| Literature DB >> 29330510 |
M S Krivokorytov1,2, Q Zeng3, B V Lakatosh1, A Yu Vinokhodov4, Yu V Sidelnikov2,4, V O Kompanets2, V M Krivtsun1,2, K N Koshelev2,4, C D Ohl5,6, V V Medvedev7,8.
Abstract
Targeting micrometer sized metal droplets with near-infrared sub-picosecond laser pulses generates intense stress-confined acoustic waves within the droplet. Spherical focusing amplifies their pressures. The rarefaction wave nucleates cavitation at the center of the droplet, which explosively expands with a repeatable fragmentation scenario resulting into high-speed jetting. We predict the number of jets as a function of the laser energy by coupling the cavitation bubble dynamics with Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities. This provides a path to control cavitation and droplet shaping of liquid metals in particular for their use as targets in extreme-UV light sources.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29330510 PMCID: PMC5766571 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-19140-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The geometry of the experiment. (b) The shadowgraphs (top - camera 1 (side-view), bottom - camera 2 (front-view)) of deformed droplets taken at different time delays t after the laser pulse impact; the laser pulse energy equals 0.83 mJ; each frame corresponds to a separate experimental realization. (c) Analysis of the fragments’ positions.
Figure 2Experimental results. (a) Maximum expansion of the droplet in the direction (black symbols) and vertical (red symbols) to the laser beam. (b) Shadowgraphs of the droplet at maximum expansion.
Figure 3Experimental results. (a) Shadowgraphs of the droplet taken at 8 μs after laser pulse. (b) Mean number of jets as a function of pulse energy for camera 1 view (diamond symbols) and camera 2 view (round symbols) both with the numerical result on the peak number of the most unstable surface wave.
Figure 4Numerical results. Top: the comparison of experimental and numerical results, the dots represent the droplet radius in experiment under pulse energy of 0.83 mJ, the solid line and the dash line are the numerical result of the droplet and bubble radius evolution with the initial condition of R0 = 25 μm, R = 5 μm, P0 = 900 bar. Bottom: the normalized amplitude of the perturbations of different modes.