| Literature DB >> 25762003 |
Javier Hernandez-Rueda, Nadine Götte1, Jan Siegel, Michelina Soccio, Bastian Zielinski1, Cristian Sarpe1, Matthias Wollenhaupt1,2, Tiberio A Ezquerra, Thomas Baumert1, Javier Solis.
Abstract
We have investigated the use of tightly focused, temporally shaped femtosecond (fs)-laser pulses for producing nanostructures in two dielectric materials (sapphire and phosphate glass) with different characteristics in their response to pulsed laser radiation. For this purpose, laser pulses shaped by third-order dispersion (TOD) were used to generate temporally asymmetric excitation pulses, leading to the single-step production of subwavelength ablative and subablative surface structures. When compared to previous works on the interaction of tightly focused TOD-shaped pulses with fused silica, we show here that this approach leads to very different nanostructure morphologies, namely, clean nanopits without debris surrounding the crater in sapphire and well-outlined nanobumps and nanovolcanoes in phosphate glass. Although in sapphire the debris-free processing is associated with the much lower viscosity of the melt compared to fused silica, nanobump formation in phosphate glass is caused by material network expansion (swelling) upon resolidification below the ablation threshold. The formation of nanovolcanoes is a consequence of the combined effect of material network expansion and ablation occurring in the periphery and central part of the irradiated region, respectively. It is shown that the induced morphologies can be efficiently controlled by modulating the TOD coefficient of the temporally shaped pulses.Entities:
Keywords: dielectrics; femtosecond lasers; nanofabrication; phosphate glass; sapphire; temporal pulse shaping
Year: 2015 PMID: 25762003 DOI: 10.1021/am508925m
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229