JOURNAL ARTICLE

Ultrafast dynamics and internal processing mechanism of silica glass under double-pulse femtosecond laser irradiation

Guoqi RenYusuke ItoReina YoshizakiHuijie SunJunya HattoriNaohiko Sugita

Year: 2024 Journal:   Optics Express Vol: 32 (18)Pages: 32408-32408   Publisher: Optica Publishing Group

Abstract

Femtosecond laser-induced plasma filaments have potential for various applications including attosecond physics, spectroscopy, and microprocessing. However, the use of plasma filaments to generate high-aspect-ratio internal modifications remains low-efficiency. Here, we experimentally demonstrated high-efficiency internal processing using plasma filaments induced by a double-pulse femtosecond laser. The processing mechanism was revealed through an investigation of the ultrafast dynamics of plasma filaments in experiments and simulations. We found that the excitation region of the first pulse (P1) exerted a temporal effect on the propagation and absorption of the second pulse (P2) due to the evolution of excited electrons, thus resulting in different processing characterizations. At a smaller inter-pulse delay (IPD), electrons and self-trapped excitons induced by P1 improved the absorption of P2 in the shallow region. Consequently, the main excitation regions of P1 and P2 were separated, resulting in a lower density of energy deposition and weak modifications. Whereas, at a larger IPD, P2 penetrated a deeper region with the relaxation of electrons and excitons induced by P1, leading to a better overlap of excitation regions between P2 and P1, thus improving the density of energy deposition and achieving efficient microprocessing. Besides, at an infinite IPD, P2 behaved like P1, but no modification was obtained owing to the complete energy diffusion of P1. Therefore, controlling the electron dynamic and energy diffusion contributes to the improvement of modification efficiency. Furthermore, the distribution of electron densities on the cross section was estimated to precisely analyze the microprocessing. These results are expected to aid in a better understanding of the interaction mechanism between dielectrics and intense ultrafast lasers and be useful for microprocessing applications.

Keywords:
Femtosecond Ultrafast laser spectroscopy Materials science Ultrashort pulse Laser Electron Plasma Exciton Excitation Atomic physics Absorption (acoustics) Relaxation (psychology) Molecular physics Optics Physics

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Citation History

Topics

Laser Material Processing Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Computational Mechanics
Laser-induced spectroscopy and plasma
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanics of Materials
Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
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