Over the years we’ve gotten a lot of questions about the various marking techniques that can be accomplished with a fiber laser marking system. The terms "Laser Marking" and "Laser Engraving" are frequently used interchangeably but there is a difference. Generally speaking, Laser Marking refers to placing legible information onto the surface of a part with little or no penetration whereas Laser Engraving refers to placing information into a part with obvious penetration below the surface. The same laser can accomplish either technique simply by changing settings within the laser marking software.
The type of mark and the depth of the mark on the part is determined by a number of factors. The speed of the laser beam over the part, the output power and pulse frequency of the laser and the spacing of individual vector lines which comprise the marking information all have an effect on the resulting mark.
Each of the common marking techniques (engraving, ablation, dark marking, and stain marking) are achieved by changing the speed, power, and pulse frequency of the laser. Further marking refinement is aided by adjustment of the focused laser spot size and spacing of the vector lines that make up the marking information. Each marking technique affects the surface of the part in a different way. Stain marking, for example, only heats the surface of the material enough for an oxide layer to form but not enough to cause vaporization. The resulting oxide layer creates the appearance of color, usually black, although, with some amount of work, other color shades can be made to appear. Ablation marking, on the other hand, ablates away a microns thin layer of material to create a light-colored mark.
Where laser marking ends and laser engraving begins is difficult to quantify. At Jimani we think of a laser marked part as having microns of depth and a laser engraved part as having mils (thousandths of an inch) of depth although there is no specific depth at which a marked part becomes an engraved part.
Contact Jimani to learn more about laser marking, and see what they can do for you with a state of the art laser marking system.