Laser Ablation of Metals: Analysis of Surface Heating and Plume Expansion Experiments
Academic Article
Publication Date:
1997
abstract:
The thermal effects produced by laser pulses 6 or 18 ns. absorbed by a solid target have been investigated
experimentally and theoretically. The energy which is absorbed serves to raise the temperature of the surface. The regimes to
be considered are described by the heat-diffusion equation under conditions of what we term 'normal vaporization'.
Numerical solutions of the heat-diffusion equation lead to the temperature profiles produced within the target. The aim of
this work is to present the results on heat flow in terms of the surface temperature and the velocity at which the surface
recedes. Experimental data on the recession velocity and of the crater depth in relation to the thermophysical parameters of
the metals Al, Cu, Nb, W, and Zn, are reported. The effect of the surface heating has also been examined in terms of the
velocities of the plumes emitted from the targets. It is concluded that vaporization from the laser-heated targets is not the
only relevant process but that one or both of laser-plume interaction and phase explosion may play a role in determining
particle energies.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Giardini, Anna; Orlando, Stefano
Published in: