Laser Cutting Material Thickness Parameters Guide
Compiled based on process manuals from mainstream laser equipment manufacturers such as TRUMPF, Bystronic, Amada, and Mazak. Covers recommended cutting parameters for common materials like carbon steel, stainless steel, and aluminum alloy at different powers and thicknesses.
Mild Steel
Fast oxygen cutting, economical for structural applications
Stainless Steel
High-quality nitrogen cutting for oxide-free edges
Aluminum Alloy
Specialized parameters for high-reflectivity materials
How to Use This Reference Guide
Choose the parameter table corresponding to your material (carbon steel, stainless steel, aluminum alloy, etc.)
Use the dropdown menu to select your equipment's laser power level (1kW-12kW)
Locate your material thickness in the table to obtain complete process parameters
Table parameters are reference values. Adjust ±10-15% based on equipment condition, material batch, and quality requirements
Material Characteristics Comparison
Quick comparison of cutting characteristics across different materials
| Material | Difficulty | Reflectivity | Thermal Conductivity | Edge Quality | Oxidation | Gas Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild Steel (Oxygen) | easy | low | medium | good | high | low |
| Stainless Steel (Nitrogen) | medium | medium | low | excellent | none | high |
| Stainless Steel (Air) | medium | medium | low | good | low | low |
| Aluminum Alloy | hard | high | high | good | low | medium |
Mild Steel (Oxygen)
Typical Applications:
- • Structural components
- • Machinery parts
- • Automotive frames
Stainless Steel (Nitrogen)
Typical Applications:
- • Food processing equipment
- • Medical devices
- • Architectural panels
Stainless Steel (Air)
Typical Applications:
- • Structural stainless
- • Industrial enclosures
- • Non-aesthetic parts
Aluminum Alloy
Typical Applications:
- • Aerospace components
- • Automotive parts
- • Electronics enclosures
Legend:
Speed vs Thickness Relationship
Mild Steel (Carbon Steel) - Cutting speed decreases non-linearly with thickness
Key Insights
- • Cutting speed decreases non-linearly as thickness increases
- • Higher power enables faster speeds across all thicknesses
- • Speed advantage of higher power is more pronounced in thicker materials
- • Thin materials (1-3mm) can be cut very fast even with moderate power
Quick Parameter Finder
Select material, power, and thickness to instantly find recommended cutting parameters
Select material, power, and thickness to view parameters
Understanding Material-Specific Parameters
Carbon Steel Cutting Characteristics
Carbon steel remains the most common material in laser cutting operations, accounting for over 60% of industrial cutting applications. Its favorable laser absorption characteristics and oxygen-assist cutting capability make it economical to process. However, understanding the nuances between different carbon steel grades is crucial for optimal results.
For mild steel (Q235, SPCC), oxygen-assist cutting provides the fastest speeds and lowest operating costs. The exothermic reaction between oxygen and iron contributes additional energy, allowing higher cutting speeds than nitrogen cutting. For example, a 3kW fiber laser cutting 6mm mild steel achieves 3.5 m/min with oxygen versus 2.2 m/min with nitrogen. However, oxygen cutting produces an oxide layer requiring post-processing for applications demanding clean edges.
High-carbon steels (>0.3% carbon) require more careful parameter control due to potential hardening in the heat-affected zone. Reducing cutting speed by 15-20% and using nitrogen instead of oxygen often produces better results, especially for tooling and precision parts where edge hardness variation is problematic.
Stainless Steel Complexity
Stainless steel presents unique challenges due to its low thermal conductivity and high reflectivity. Heat accumulation during cutting can cause edge oxidation and warping if parameters aren't optimized. The choice between nitrogen and air assist significantly impacts both quality and operating costs.
For austenitic stainless (304, 316), nitrogen cutting at 10-18 bar produces oxide-free edges critical for food processing, medical, and architectural applications. Air cutting offers 80% cost savings but produces slight oxidation acceptable for structural applications. Advanced parameter optimization and adaptive control systems can automatically adjust parameters real-time based on material feedback, ensuring consistent quality across varying material conditions while minimizing gas consumption by 15-25%.
Duplex stainless steels require 20-30% lower cutting speeds than austenitic grades due to higher strength. The parameter tables provide baseline values, but field optimization through test cuts is recommended for critical applications.
