Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering (Feb 2021)

Texturing of Glass Surface using Micro-slurry Jet Machining Process

  • Hajime Yamaguchi,
  • Koshi Sakata,
  • Keiji Kasamura,
  • Yuta Nakashima,
  • Yoshitaka Nakanishi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmech.2021.631093
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Existing methods for the microfabrication of convex structures on a glass surface require a complex and expensive masking process. In this study, a simple microfabrication method that combines the masking process using polyimide tapes and a micro-slurry jet (MSJ) process was developed. The masking process was performed using a CO₂ laser machine, and the surface of the processed glass was observed using a three-dimensional laser microscope. Although the geometric shape of the mask was not a perfect circle, convex structures with a diameter of approximately 1.0 mm and heights of more than 1.5 μm were formed on soda-lime glass surfaces. The deepest structures were observed to create convex structures with a height of 19 µm. The effects of the travel speed of the nozzle and number of repetitions of the MSJ process on the height of the convex structures on the glass surface were also investigated. It was found that the masking process combining polyimide tapes and the MSJ process could form high-convexity structures on the glass surface. The proposed method is expected to enable the fabrication of devices with various functional properties for materials that cannot be processed using existing methods.

Keywords