| Literature DB >> 30416911 |
Wei-Hung Hsu1, Frances Camille P Masim1, Armandas Balčytis2, Hsin-Hui Huang1, Tetsu Yonezawa3, Aleksandr A Kuchmizhak4,5, Saulius Juodkazis2,6, Koji Hatanaka1,7,8.
Abstract
Enhancement of X-ray emission was observed from a micro-jet of a nano-colloidal gold suspension in air under double-pulse excitation of ultrashort (40 fs) near-IR laser pulses. Temporal and spatial overlaps between the pre-pulse and the main pulse were optimized for the highest X-ray emission. The maximum X-ray intensity was obtained at a 1-7 ns delay of the main pulse irradiation after the pre-pulse irradiation with the micro-jet position shifted along the laser beam propagation. It was revealed that the volume around gold nanoparticles where the permittivity is near zero, ε ≈ 0, accounts for the strongest absorption, which leads to the effective enhancements of X-ray emission.Entities:
Keywords: X-ray; double pulse; gold nanoparticles; intense femtosecond laser; plasma; water
Year: 2018 PMID: 30416911 PMCID: PMC6204784 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.9.242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1(a) Schematics of experiment showing polarizations of the pre-pulse E1 and the main pulse E2 in the plane of incidence (xz-plane). (b) The absorption spectrum of the sample gold solution with an SEM image of gold nanoparticles. (c) Beam steering optimization in xy-projection for the highest yield of X-ray generation at 100 ps delay between the pre-pulse (energy E1 = 80 μJ) and the main pulse (E2 = 700 μJ). The distance between water film and Geiger counter was 15 cm, with an aperture of 2 mm. The orientation of the E1 polarization is shown for reference.
Figure 2X-ray intensities from (a) a water film and (b) a film of a colloidal suspension of gold nanospheres irradiated by a pre-pulse at 80 μJ/pulse and a main pulse at 700 μJ/pulse with different time delays. The automatic positioning system was used to find the maximum X-ray intensity [35]. The laser irradiates the solution film from the right side in these figures. The width of the solution film hit by the laser pulse at an incidence angle of θ = 60° is 2h ≈ 40 μm (shown in panel (a)).
Figure 3X-ray intensity at different positions of the water film (a) and the gold nanosphere colloidal solution film (b) at Δt = 6 ns. The laser irradiates the solution film from the right side in these figures. The fit constitutes a multi-Gaussian convolution. The intensity of the pre-pulse is 80 μJ. Under double-pulsed excitation, the spatial profiles of X-ray intensity are significantly different in the cases of water and the gold nanospheres colloidal solution.
Figure 4Position of X-ray maximum generation (a) and its intensity (b) for distilled water films at short excitation times and at different pre-pulse energies E1, while the main pulse energy was fixed at E2 = 700 μJ. A positive z-shift corresponds to an upward movement of solution position towards the incoming laser pulse (see Figure 2a). The lines are guides to the eye.
Figure 5FDTD simulations of light-field enhancement under the conditions of the experiment: angle of incidence 60°, 800 nm wavelength, the concentration of gold nanoparticle yields a separation of ca. 1 μm between them. (a) Interaction of a water film with 20 nm-diameter gold nanoparticles and a laser pulse (modeled as a plane wave incidence). (b) The formation of a plasma around nanoparticles with permittivity near zero ε ≈ 0.86 + i0.86 (ENZ) in which light is efficiently absorbed: 20 nm wide shell around a 20 nm diameter nanoparticle. (c) Sphere of strongly ionized water around a gold nanoparticle. The absorption depth under ENZ plasma conditions is ls = 149 nm, which is taken as radius of the excited volume. Nanoroughening of water surface evolves at longer times. Disintegration of gold nanoparticles is expected inside the cavitation bubble. Intensity of incident beam: .