학술논문

Resolving transient temperature and density during ultrafast laser ablation of aluminum.
Document Type
Article
Source
Applied Physics A: Materials Science & Processing. Sep2023, Vol. 129 Issue 9, p1-14. 14p. 1 Diagram, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*LASER ablation
*ULTRA-short pulsed lasers
*DIELECTRIC function
*THERMAL equilibrium
*DIELECTRIC materials
*ALUMINUM
Language
ISSN
0947-8396
Abstract
To understand the dynamics of ultrashort-pulse laser ablation, the interpretation of ultrafast time-resolved optical experiments is of utmost importance. To this end, spatiotemporally resolved pump-probe ellipsometry may be utilized to examine the transiently changing dielectric function of a material, particularly when compared to two-temperature model simulations. In this work, we introduce a consistent description of electronic transport as well dielectric function for bulk aluminum, which enables unambiguous quantitative predictions of transient temperature and density variations close to the surface after laser excitation. Potential contributions of these temperature and density fluctuations to the proposed optical model are investigated. We infer that after the thermal equilibrium of electrons and lattice within a few picoseconds, the real part of the dielectric function mostly follows a density decrease, accompanied by an early mechanical motion due to stress confinement. In contrast, the imaginary part is susceptible to a complicated interaction between time-varying collision frequency, plasma frequency, and a density dependency of the interband transitions. The models proposed in this study permit an outstanding quantitative prediction of the ultrashort-pulse laser ablation's final state and transient observables. Consequently, it is anticipated that in the future, these models will provide a quantitative understanding of the dynamics and behavior of laser ablation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]