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| United States Patent | 4139409 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4139409.html |
| Inventor(s) | Macken; John A. (4039 Shadow Hill Dr., Santa Rosa, CA 95404);
Palanos; Paul N. (3852 Sherbrook Dr., Santa Rosa, CA 95404) |
| Abstract | Means and method for forming a raised metallic relief wherein a metal foil
affixed to a support film is selectively etched, affixed to a wood
surface, and then exposed to a scanning concentrated laser beam to
vaporize the support film and wood in areas unprotected by the metal
sheet. The metal design is left on the wood surface in the form of a
raised relief. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4139409 |
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Laser engraved metal relief process |
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| Publication Date |
February 13, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
February 9, 1978 |
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| Parent Case |
This is a continuation, of application Ser. No. 745,856 filed Nov. 29,
1976, now abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to the production of a metallic relief on wood and,
more particularly, to means for producing a metallic relief on wood by a
method suitable for mass production. A metal sheet is affixed to a support
film, etched to the desired pattern, and affixed to a wooden substrate.
The metal then selectively reflects a scanning laser beam which exposed
portions of the supporting film and substrate are vaporized. The resultant
product appears to be thick metal parts standing in relief above a wooden
surface.
2. Prior Art
It is known that metallic relief plaques can be made by deep etching into
solid metal. This is accomplished by using a photo-resist film to protect
certain areas of the metal. Other areas of the metal are then etched away
on the exposed surfaces by immersing the metal in the correct etching
solution. The solution dissolves the unprotected metal and leaves raised
areas on a recessed background. At this point, to obtain contrast, the
background of the solid metal plaque is usually painted or purposely
tarnished. This method is limited in its resolution because the metal
etching process results in metal removal below the protective surface
until it is undermined sufficiently to break off. Thus, either the relief
depth or the relief thickness is restricted.
If another type of plaque is desired, such as raised metal letters on a
wooden substrate, the plaque is formed by individually attaching cast meal
letters to the wood.
The method of this invention produces raised metal patterns or symbols on a
wooden background with excellent resolution, low cost, a desirable
appearance previously unobtainable, and less metal removal.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A metallic sheet is adhered to an organic film material. The metallic sheet
is selectively etched on exposed surfaces thereof using photo-resist
methods well known to those skilled in the art. The film maintains the
position of the metal areas which remain after etching. The film is then
bonded to a wooden substrate blank with the metal areas facing upwards. A
focused laser beam is then scanned over the area of the wood covered by
the metal sections and film. The laser beam is reflected by the metal
areas. The laser beam vaporizes the film which is unprotected by the metal
and also removes a depth of wood. The depth of the vaporized cut into the
wood depends upon the laser power and exposure time. The final product has
the appearance of a metal relief attached to the surface of a wooden
block, with resolution not attainable in deep metal etching.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a three-layer photo-resist composite
prior to processing.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of the composite of FIG. 1 after the
photo-resist has been developed and removed, and the metallic sheet has
been etched away leaving the desired metallic pattern.
FIG. 3 is a view of the processed composite of FIG. 2 bonded to a substrate
material.
FIG. 4 is a view of the composite of FIG. 3 after laser engraving has been
carried out, which leaves the desired metallic-appearing relief on the
substrate material.
FIG. 5 is a view of the engraved substrate material after the metal pattern
and adhesive are removed.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Referring to FIG. 1, there is shown a multilayer sheet which in a preferred
embodiment is composed of three layers of different materials. Layer 1 is
an organic substance which changes its physical properties when exposed to
ultraviolet light. Such substances are commonly referred to as
photo-resists and are known to those skilled in the art of manufacturing
electronic components. There are many different formulations for
photo-resists, but such differences do not significantly affect the
operation of this invention. Layer 2 is a metallic substance such as
copper, brass, aluminum, or the like. For purposes of illustration in this
embodiment, it is presumed that layer 2 is a sheet of brass approximately
0.005 inches thick. Layer 3 is a flexible organic film or sheet
approximately 0.002 inches thick. The film can be made of thermo-plastics
such as urethane or polyvinyl chloride, which will bond to the metal with
the application of heat and pressure. The layer 3 could also be a plastic
such as polyester film or paper which requires an adhesive to bond to the
metal. In this case, there would be a thin adhesive layer (not shown in
drawings) between layer 2 and 3 in FIG. 1.
In accordance with the teachings of this invention, layer 1 of the sheet of
FIG. 1 is sequentially exposed, developed, and etched according to the
techniques well known to those skilled in making printed circuit boards.
