting the vapour out of the way. (This would be easier in the US, because they have 'vapor', which is one letter smaller and therefore more diffusive.)
MaxwellBuchanan, Feb 27 2017
  

       //made billions for somebody if it weren't posted here//   

       on some level, ruining someone else's day is a little like having a good one yourself. All relative.   

       //gunked up by the vaporized material. But presumably any material deposited on the lens would just get re- vaporized.//   

       That's the idea, even if it works it might need tuning. A cutting blast might leave a lens deposition which would attenuate the next blast. You can play with angles however, so you could have 100nm range 20nm range 100nm range, to kind of cut-clean-cut. I also thought it might be possible to charge the lens, most metals would be prone to losing electrons so a +ve charge might do the trick, although it's vapor not plasma. Wait... 100nm gap in argon is only 0.1V breakdown voltage, that's not robust even at those scales.
bs0u0155, Feb 27 2017
  

       Is it strictly true that lasers can't cut to a given depth? If each pulse removed only a small amount of material, and if the depth were monitored, it ought to be possible to fix the depth of cut.
MaxwellBuchanan, Feb 27 2017
  

       it's like microscopy. You have a focal point with the most effect but also a progressive out of focus contribution. While the focal point might be effective as hell, the out of focus light might be enough to affect the material at a greater than desired depth, with fancy materials you can damage them thermally. Many alloys lose their desirable properties when heated even modestly. You could go confocal I suppose. Multi photon would also be super clever, and work at longer range. There is a type of laser cutting that uses a low pressure water jet, the laser is contained within that by TIR so that it behaves as a parallel beam it also uses the water as coolant and to remove debris. That's so neat it made my day. I want the opposite though, v.small defined Z resolution, not infinite. Although you can see the utility of such a system.
bs0u0155, Feb 27 2017
  

       I like this idea. I may have read that microwaves passing through a wax prism, generate an evanescent wave at the prism next it, which then detected. That gap might have been like 1/2 millimeter, although I do not remember. the half millimeter gives lots of room to blow air through the gap removing vapors, or even vapours.
beanangel, Feb 27 2017
  

       //That gap might have been like 1/2 millimeter//   

       I'm familiar with 1/2 millimeter precision. That's in the range of my hammering skills... :-)
bs0u0155, Feb 28 2017
  

       One problem might be that only a small fraction of the laser power ends up in the target material.
mitxela, Feb 28 2017
  

       Another problem is that you only get TIR against a drop in refractive index. Most materials you would want to etch are probably denser or equal in density to the lens.   

       For etching metals you don't need this, anyway. The skin depth for metals at IR frequencies is measured in nanometers. I assume that ordinary laser cutting of metal just relies on heat conduction to penetrate beyond the surface.
mitxela, Feb 28 2017
  

       My contribution will be of little value, and the tech referenced is no doubt out of date, but just before the turn of the century I provided visual inspection support to some guys who wanted to drill holes .003 of an inch in diameter with lasers. The material in question was some kind of low cost circuit board composite.   

       They were dismayed by the irregular diameter profiles developed. Kind of on the jagged side.
normzone, Feb 28 2017
  

       //Another problem is that you only get TIR against a drop in refractive index. Most materials you would want to etch are probably denser or equal in density to the lens.//   

       Aluminum is 1.33, so almost any lens material is OK, but diamond or cubic zirconia will be nice and tough. For iron, you need >3.1. But there are materials for that, silicon is probably the best candidate. For anything extreme, you'll need to play around with germanium mixes.
bs0u0155, Jan 22 2019
  

       Also, the width of the lens and housing will make it difficult to machine pockets, grooves, etc.   

       Since when does microscopy start with an F?
notexactly, Jan 23 2019
  

       //Since when does microscopy start with an F?//   

       Well, it's normally "TIRF microscopy" But since it is not operating on the micro scale and not scoping, I thought I'd leave it out. It's also not fluorescent either so more like TIR- laser face milling.
bs0u0155, Jan 23 2019
  

       "ReFlection"? But "frustrated total internal reflection" is abbreviated as FTIR, not FTIRF.
notexactly, Jan 24 2019
  

       No, the "F" in TIRF is for "fluorescence", because the evanescent wave excites fluorophores near the glass.
MaxwellBuchanan, Jan 25 2019
  

       Ah. It reminds me of when I saw image sensors marketed as being for "fluorescence lifetime imaging" applications, abbreviated as "FLIM". I wondered why it wasn't "FLI" or "FLTI". Turns out there's another word there, that they hadn't included: "microscopy".   

       Sounds like this idea needs to explain how the fluorescence is used in the milling application. Can it help with the refractive index or millable shape limitations?
notexactly, Jan 26 2019
  
      
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