3. Pulsed Mode Welding
In pulsed mode, the laser emits discrete, high-energy bursts rather than a continuous beam. Each pulse creates a small, rapidly solidified melt pool. By controlling pulse duration, peak power, and frequency, operators can precisely manage heat input. This mode is particularly valuable for thin materials (below 1mm), heat-sensitive components, and spot welding applications.
Pulsed welding shines in electronics—securing battery tabs without melting separators—and in dental or orthodontic device manufacturing, where adjacent components must stay cool. The primary drawback is slower overall throughput compared to continuous wave welding for thick sections.
4. Continuous Wave (CW) Mode
In CW mode, the laser emits a steady, uninterrupted beam for the entire weld length. This provides consistent heating and rapid travel speeds, making it the mode of choice for long, continuous seams. CW is almost always used with keyhole welding for deep joints and with heat conduction welding for hermetic sealing of large enclosures. High-power CW lasers (2kW and above) are common in automotive and heavy fabrication.
One nuance: CW does not mean the power is constant. Modern CW lasers allow "modulation"—programmed power ramping at the start/end of a weld to avoid crater formation or burn-through.
5. Oscillation (Wobble) Welding Mode
This refers to the beam motion pattern rather than the laser emission type. The beam rapidly scans in circular, figure-eight, or linear patterns using galvanometer-driven mirrors. Oscillation enlarges the effective melt pool, improves gap bridging (tolerating up to 0.5mm gaps that would otherwise cause failure), and stabilizes the keyhole to reduce porosity.
Wobble welding is particularly beneficial for aluminum and copper alloys, which tend to be reflective and prone to spatter. By mixing the melt pool, oscillation ensures uniform heat distribution. Most modern handheld and scanning laser welders come with programmable oscillation modes.
Choosing the Right Mode
Selecting a process mode involves a trade-off between penetration depth, speed, and defect risk. Heat conduction mode provides clean but shallow welds. Keyhole mode offers depth at the cost of process sensitivity. Pulsed mode protects delicate components. Continuous wave maximizes productivity. Oscillation improves tolerance. A well-designed laser welding process often combines these modes—for instance, pulsed keyhole welding with wobble—to achieve both quality and throughput. Understanding each mode's physical principles is the first step toward a reliable, repeatable weld.