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Research could improve laser-manufacturing technique
December 20, 2011
Engineers have discovered details about the behavior of ultrafast laser pulses that may lead to new applications in manufacturing, diagnostics and other research. Ultrafast laser pulses are used to create features and surface textures in metals, ceramics and other materials for applications including the manufacture of solar cells and biosensors. The lasers pulse at durations of 100 femtoseconds, or quadrillionths of a second, and cause electrons to reach temperatures greater than 60,000 degrees Celsius during the pulse duration. The pulses create precise patterns in a process called "cold ablation," which turns material into a plasma of charged particles. Images taken with a high-speed camera show tiny mushroom clouds eerily similar in appearance to those created in a nuclear explosion. The clouds expand outward at speeds of 100 to 1,000 times the speed of sound within less than one nanosecond. However, new findings reveal that an earlier cloud forms immediately before the mushroom cloud, and this early plasma interferes with the laser pulses, hindering performance, said Yung Shin, a professor of mechanical engineering and director of Purdue University's Center for Laser-Based Manufacturing. Finding a way to eliminate the interference caused by the early plasma could open up new applications in manufacturing, materials and chemical processing, machining and advanced sensors to monitor composition, and chemical and atomic reactions on an unprecedented scale, he said. Researchers used experiments and simulations to study the phenomenon. Research papers about the work were published online Dec. 6 in Applied Physics Letters and in September in the journal Physics of Plasmas. The papers were written by doctoral student Wenqian Hu, Shin and mechanical engineering professor Galen King. "We found the formation of early plasma has very significant bearing on the use of ultrashort pulse lasers because it partially blocks the laser beam," Shin said. "The early plasma changes the optical properties of air, but the mechanism is still largely unknown." The researchers studied the early plasma by tracking the movement of millions of individual atoms in the plasma; observing how the laser beam travels in space and interacts with plasma; and using a "laser pump probe shadowgraph," a technique in which one laser ablates a material, producing the early plasma, and a second laser fired perpendicular to the first is used to study the cloud. A series of optical elements and mirrors is used in the shadowgraph technique. Purdue University

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Ultrashort Laser Pulse Phenomena, Second Edition (Optics and Photonics Series)
by Jean-Claude Professor Diels (Author), Jean-Claude Diels (Author), Wolfgang Rudolph (Author)
Ultrashort Laser Pulse Phenomena serves as an introduction to the phenomena of ultrashort laser pulses and describes how this technology can be applied in areas such as spectroscopy, medical imaging, electromagnetism, optics, and quantum physics. Combining the principles with experimental techniques, the book serves as a guide to designing and constructing femtosecond systems.
The second edition has updated and expanded its content, and includes more examples of ultrashort sources and a more comprehensive fundamentals chapter. Diagnostic techniques and applications involving sensors, mode-locked lasers, and imaging have been fully revised to include current technologies.
Written in a tutorial style, this book is suitable for senior undergraduate and graduate students as...
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Femtosecond Laser Pulses: Principles and Experiments (Advanced Texts in Physics)
by Claude Rulliere (Editor)
This smooth introduction for advanced undergraduates starts with the fundamentals of lasers and pulsed optics. Thus prepared, the student is introduced to short and ultrashort laser pulses, and learns how to generate, manipulate, and measure them. Spectroscopic implications are also discussed. The second edition has been completely revised and includes two new chapters on some of the most promising and fast-developing applications in ultrafast phenomena: coherent control and attosecond pulses.
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Atmospheric Transmission Windows for High Energy Short Pulse Lasers
The US Navy is exploring the feasibility of using a high energy laser weapon as a ship-borne self-defense system against sea-skimming cruise missile attacks. Since the attenuation of laser energy by the atmosphere is the highest at low altitudes and varies with frequency, the selection of appropriate wavelengths becomes critical for a laser weapon to be effective. A high energy free electron laser (FEL) is suitable for employment in the envisaged role because it can be designed to operate at any desired frequency and, to a degree, is tunable in operation. This study aims to determine the optimal atmospheric windows for high energy, pico second, short pulse lasers. Computer simulations were carried out by convolving a pulse spectrum with the transmission spectrum and the absorption...
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Free Electron and Solid State Lasers Development For Naval Directed Energy
A MW level FEL is being designed with a short a Rayleigh length resonator to increase the spot size at the mirrors and to avoid mirror damage. In this thesis, it is found that it is desirable to focus the electron beam to improve the FEL extraction efficiency. Three-dimensional simulations show that the focused electron beam increases the extraction efficiency far beyond the required value of 0.7%. It is also found in this thesis that shifting the electron beam off-axis less than 0.3 mm, the efficiency remains above the required value. The proposed FEL design uses high power, short optical pulses whose spectrum may cover many absorption lines. The absorbed laser energy can heat up the air resulting in defocusing the laser beam (thermal blooming). This thesis shows that thermal blooming is...