Exposure of layer 1 to ultra-violet light, or other appropriate radiation,
changes the property of the film of layer 1 such that it is polymerized
either in the area exposed to the light, or the area not exposed to the
light, depending on whether positive-acting or negative-acting
photo-resist is used. Developing of the photo-resist washes away portions
of layer 1 from the metal of layer 2 in the desired areas whereby a
patterned protective layer is formed on layer 2. The sheet is then passed
through an etching bath or spray such that metal layer 2 is attacked by an
acid or other etchant (such as ferric chloride) in the areas unprotected
by the photo-resist. After the exposure of the photo-resist and the
subsequent etching process, the three layer film appears as shown in FIG.
2, the plastic film layer 3 being unaffected by the above processing to
thereby provide supporting areas for the metal and photo-resist layers.
Referring now to FIG. 2, there is shown an exemplary perspective view of
the composite sheet after it has been developed and etched as described
supra. Although layer 3 is unaffected, the metal and photo-resist layers
now form discrete areas which can be in the form of letters (as shown) or
other art work.
Referring now to FIG. 3 there is shown the composite sheet, with layers 1,
2 and 3 bonded by means of a suitable adhesive layer 4 to material 5. No
adhesive layer 4 would be required if layer 3 could be bonded directly to
material 5 with the application of heat and pressure. Material 5 is a
substrate material (such as wood or plastic, etc.) which is to be laser
engraved. Once the processed material has been bonded to the substrate
material 5, which for purposes of illustration is herein selected to be
wood, the composite structure is passed under a scanning continuous laser
such as a 100 watt carbon dioxide (CO.sub.2) laser exhibiting overlapping
scans that make a TV-like rasterscan across the surface of the composite
structure. As the selectively focused laser beam is scanned across the
materials shown in FIG. 3 the laser beam cleanly vaporizes portions of the
organic material it strikes while being reflected from the metallic
material. Thus, the portions of layers 1, 3, 4 and 5 exposed to the
scanning laser will be vaporized while areas which lie beneath layer 2
will be protected.
Acceptable results are achieved by focusing the laser light to a power
density of about 30,000 watts per square centimeter. In the case of a 100
watt carbon dioxide laser, this amounts to a focused spot size of about
0.5 millimeters diameter.
Referring now to FIG. 4 there is shown the result after the scanning laser
beam has passed over the assembled materials. The scanning laser beam has
vaporized the wooden layer 5 to a depth which is preselectively determined
by the laser power and the length of time the laser was allowed to scan
across the material. At this juncture, there is provided a bas-relief
device which has a metallic surface formed by layer 2 and a support
structure or substrate formed by the material of layer 5. The laser has
also vaporized away all of photo-resist layer 1 if this layer is mounted
up, or it will have vaporized all of layer 3 if this layer was mounted up.
The laser will also have vaporized away layers of adhesive or film not
protected by the metal mask so that the result appears to be a metal
capped, raised area above a recessed background. The sides of the cut are
perfectly matched to the shape of the metal film, so that the metal
appears to be much thicker than it actually is. When this substrate
material is a dark wood, such as walnut, the appearance is as if a thick
piece of metal is protruding from the recessed surface. This metal may
then be treated in any desirable manner, such as polishing or the like.
If layers 2, 3 and 4 are removed, as depicted in FIG. 5, the result is a
device, such as a plaque, with free standing raised letters or other
artwork of the same material as the substrate.
The removal of these layers can be accomplished by mechanical means such as
peeling, scrapping or sanding. Also, they can be removed by methods which
attack the adhesive layer 4, such as solvents or the application of heat
or cold.
Thus, there is presented the novel concept of a mask used for laser
engraving where free-standing metallic areas (layer 2) are supported by a
film (layer 3) which can be bonded (adhesive 4) to the substrate material
(layer 5) to be laser engraved. The film is made of a material which can
be vaporized by the laser beam such that no traces of the film are left
after the laser beam has scanned across the layer 5 substrate. Only the
metallic areas protect the substrate from the scanning laser beam. After
the substrate has been vaporized to the desired depth in the unprotected
areas the remaining portions of the mask consisting of the metal film, the
plastic film and the adhesive, can be removed and discarded by releasing
the adhesive or mechanically abrading away these layers.
Of course, it will be recognized that layers 2, 3 and 4 can be retained as
shown in FIG. 4 which results in raised metallic coated letters or other
art work, whereas the removal of said layers will result in raised wooden
(or other substrate material) letters or other art work.
A variation of the process would be to flip layers 1, 2 and 3 upside down
and bond them to the wood adhesive layer contacting photo-resist layer 1.
Alternatively, photo-resist layer 1 may be removed in a stripping process
well known to those skilled in the art, and layers 2 and 3 can be bonded
to substrate 5. If this variation is used, the art work may have to be
reversed so that it reads properly when flipped again.
There has been shown a preferred embodiment of means and method for laser
engraving of a workpiece wherein a dual-purpose mask was formed by
photo-resist techniques. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art
that various modifications and improvements may be made without departing
from the purview of the invention, which is to be determined only by the
appended claims.
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Description  |
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