Aluminum Alloy Challenges
Aluminum cutting represents one of the most technically demanding applications in fiber laser cutting. High reflectivity (particularly at 1.06μm wavelength) and high thermal conductivity require higher power density and precise parameter control to achieve reliable results.
Key parameters for aluminum success include: (1) Higher power requirement - typically 30-40% more power than equivalent steel thickness; (2) Nitrogen pressure 12-18 bar minimum to prevent oxidation and ensure clean cuts; (3) Larger nozzle standoff(0.8-1.2mm) to manage melt ejection; (4) Focus position optimization - typically -2 to -4mm for thick aluminum to maximize power density penetration.
Different aluminum alloys vary significantly. Pure aluminum (1xxx series) cuts easily but tends to produce more dross. 5xxx series marine-grade aluminum cuts cleanly with proper parameters. 6xxx series architectural aluminum requires careful speed control to avoid burning. 7xxx series aerospace aluminum demands the most careful parameter optimization due to high strength and crack sensitivity.
Power-Thickness Relationships
Understanding the power-thickness relationship is fundamental to effective parameter selection. The relationship is not linear but follows a complex curve influenced by material properties, desired cutting speed, and quality requirements.
For steel cutting, the rule of thumb suggests 1kW per 3-4mm thickness for economic cutting speeds (2-4 m/min). However, this dramatically shifts at thickness extremes. Thin materials (0.5-2mm) can be cut very fast with lower power, where a 1kW laser achieves 15-25 m/min. Thick materials (20mm+) require disproportionately high power - cutting 25mm steel economically demands 12-15kW, not the 7-8kW that linear scaling would suggest.
This non-linearity stems from heat dissipation dynamics. In thin materials, heat quickly dissipates through conduction, requiring high power density but brief dwell time. In thick materials, heat accumulation helps cutting, but the deeper kerf requires sustained high power to maintain melt pool dynamics throughout the thickness.
Parameter Optimization Methodology
The parameters in this guide provide tested starting points, but optimal parameters for your specific equipment, material supply, and quality requirements require systematic optimization. A structured approach yields the best results:
- Baseline Establishment: Start with table values at mid-range for thickness and power
- Speed Optimization: Increase speed in 10% increments until quality degrades, then back off 15%
- Pressure Tuning: Adjust gas pressure ±2 bar to optimize melt ejection and edge quality
- Focus Refinement: Test focus positions in 0.5mm steps across ±2mm range
- Nozzle Selection: Try adjacent nozzle sizes if edge quality issues persist
- Documentation: Record all successful parameters with material batch information
Advanced users should implement Design of Experiments (DOE) methodology for multi-parameter optimization. This statistical approach efficiently explores parameter space and identifies optimal combinations faster than sequential single-variable testing.
Material Batch Variation Impact
One of the most underestimated factors in parameter optimization is material batch variation. Even from the same supplier with identical specifications, batches can vary in: surface condition (mill scale, rust, oil), chemical composition within spec tolerance, grain structure from rolling process, and internal stress distribution.
These variations can cause 10-20% fluctuation in optimal cutting speed. Professional shops maintain parameter libraries by material supplier and batch code. When changing material batches, always perform test cuts before production runs, even with seemingly identical specifications.
Galvanized and pre-coated steels present additional complexity. Zinc coating burns off during cutting, affecting gas dynamics and requiring modified nozzle standoff. Pre-painted materials require reduced power to avoid burning paint beyond cut edge. These materials typically need 15-25% speed reduction compared to bare steel.
