Welding method merges metal and glass
S. Himmelstein | March 05, 2019Joining metal and glass for certain manufacturing applications is not an easy feat, as the adhesives used can creep and outgas, leading to reduced product lifetime. A more efficient process for marrying these two
seemingly incompatible materials has been pioneered at Herriot-Watt University, U.K.
The new welding method merges metal and glass by use of picosecond-duration laser pulses. Joining is accomplished by directing the laser at the interface between the two materials held in close contact, creating a microplasma in the middle of a highly confined melt region. Tests achieved megawatt peak power in an area measuring a few microns across and demonstrated the joining of borosilicate glass, quartz and sapphire to aluminum, titanium and stainless steel.
The laser-activated welds were also shown to remain intact when subjected to a temperature range of -50° C to 90° C.
The team is now working with specialists to commercialize the welding process, which could benefit manufacturing in the aerospace, defense, optical technology and healthcare sectors.
It seems they could join metal and glass long before there were lasers...
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Nice I guess that the heat affected zone should be small. High voltage switches, capacitors and vacuum tubes have used copper to glass seals since about the 1940's. Higher power stuff is now copper to alumina where I have personally run stuff to 16" diameter. Yes, this was all Mil-Spec stuff that passed full shake and bake qualification.