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Ultrashort Laser Pulse Phenomena: Fundamentals, Techniques, and Applications on a Femtosecond Time Scale (Optics & Photonics Series)
by Jean-Claude Professor Diels (Author), Wolfgang Professor Rudolph (Author), Jean-Claude Diels (Author), Wolfgang Rudolph (Author), Paul F. Liao (Editor), Paul Kelley (Editor)
One of the first coherent, tutorial graduate level text/reference books on ultrashort laser phenomena, this book presents an introduction to the phenomena and explains how it can be used to help examine problems in areas such as electromagnetism, optics, and quantum mechanics. Written for students as well as experimental researchers in physics, engineering, biology, or chemistry, the text provides the necessary background and tools to design experiments involving ultrashort pulses. All aspects of design are covered: from the construction of the source, to the amplifier, to the diagnostic method, and finally, to the design of the experiment in any field. The text reviews the basic properties of light propagation through matter and provides a study of simple optical components with emphasis...
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Researchers generate high-speed pulses of laser light on silicon, speeding data transmission.(TECHNOLOGY): An article from: Fiber Optics Weekly Update
by Gale Reference Team (Author)
This digital document is an article from Fiber Optics Weekly Update, published by Thomson Gale on August 24, 2007. The length of the article is 548 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: Researchers generate high-speed pulses of laser light on silicon, speeding data transmission.(TECHNOLOGY) Author: Gale Reference Team Publication: Fiber Optics Weekly Update (Newsletter) Date: August 24, 2007 Publisher: Thomson Gale Volume: 27 Issue: 34 Page: 1(2)
Distributed by Thomson...
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Atoms in Intense Laser Fields
by Professor C. J. Joachain (Author), N. J. Kylstra (Author), R. M. Potvliege (Author)
The development of lasers capable of producing high-intensity pulses has opened a new area in the study of light-matter interactions. The corresponding laser fields are strong enough to compete with the Coulomb forces in controlling the dynamics of atomic systems and give rise to multiphoton processes. This book presents a unified account of this rapidly developing field of physics. The first part describes the fundamental phenomena occurring in intense laser-atom interactions and gives the basic theoretical framework to analyze them. The second part contains a detailed discussion of Floquet theory, the numerical integration of the wave equations and approximation methods for the low- and high-frequency regimes. In the third part, the main multiphoton processes are discussed: multiphoton...
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Ultra-Fast Fiber Lasers: Principles and Applications with MATLABĀ® Models (Optics and Photonics)
by Le Nguyen Binh (Author), Nam Quoc Ngo (Author)
Ultrashort pulses in mode-locked lasers are receiving focused attention from researchers looking to apply them in a variety of fields, from optical clock technology to measurements of the fundamental constants of nature and ultrahigh-speed optical communications. Ultrashort pulses are especially important for the next generation of ultrahigh-speed optical systems and networks operating at 100 Gbps per carrier. Ultra Fast Fiber Lasers: Principles and Applications with MATLABĀ® Models is a self-contained reference for engineers and others in the fields of applied photonics and optical communications. Covering both fundamentals and advanced research, this book includes both theoretical and experimental results. MATLAB files are included to provide a basic grounding in the simulation of...
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Frequency-Resolved Optical Gating: The Measurement of Ultrashort Laser Pulses
by Rick Trebino (Author)
The Frequency-Resolved Optical-Gating (FROG) technique has revolutionized our ability to measure and understand ultrashort laser pulses. This book contains everything you need to know to measure even the shortest, weakest, or most complex ultrashort laser pulses. Whether you're an undergrad or an advanced researcher, you'll find easy-to-understand descriptions of all the key ideas behind all the FROG techniques, all the practical details of pulse measurement, and many new directions of research. This book is not like any other scientific book. It is a lively discussion of the basic concepts. It is an advanced treatment of research-level issues.
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Field Guide to Laser Pulse Generation (SPIE Vol. FG14) (Field Guide) (Field Guide) (Field Guide) (Spie Field Guides)
by Rudiger Paschotta (Author)
This Guide provides the essential information on laser pulse generation, including Q switching, gain switching, mode locking, and the amplification of ultrashort pulses to high energies. Pulse characterization is also covered, along with the physical aspects and various technical limitations. It is important to note that laser pulses span an enormously large parameter space in terms of pulse duration, pulse energy, and wavelength. This is possible only with a wide range of techniques, the most common of which are discussed in this Field Guide. This Guide is designed for industry practitioners, researchers, users of pulsed and ultrafast laser systems, and anyone wanting to learn more about the potential of different pulse generation methods. Contents - Glossary of Symbols -...
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