Title: Laser%20PCB%20Milling%20Machine
1Laser PCB Milling Machine
- Group 18
- Nathan Bodnar
- David Dowdle
- Ryan Maticka
2Project Overview
- The system will be capable of laser etching
copper coated printed circuit boards (PCBs) for
the purpose of rapidly prototyping senior design
projects - The system will consist of
- High powered green laser
- Custom software
- XY plotting table
- Safety mechanisms
2
3Project Motivation
- Current milling machine used by senior design
students has had numerous breakdowns - We replaced the current milling machine with a
more reliable system that is capable of running
without continuous user input - Design and build our own high powered green laser
3
4Project Goals and Objectives
- Capable of producing a quality result in less
time than is required to ship out a PCB to a
professional manufacturer - Capable of vaporizing copper in just a few pulses
of a laser - Capable of burning through the fiberglass
substrate with the laser alone - Capable of handling FR4 copper clad PCBs
- Capable of milling warped boards
4
5Project Goals and Objectives
- Safe, most specifically in the area of eye and
lung safety - Capable of accepting a Gerber file from a
mainstream PCB layout software program - Capable of accepting boards to be milled in PNG
format - Capable of interfacing with a computer through
two USB ports
5
6Project Specifications Requirements
- Capable of milling a 12 in x 12 in board
- Resolution of 1 mil
- 1 mil 1/1000 in
- Beam waste of 1 mil or lower
- Software is protected through the storage of
hashed user passwords (SHA-512)
6
7Project Specifications Requirements
- Require 512 MB of main memory (computer) to run
after everything else for the maximum supported
file size (12,000 x 12,000 pixels) - Implement a call and answer protocol for the
interface between the computer and the
microcontroller through the use of 64 Byte data
packets
7
8Safety
- User safety
- Laser being ran as a class one
- Enclosed laser subsystem
- Equipment safety
- Housing to protect equipment from the vaporized
copper by product of the mill procedure
8
9Laser Safety
- Desirable to run the system as a class one laser
- Laser safety glasses (Five OD as per ANSI Z136.1
standard) still required when testing and
calibrating the laser - Needed to classify the laser as a class one
- Protective housing
- Interlocks on the housing
- Service access panel
- Equipment labels
9
10Burn Testing
Minimum amount of Energy needed 0.7mJ for 20ns _at_
532nm
10
11Laser
- Previous Design
- Second harmonic NdYAG Q switched laser
- Generating second harmonic inside laser cavity is
more efficient than outside cavity - Output
- Energy 9 mJ
- Pulse lt 40 ns
12Laser Cavity
- Folded cavity Design
- Q switched
- 808 nm Diode Pumped
- Output 532 nm
- NdYAG (end pumped)
12
13Laser Cavity Simulations
- With 80 W input 30 W _at_ 1064 nm
- 12 W _at_ 532 nm CW
- Pulsed 4 mJ _at_ 13 ns
- 307 MW duty 0.0013
13
14Laser Block Diagram
14
15Current Laser System
- Laser diode problem
- 808 nm diode ran at 800 nm, and NdYAG has
acceptance region of 0.6 nm - To work, the diode must be heated to unsafe
operating temperatures - Flash tube based system
- Advantages
- Higher output power from oscillator
- Fewer shots to burn through
- Disadvantages
- 2 efficient at best
- Low duty cycle
- Maximum 100 pulses per second
- Realistic 1 pulse per second
- Shorter mean time to failure compared to diode
system
16Flash Tube System
- 15 J electrical input power generates 100 mJ of
1064 nm light - Flash tube based amplifier
- Single pass amplification
- Focusing lens creates focal point
- Focused light passes through KTP crystal twice
via highly reflective mirror to produce 532 nm - light hits mirror that reflects 532 nm and
transmits 1064 nm - 532 nm transmitted to XY table via mirrors and
1064 nm stays in laser section
17Previous Q Switch
- Pockel Cell
- Fast Switching Characteristics lt 1ns
- Voltage Rating 3-5 kV
- High Laser Power Operation
- Crystal KDP
- Polarization Dependent
- Alternative Q Switches
- AOM modulator
- Mechanical
- Saturable Absorber
17
18Q Switch PSU Block Diagram
- Generates 0 - 5 kV output
- Generates pulses with minimal delay
- Emergency Shutoff capabilities
18
19Q Switch
- Current Design
- Saturable absorber
- Laser cavity lt 10 cm long, so no pockel cell
- Saturable absorber is 3 mm long
20Stepper Motor Controller
- Stepper Controller
- Full bridge MOSFET driver
- 120 micro-steps per full step gives 0.0075 per
step
- Stepper Motor
- 0.9 rotation per step
- Holding Torque 30 oz-in