Mild Steel (Carbon Steel)
Assist Gas: Oxygen (O₂) | Purity: ≥99.5%
| Thickness (mm) | Cutting Speed (m/min) | Gas Pressure (bar) | Nozzle Diameter (mm) | Focus Position (mm) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3.8 | 0.3 | ø 1 | 0 | - |
| 2 | 2.2 | 0.4 | ø 1.2 | -0.5 | - |
| 3 | 1.6 | 0.5 | ø 1.4 | -1 | - |
| 4 | 1.2 | 0.5 | ø 1.5 | -1 | - |
| 5 | 0.9 | 0.6 | ø 1.5 | -1.5 | - |
Thickness: 1 mm
Thickness: 2 mm
Thickness: 3 mm
Thickness: 4 mm
Thickness: 5 mm
Important Notes
- •Oxygen cutting provides fast speeds but produces oxide layer on cut edge
- •Suitable for parts requiring subsequent welding or coating
- •Best results with low-carbon steel (Q235, SPCC, A36)
Stainless Steel (Austenitic)
Assist Gas: Nitrogen (N₂) | Purity: ≥99.99%
| Thickness (mm) | Cutting Speed (m/min) | Gas Pressure (bar) | Nozzle Diameter (mm) | Focus Position (mm) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 | 10 | ø 1 | 0 | - |
| 2 | 1.7 | 12 | ø 1.2 | -0.5 | - |
| 3 | 1.2 | 14 | ø 1.5 | -1 | - |
Thickness: 1 mm
Thickness: 2 mm
Thickness: 3 mm
Important Notes
- •Nitrogen cutting produces oxide-free, bright cut edges
- •Requires higher gas pressure (10-20 bar) for clean cuts
- •Suitable for 304, 316, and other austenitic stainless steel grades
Stainless Steel (Air Cutting)
Assist Gas: Compressed Air | Purity: Filtered, oil-free
| Thickness (mm) | Cutting Speed (m/min) | Gas Pressure (bar) | Nozzle Diameter (mm) | Focus Position (mm) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 6 | 10 | ø 1 | 0 | Minimal oxidation |
| 2 | 3.5 | 12 | ø 1.2 | -0.5 | Light edge discoloration |
| 3 | 2.5 | 14 | ø 1.5 | -1 | Visible oxidation |
Thickness: 1 mm
Thickness: 2 mm
Thickness: 3 mm
Important Notes
- •Air cutting offers 80% cost savings compared to nitrogen
- •Produces slight edge oxidation acceptable for structural applications
- •Requires higher power (typically 20-30% more than nitrogen cutting)
- •Not recommended for food processing, medical, or high-aesthetic applications
Aluminum Alloy
Assist Gas: Nitrogen (N₂) | Purity: ≥99.99%
| Thickness (mm) | Cutting Speed (m/min) | Gas Pressure (bar) | Nozzle Diameter (mm) | Focus Position (mm) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4.5 | 10 | ø 1 | +0.5 | - |
| 2 | 2.8 | 12 | ø 1.2 | 0 | - |
| 3 | 1.8 | 14 | ø 1.5 | -0.5 | - |
Thickness: 1 mm
Thickness: 2 mm
Thickness: 3 mm
Important Notes
- •High reflectivity requires 3kW+ power for reliable cutting
- •Requires higher gas pressure to prevent oxidation
- •Suitable for 5052, 6061, and other common aluminum alloys
Parameter Definitions
The speed at which the cutting head moves along the cutting path. Too fast causes incomplete penetration; too slow produces dross and burn marks.
Assist gas jet pressure. Oxygen cutting typically uses 0.3-0.6 bar; nitrogen cutting requires 10-20 bar.
Nozzle orifice size. Thin sheets use small nozzles (1.0-1.5mm); thick plates use large nozzles (2.0-3.5mm).
Laser beam focus position relative to material surface. Negative value = focus inside material; positive value = focus above material.
Parameter Optimization Tips
- ✓Speed Priority: Maximize speed while maintaining cut quality to improve productivity
- ✓Quality Priority: Reduce speed by 15-20% to significantly improve edge quality and perpendicularity
- ✓Cost Optimization: Use oxygen for carbon steel; choose nitrogen or air for stainless based on quality requirements
- ✓First Article Testing: Always perform test cuts when changing materials or batches to verify parameters
- ✓Documentation: Build your own parameter database and record actual optimal parameters
Related Calculation Tools
Calculate required laser power based on material and thickness
Estimate kerf width and compensation values
Calculate complete cutting costs including gas, power, and time
Related Technical Guides
How to properly adjust and calibrate focus position
Systematic parameter optimization methodology
Resolve common cutting quality issues
Disclaimer
This reference guide data is compiled from publicly available technical documentation and industry standards from mainstream laser equipment manufacturers, provided for reference only. Actual cutting parameters are influenced by multiple factors including equipment model, laser condition, material batch, environmental conditions, and quality requirements, and may differ from the values shown. Please adjust parameters based on your equipment manufacturer's technical manual and on-site test cutting results. This site assumes no responsibility for any direct or indirect losses resulting from the use of this data.
Data Last Updated: 2025-11-02 | Recommended to review parameter validity every 6 months