Optical diffraction patterns and almost-holograms made with a MOPA laser engraving machine - Applied Science
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I use a Cloudray MOPA fiber laser to make diffraction gratings, multi-color images from bitmaps, and almost-holograms on stainless steel sheets. I inspect the gratings with an electron microscope, and also create images made from diffraction grating "pixels" where each pixel has controllable pitch and angle.
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Summary: Making Diffractive/Structural-Color Patterns on Stainless Steel with a MOPA Fiber Laser (Applied Science)
What’s demonstrated
- A method to produce vivid, angle-dependent colors and diffractive effects on stainless steel using a MOPA fiber laser engraver.
- Two related effects:
- Structural color via thin-film oxide thickness on stainless steel (destructive/constructive interference filters parts of the spectrum).
- Diffraction grating patterns by engraving closely spaced scan lines with controlled pitch.
Key ideas & mechanisms
- MOPA architecture = Master Oscillator Power Amplifier: precise control of pulse rate and per-pulse energy, enabling repeatable surface modification.
- Color formation (stainless steel):
- Laser heating grows a controlled oxide layer of specific thickness.
- The oxide acts as a thin film: wavelength-dependent interference removes portions of the spectrum; the remaining light produces a perceived color.
- Diffraction grating:
- Parallel engraved lines with sub-wavelength to few-micron pitch diffract light; the grating period sets the observed color at a given view angle.
- Varying the pitch across the artwork steers colors to the viewer.
Practical setup & workflow
- Uses a galvo-style fiber laser marker with motorized Z/auto-focus (depth gauge measures work distance; Z-axis motor sets focus).
- LightBurn is used to assign settings per color/layer and to import SVG artwork.
- Typical approach:
- Run a material test (color chart) holding everything constant except pulse frequency, mapping frequency to resulting colors on the same stainless stock.
- In LightBurn, assign layers in the SVG to the tested frequency “swatches” to place specific colors.
- For diffractive images, generate toolpaths that vary line spacing (pitch) as a function of position; import the resulting vectors to engrave.
Parameters (as shown/mentioned)
- Pulse frequency strongly affects outcome; examples include sweeps around ~100 kHz, ~200 kHz, ~300 kHz, up to ~800 kHz.
- Power kept modest for interference-color passes (example given: ~20% power for color work), higher power reserved for cutting.
- Speed/spacing:
- For oxide color: speed mainly balances heat input with frequency and power.
- For grating effects: scan speed plus pulse repetition determine effective line spacing; fine control of the pitch is crucial.
Observations & results
- The same stainless coupon shows distinct, reproducible colors at different frequencies when other settings are held constant.
- Angular dependence is strong for both oxide-color and diffractive pieces; colors shift with viewing and lighting angles.
- Complex images can be produced by pitch-modulated gratings; despite simple input art, interference of multiple passes/regions can make patterns look intricate.
- Photographing the pieces is tricky because color is view-angle sensitive; small angle changes can alter perceived hue/intensity.
Tips, constraints, cautions
- Start with low power and increase gradually to avoid excessive heat-affected zones or surface damage.
- Maintain consistent focus (motorized Z/depth gauge helps); small defocus changes color and grating efficiency.
- Keep parameters consistent across tests (same alloy, finish, focus, environment) so color charts map reliably to final art.
- For grating work, ensure stable galvo timing and predictable step spacing; small timing errors accumulate into visible artifacts.
Software/data handling
- Large vector files (tens of MB SVGs) were handled; LightBurn managed big inputs reliably.
- Simple scripts were used to compute position-dependent grating pitch so the “right” color is diffracted toward the viewer across the image.
Limitations noted
- View-angle sensitivity: results are spectacular in person but hard to capture consistently in photos.
- Tuning required for photo-realistic halftones; more experimentation needed to balance oxide color vs. grating effects without unintended interactions.
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