Solutions
“Only with laser technology can we free the manufacturing process from its old hurdles and make the product ready for mass demand,” says Marvin Michel. “Welding is extremely cost-effective compared to the casting process. This means we use around 50 percent less material per housing, as we can manufacture the housing walls much narrower.”
Implementation
All this is only possible because CooolCase opted for the TruLaser Weld 5000, which masters all the steps required in the process. Because despite all the economic advantages of laser welding and the unspectacular appearance: Welding an inverter housing is anything but simple. Making the component involves three tricky welding tasks for which CooolCase has to use all of its expertise. Firstly, there are the seams on the sides as i-seams and the rounded corner joints. Here, CooolCase relies on precisely dosed heat conduction welding, which introduces as little energy as possible into the component: “Otherwise, hot cracks form on the weld seams and they start to leak,” says Michel. Secondly, a stiffening plate must be welded onto the housing. To do this, the laser system switches the welding process to deep penetration welding: The laser light welds through two millimeter thick aluminum and ensures a reproducibly tight seam that does not allow any H2O molecule can pass through. Now comes the welding highlight: CooolCase attaches a heat sink to an opening on the housing roof, which later ensures that the inverter does not overheat. For production reasons, this heat sink - a so-called continuous casting profile - is only available in 6000 aluminum alloy. “It is particularly hard and susceptible to hot cracking. This is exactly what we must prevent at all costs. And if that wasn't exciting enough, here we have a situation where we have to weld a challenging 6000 series aluminum to another aluminum alloy. Absolutely leak-proof, of course.” This is why the TruLaser Weld 5000 switches the welding method again and now uses a supplementary wire via FusionLine. “It has to be similar enough to both alloys. And just finding the right welding parameters was a tightrope act. Fortunately, we had a strong partner in TRUMPF,” says Michel. The feat succeeds and the TruLaser Weld 5000 processes one housing after the other on a rotary table.