Question matière

Yaug
Messages : 2399
Inscription : 18 févr. 2014, 08:13

Question matière

Message par Yaug »

Hello
J'ai ramené hier quelques morceaux d' altuglas qu'un collègue m'a refilé pour voir si on pouvait l'utiliser avec la découpeuse.
Apparemment c'est ça

Des retours des experts de la laser ?
Franck
Messages : 537
Inscription : 21 févr. 2014, 08:05

Re: Question matière

Message par Franck »

Mon avis d'espert : le pmma ca pue ;)
Sinon ca se coupe pas trop mal ;)
Yaug
Messages : 2399
Inscription : 18 févr. 2014, 08:13

Re: Question matière

Message par Yaug »

Ah cool.
bon, bah vous êtes libres de vous servir gratos dans les morceau de pmma que j'ai ramené
Avatar de l’utilisateur
.vince
Messages : 1354
Inscription : 18 févr. 2014, 10:41

Re: Question matière

Message par .vince »

La version english de wikipedia donne des infos intéressantes :
Laser cutting may be used to form intricate designs from PMMA sheets. PMMA vaporizes to gaseous compounds (including its monomers) upon laser cutting, so a very clean cut is made, and cutting is performed very easily. However, the pulsed lasercutting introduces high internal stresses along the cut edge, which on exposure to solvents produce undesirable "stress-crazing" at the cut edge and several millimetres deep. Even ammonium-based glass-cleaner and almost everything short of soap-and-water produces similar undesirable crazing, sometimes over the entire surface of the cut parts, at great distances from the stressed edge. Annealing the PMMA sheet/parts is therefore an obligatory post-processing step when intending to chemically bond lasercut parts together. This involves heating the parts in an air circulating oven from room temperature up to 90 °C (at a rate of no more than 18 degrees per hour) down to room temperature (at a rate of no more than 12 degrees per hour). Temperature should be maintained as follows: one hour for 3 mm thickness, two hours for up to 6 mm thickness, four hours for up to 12 mm thickness, and six hours for up to 20 mm thickness. A rapid annealing cycle is reliable for thin sheets and involves placing them in a pre-heated oven to 80 °C for one hour, then removing parts from the oven and allowing to cool to room temperature. This added time component should be factored into the whole fabrication process, and the alternative Zero-rake sawcutting technique may provide better cost-effectiveness, unless complex non-straight line edges are required. In this respect PMMA has an advantage over competing polymers such as polystyrene and polycarbonate, which require higher laser powers and give more messy and charred laser cuts.

In the majority of applications, it will not shatter. Rather, it breaks into large dull pieces. Since PMMA is softer and more easily scratched than glass, scratch-resistant coatings are often added to PMMA sheets to protect it (as well as possible other functions).
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