- Unipolar
20
21XY table
Previous Design
Current Design
- Threaded Rod Design
- Requires material to move
- Requires double the area to travel
- Belt Driven with linear bearings
- Moves the mirrors and not the material
- Requires only 6 extra for head travel
21
22Laser Power Supply
- Previous Design
- Specifications
- Input 120 V AC, 60 Hz
- Output 0 - 5 V DC, 60 A
- Output voltage ripple lt 1 mV
- Current controlled
- Current monitoring
- Temperature monitoring
23DC to DC Converter
- Choices
- Linear regulator
- Low efficiency
- Large size
- Thermal problems
- Switched-mode DC to DC Converter
- Buck converter for voltage gain lt 1
- Adjusting PWM will control voltage and current
output
23
24Switching
- Choices
- Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT)
- Pros High current carrying capability
- Cons High driving power, Low frequency
- Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor
(MOSFET) - Pros High frequency, low driving power, low
losses - Cons Low current carrying capability, lowered
efficiency at high voltage - Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor (IGBT)
- Pros High current carrying capability, High
reverse voltage blocking - Cons Lower frequency and higher switching losses
than MOSFET
24
25Switching
- Problem
- MOSFETs carry low current
- Solution
- Use MOSFETs in parallel
- High current
- High switching speed
- Low driving power
25
26Synchronous Switching
- Low Power
- Blocking diode can handle low power
- High Power
- Risk of diode breakdown from high stress
- Power losses on diode is large compared to using
a MOSFET - Replace diode with MOSFET controlled by secondary
PWM
26
27Converter Control
- Pulse width modulation (PWM) changes duty cycle
of MOSFETs - Choices
- Microcontroller detects output and controls PWM
to main MOSFET - LT1339 buck/boost converter controller instead of
microcontroller - More features for better control
- Added circuit uses potentiometer to control
current output
27
28(No Transcript)
29Thermoelectric Cooling
12V
PWM
- Peltiers cool the laser diodes to desired
temperature - ATX PSU 12V DC
- PWM controls MOSFET to control the power to each
peltier - Temperature monitored via thermistor on peltier
- TEC not used in current design
29
30Current Laser Power Supply
- Specifications
- Input 120 V AC, 60 Hz
- Output 730 V DC
- Flash tube system not susceptible output voltage
and current ripple - PWM controller
- Switching 17 kHz
- No thermoelectric cooling required for laser
31Boost Converter
- IGBT chosen over MOSFET because
- Better than MOSFET when voltage is over a few
hundred volts - Discontinuous conduction mode (DCM)
- Generates larger peak current compared to
continuous conduction mode (CCM) - Double converters for faster current response
- Regulating Pulse Width Modulator (UC3526)
32Boost Converter
33Snubber
- Active snubber for increased efficiency
- LC circuit stores power that would be turn-off
losses on main IGBT - Secondary IGBT delivers to the energy output
34Microcontroller
- A different microcontroller will be used to
control each part of the project - Needed to be able to do
- Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) for micro-stepping
- Low cost
- Easy to implement
- Large repository of example code
- Easy to reprogram (USB)
34
35Microcontroller Decision Chart
MCU PIC18F2550 MC9S08JS8CWJ C8051F342-GQ ATMEGA162-16PU
Data Bus Width 8 bit 8 bit 8 bit 8 bit
Family PIC18 JS 8051 AVR
Program Memory Type Flash Flash Flash Flash
Program Memory Size 32 KB 16 KB 64 KB 16 KB
Data RAM Size 2 KB 256 B 5.25 KB 1 KB
Interface Type SPI or I2C or EAUSART SPI, SCI I2C / SPI / UART / USB SPI or USART
Maximum Clock Frequency 48 MHz 48 MHz 48 MHz 16 MHz
Number of Programmable I/Os 24 N/A 25 35
Number of Timers 4 1 4 4
Operating Supply Voltage 2 V to 5.5 V 2.7 V to 5.5 V 2.7 V to 5.25 V 2.7 V to 5.5 V
Maximum Operating Temperature 85 C 85 C 85 C 85 C
Package / Case SOIC-28 Wide SOIC-20 Wide LQFP-32 PDIP-40
Packaging Tube Tube Tray N/A
Minimum Operating Temperature - 40 C - 40 C - 40 C - 40 C
On-Chip ADC 10-chx10-bit N/A 17-ch x 10-bit N/A
Price (for 1) 4.95 2.00 10.25 6.77
35
36Microcontroller
- Which programming language for the
microcontroller? - Choices
- C
- Assembly
- We chose C, as we are the most familiar with it,
and there is a large body of software already
written for the PIC18F2550. Furthermore,
Microchip offers the ability to blend C and
Assembly in our source files, so we can get the
advantages of both languages
36
37Software Design Decisions
- Which programming language to use?
