Through a glass, darkly: point defect production by ultrafast laser irradiation of alkali-containing silica glasses and alkali halide single crystals
Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
The high instantaneous powers associated with femtosecond lasers can color many nominally transparent
materials. Although the excitations responsible for this defect formation occur on subpicosecond time scales, subsequent
interactions between the resulting electronic and lattice defects complicate the evolution of color center formation and
decay. These interactions must be understood in order to account for the long term behavior of coloration. In this work,
we probe the evolution of color centers produced by femtosecond laser radiation in soda lime glass and single crystal
sodium chloride on time scales from microseconds to hundreds of seconds. By using an appropriately chosen probe laser
focused through the femtosecond laser spot, we can follow the changes in coloration due to individual or multiple
femtosecond pulses, and follow the evolution of that coloration for long times after femtosecond laser radiation is
terminated. For the soda lime glass, the decay of color centers is well described in terms of bimolecular annihilation
reactions between electron and hole centers. Similar processes are also occurring in single crystal sodium chloride.
Finally, we report fabrication of permanent periodic patterns in soda lime glass by two time coincident femtosecond laser
pulses.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
List of contributors:
Orlando, Stefano
Book title:
Laser-Induced Damage in Optical Materials: 2004 (Boulder Damage Symposium XXXVI, Annual Symposium on Optical Materials for High Power Lasers)
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