Field Engineering Report: Implementation of Fiber Laser Cobot Systems in Bursa’s Stainless Steel Sector
1. Site Overview and Project Scope
This report details the technical deployment and performance evaluation of a 2kW high-brightness Fiber Laser Cobot system within a Tier-1 industrial workshop in Bursa, Turkey. The facility specializes in the production of food-grade processing equipment and chemical storage tanks, primarily utilizing AISI 304 and 316L stainless steel. The objective was to replace traditional manual GTAW (TIG) processes with automated Laser Technology to reduce thermal distortion and increase throughput while maintaining deep penetration requirements for pressure-vessel grade seams.
Bursa’s industrial landscape demands a high degree of adaptability. Unlike fixed robotic cells, the deployment of a Fiber Laser Cobot allows for a “mobile-first” approach, where the welding unit is moved to large-scale workpieces rather than vice versa. This flexibility is critical in the Marmara region’s dense manufacturing hubs where floor space is optimized and production mixes are high-variability.
2. The Synergy of Laser Technology and Collaborative Robotics
2.1 Fiber Laser Source Dynamics
The core of the system is a 1070nm ytterbium-doped fiber laser. In the context of Laser Technology, the transition from CO2 to Fiber has significantly altered the absorption rates in reflective materials like Stainless Steel welding. At a 1070nm wavelength, the energy absorption into the stainless lattice is approximately 3-4 times higher than traditional infrared sources, allowing for a much smaller spot size (typically 50–150 microns) and significantly higher power density.
This power density facilitates “Keyhole” mode welding. Unlike conduction-mode welding, the keyhole effect allows the beam to vaporize a narrow channel through the thickness of the material, which is then filled by the molten pool as the beam advances. For our Bursa application, this meant achieving 5mm of penetration in a single pass on 316L plate, a feat impossible for manual TIG without extensive beveling and multi-pass fills.
2.2 The Cobot Integration
The term Fiber Laser Cobot represents the marriage of this high-intensity source with a six-axis collaborative arm. In our field test, the cobot’s role was to provide the path consistency that a human operator cannot maintain over a two-meter seam. Manual handheld laser welding, while faster than TIG, often suffers from “hand-shake” or inconsistent travel speeds, which leads to fluctuations in the keyhole stability. By mounting the laser head on a cobot, we achieved a constant travel speed of 15mm/s with a path repeatability of ±0.03mm.
3. Technical Analysis: Stainless Steel Welding Parameters
3.1 Material Interaction and Heat Affected Zone (HAZ)
One of the primary “lessons learned” during the Bursa deployment was the management of carbide precipitation. When performing Stainless Steel welding, the goal is to cross the 450°C to 850°C temperature range as quickly as possible to prevent chromium carbides from forming at the grain boundaries (sensitization).

The Fiber Laser Cobot excels here because its heat input (Joules per millimeter) is roughly 15-20% that of TIG. We observed a HAZ reduction of nearly 80% compared to previous manual samples. This is vital for Bursa-based manufacturers exporting to the EU, where corrosion resistance standards (ASTM A262) are non-negotiable.
3.2 Parameter Matrix for 4mm 304L Butt-Joints
During the optimization phase, we established the following “Bursa Standard” baseline for the 2kW unit:
- Laser Power: 1850W (Continuous Wave)
- Travel Speed: 22 mm/sec
- Wobble Frequency: 180 Hz (Circle pattern, 1.5mm width)
- Shielding Gas: 100% Argon at 15 L/min (Back-purging required for full penetration)
- Focus Position: -1.0mm (sub-surface to ensure root fusion)
4. Critical Challenges and Field Solutions
4.1 The “Gap” Dilemma
The most significant hurdle in applying Laser Technology to large-scale Bursa workshops is joint fit-up. Laser beams are unforgiving. While a TIG welder can bridge a 2mm gap with filler rod, a 150-micron laser beam will simply pass through it.
Lesson Learned: We implemented a “Wobble” strategy. By oscillating the beam at high frequencies, the Fiber Laser Cobot can bridge gaps up to 0.8mm or 1.0mm without a significant loss in tensile strength. However, for gaps exceeding 1.2mm, we integrated a synchronized wire feeder. The synchronization of the wire-feed speed with the cobot’s TCP (Tool Center Point) speed is the difference between a clean bead and a weld full of porosity.
4.2 Shielding Gas Turbulence
In the windy environments of semi-open workshops common in some Bursa industrial zones, shielding gas coverage was inconsistent. Laser welding creates a high-pressure plasma plume. If the shielding gas is disrupted, oxygen entrainment causes immediate darkening of the Stainless Steel welding bead. We solved this by designing a custom-3D printed “gas trailing shield” attached to the cobot head, ensuring the weld remains under an inert atmosphere until it cools below the critical oxidation temperature.
5. The Synergy in Practice: Bursa Case Study
In a specific application involving a 5,000-liter mixing vessel, the Fiber Laser Cobot was tasked with the longitudinal seams. The previous manual process took 4 hours per vessel (including tacking and post-weld grinding).
With the Laser Technology integration:
- Welding Time: Reduced to 22 minutes.
- Post-Weld Processing: Grinding was nearly eliminated because the laser produces a flush, “ready-to-polish” bead.
- Energy Consumption: The fiber source draws significantly less wall-plug power than a 400A TIG inverter for the same penetration depth.
The synergy is clear: the laser provides the “how” (high energy density, low distortion), while the cobot provides the “where” (precise, repeatable positioning). In Bursa’s competitive manufacturing environment, this translates to a 40% reduction in the total cost of ownership (TCO) for stainless steel fabrication.
6. Safety and Integration Logistics
Operating a Class 4 laser in an open shop floor is the highest risk factor. Our implementation included the construction of a modular “Laser-Safe” enclosure with interlocked access points. We utilized “Laser-Gard” viewing windows compliant with EN 207/EN 208 standards.
Engineering Note: Never underestimate the specular reflection from Stainless Steel welding. The bright, polished surface of 304L acts as a mirror for the 1070nm beam. The cobot must be programmed with “approach and retract” angles that ensure the beam is never perpendicular to a reflective surface without being in a “sink” (the material itself).
7. Conclusions and Technical Recommendations
The deployment of Fiber Laser Cobot systems in Bursa marks a shift from labor-intensive craftsmanship to precision engineering. For firms specializing in Stainless Steel welding, the ROI is found not just in speed, but in the elimination of secondary processes like straightening and heavy grinding.
Final Field Notes:
- Invest in Upstream Accuracy: Laser technology is only as good as the plasma or water-jet cut that preceded it. Tight tolerances are mandatory.
- Training: The “welder” becomes a “process technician.” In Bursa, we found that experienced TIG welders make the best cobot operators because they understand the molten pool behavior, even if the “torch” is now a robotic arm.
- Maintenance: Protect the protective window. 90% of our downtime in the first week was due to dirty optics. Implementation of a clean-air “air knife” over the lens significantly increased uptime.
The performance of the 2kW Fiber Laser Cobot on-site has proven that for 3mm-6mm stainless applications, traditional arc welding is becoming obsolete in high-output environments. The transition is no longer a matter of “if,” but “how fast” the local supply chain can adapt.
Advanced Programming: OLP vs. Teaching-Free System
For large-scale gantry welding, manual "point-to-point" teaching is inefficient. PCL offers two cutting-edge solutions to minimize downtime and maximize precision. Understanding the difference is key to choosing the right automation level for your factory.
Off-line Programming (OLP)
OLP allows engineers to create welding paths in a 3D virtual environment using CAD data (STEP/IGES).
- Zero Downtime: Program the next job on a PC while the robot is still welding.
- Collision Detection: Simulates the gantry movement to prevent accidents in a virtual space.
- Best For: Complex workpieces with high repeat rates and detailed weld joints.
Teaching-Free Welding System
Uses 3D laser scanning or vision sensors to "see" the workpiece and generate paths automatically without any CAD data.
- Instant Setup: No manual coding or 3D modeling required; just scan and weld.
- High Flexibility: Ideal for "One-off" parts where every workpiece is slightly different.
- Real-time Adaptation: Automatically compensates for thermal distortion and fit-up gaps.
- Best For: Custom fabrication, repairs, and low-volume/high-mix production.
| Feature | Off-line Programming (OLP) | Teaching-Free System |
|---|---|---|
| Input Required | CAD 3D Models | 3D Laser Scanning |
| Programming Time | Minutes to Hours (Off-site) | Seconds (On-site) |
| Ideal Production | Mass Production / Batch Work | Custom / Single Unit Work |
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