- Vector or raster mill?
- Directly support Gerber files?
- Directly support TIFF images?
- How should we communicate with the
microcontroller? - How should we control security?
37
38Software Design Decisions
- Which programming language for the computer
program? - Choices
- C, Java, C
- We chose Java as we are the most familiar with it
other than C, and it is much easier to create
GUIs in Java. C would have interfaced with our
microcontroller easier, but we were not as
familiar with it as Java, and we wanted to cut
down on development time so that we could have
more time to debug and test
38
39Environment
- Window Builder Pro to produce the GUI
- Eclipse to integrate everything together
- To account for the 12,000x12,000 pixel size that
could result from the convert operation, 512MB of
memory was allocated to the JVM - This could be optimized if we were to use the JAI
to tile the TIFF images, and read each tile
separately.
39
40Software Design Decisions
- Vector or raster mill procedure?
- Vector follow the outlines of each object until
you come back to the beginning of the object - Pros Shorter mill time, less movement of XY head
- Cons more complicated algorithm
- Raster scan left and right across the area to be
plotted - Pro simple algorithm
- Cons longer mill time, more movement of XY head
40
41Software Design Decisions
- Directly support Gerber files?
- Would allow for easier implementation of Vector
milling - Specification is too complicated for the scope of
this project - Use gerb2tiff (external program) to convert the
input Gerber file to a TIFF - Use the output as a raster mill input
41
42Gerber File Example
G01 X6890Y40388D02 G03 X6500Y40550I-390J-388D01
G01 X6889Y40389D02 G03 X6500Y40550I-389J-389D
01 G01 X81876Y18000D02 G03 X83624Y18000I874J12
50D01 G01 X78376D02 G03 X80124Y18000I874J1250D
01 G01 X82012Y10000D02 G03 X82012Y10000I-2013J
0D01 G01 X76013Y552D02 G03 X76050Y750I-513J198
D01 continues
- FSLAX43Y43
- MOMM
- G71
- G01
- G75
- G04 Layer_Physical_Order1
- G04 Layer_Color255
- ADD10C,0.250
- ADD11R,3.000X1.800
- ADD12R,4.700X3.810
- ADD13R,0.720X1.800
- ADD14R,4.060X3.810
- ADD15R,3.810X6.350
- ADD16C,1.000
- ADD17C,2.000
- ADD18C,2.200
- ADD19C,0.600
- ADD20C,0.254
- ADD21R,8.400X1.800
ADD22R,7.000X2.000 ADD23R,24.000X17.000 ADD
24C,1.800 ADD25R,1.800X1.800 ADD26C,2.000
ADD27C,2.200 ADD28C,1.600 ADD29C,1.200 D
10 X18192Y29200D02 G03 X17896Y29381I-942J-1200D
01 G01 X16805Y30473D02 G03 X16073Y31205I-1305J
-573D01 G01 X8012Y50000D02 G03 X8012Y50000I-20
13J0D01
42
43TIFF and Machine Code Result
- The Gerber file from the pervious page creates
this TIFF file through the use of the gerb2tiff
program - This TIFF file is then used to create the PNG
file that Java will use
Representation of the Gerber file that will be
used to control the milling machine Format
ltlaser on/offgt ltdistance to movegt
1 364 0 99 1 132 0 98 1 463 0 211 1 1203 0 38 1
35 0 76 1 98 0 31 1 2462 0 39 1 35 0 38 1 24 0 28
1 639 0 28 1 1908 0 2 1 365 0 99 1 130 0 99 1 463
0 211 1 1202 0 38 1 35 0 78 1 96 0 32 1 2461 0 39
1 35 0 38 1 26 0 27 1 639 0 28 1 1908 0 2 1 365 0
100 1 128 0 99 1 464 0 211 1 1201 0 38 1 35 0 80
1 94 0 32 1 2461 0 39 1 35 0 38 1 27 0 27 1 112 0
415 1 112 0 28 1 1908 0 2 1 366 0 100 1 126 0 100
1 464 0 211 1 1200 0 38 1 35 0 81 1 94 0 32 1
2460 0 39 1 35 0 38 1 28 0 27 1 112 0 415 1 112 0
28 1 1908 0 2 1 366 0 101 1 124 0 101 1 464 0 211
1 1199 0 38 1 35 0 83 1 92 0 32 1 2460 0 39 1 35
0 38 1 29 0 28 1 110 0 417 1 110 0 29 1 1908 0 2
43
44Software Design Decisions
- How should we communicate with the PIC18F2550?
- Initially Send large amounts of data to PIC,
with no response - Final choice Send individual commands, wait for
acknowledged response before sending another - Slower method, but we are using a very small
amount of our available bandwidth at any one
time, and the latency is low enough to be
negligible compared to the rate of dots/s where
1dot 1/1000in
44
45Software Design Decisions
- How should we control security?
- Option1 None
- Check the users input password against a plain
text file - Not really an option, we need user access level
control - Option2 Encryption
- Encrypt the users password, and check against
the inserted password - Difficult to implement
- Option3 Hashing
- Hash the users password, store the hash, and
create a new hash based on the inserted password.
Verify that they match. - Easy to implement, and mathematically impossible
to construct the password from the hashed value
45
46Software Design Decisions
- How should we control security?
- Option3 Hashing (SHA-512)
- Cant just store the users password
- Need to store the users access level also
- Therefore, store
- hash(ltaccess_levelgtltpasswordgt)
- then compute the four possible hashes based on
the current password that has been entered into
the system and assign the user the correct access
level - Access Levels None, Standard, Advanced,
Experienced, Administrator
46
47Optimal Control Path
Main Program
User Login
Main GUI
Select File
Translate Image
Main GUI
Console GUI
Experienced User
Administrator User
Standard User
mill()
47
48Main GUI
48
49Read Input File
- Convert the Gerber file to a TIFF (gerb2tiff.exe)
- Convert the TIFF file to a PNG (convert.exe,
Image Magick suite) - Runtime rt Runtime.getRuntime()
- pr rt.exec(String toRun)
- We did not want to have to write our own Gerber
parser, so we used the gerb2tiff program - Java will not natively handle TIFF files, so we
used the convert program - JAI library was deemed to add too much complexity
to this project
49
50Mill Procedure
- mill(String fileName) procedure called
- checkReady()
- Is the laser on?
- Have any errors occurred?
- loadPreprocessedFile(String fileName)
- If errors occur, exit gracefully to calling
procedure which will handle the outcome - loadSettings()
- Set how fast the XY head will move over areas
where the laser will be on or off - traverseXY(int xy, int laser, int distance)
- int xy determines which MCU to connect with,
laser determines whether the laser will be on or
off and thus how fast to move the milling head,
and the distance determines how far to go with
this one command - moveXY (int xy, int laser, int distance)
- sends the actual commands to the respective
microcontroller - returns a boolean to traverseXY() depending on
whether the mill operation for that movement
command was a success or not
50
51Send and Receive Data
- Traverse the processed input file in an
alternating line fashion - Send the data to the machine, wait for an
acknowledgement packet back before sending the
next movement command - If a line has nothing to be milled on it, move
down until a line with something to be milled is
found, the edge of the file, or the edge of the
XY table is found
51
52Image Tiling
- Idea Split the image into smaller sections to
reduce the extraneous travel of the milling head - Implemented along with a blank line skip
- algorithm that allows quick travel through
- large sparsely populated regions.
Blank Line
- Accomplished by loading the main full sized image
first, grabbing sub sections - of this image and saving the location data of
where to mill in a text file.
53Milestone Chart
Laser PS
Software
Software Testing
TEC PS
Laser Cavity
Q Switch PS
XY Table Testing
XY Table Stepper PS
Cleaning up
Mar 7
Mar 24
Mar 28
Apr 4
Apr 11
Feb 28
Feb 21
Mar 14
53
54Budget
Estimate cost
Spent cost
- Software free
- Parts for XYZ table 200
- Laser setup
- Q-switch 60 - 5000
- 808nm Diodes 600
- NdYAG rod 50
- KTP(KDP) 30 to 100
- Directing mirrors 450
- Lens 600
- Quarter wave plate 200
- Polarizer 400
- Parts for Laser Power Supply 200
- Parts for TEC Power Supply 75
- Parts for Q switch Power Supply 50
- Parts for Stepper Power Supply 30
- Parts for Power Management Circuit 50
- Fume controller 30
- Total 3100 to 8100
- Software free
- Parts for XYZ table 200
- Laser setup
- Q-switch 512.95
- 808nm Diodes 486.99
- NdYAG rod 250
- KTP(KDP) 43.22
- Directing mirrors 27.19
- Lens 420
- Quarter wave plate 74
- Polarizer 49
- Parts for Laser Power Supply 400
- Parts for TEC Power Supply 35
- Parts for Q switch Power Supply 140
- Parts for Stepper Power Supply 30
- Parts for Power Management Circuit 70
- Total 2738.35
54
55Acknowledgment
- Special Thanks to the Laser Plasma Laboratories
team in the CREOL department for the help in burn
testing and laser diode calibration. - Group 17 for there morale support.
56Questions?