Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5367601 Applied Surface Science 2009 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

New experimental results are obtained by coupling both time-resolved reflectivity and rapid infrared pyrometry under a hemispherical reactor. The heating source KrF laser beam (28 ns, 248 nm) is homogenized and as for probing, a CW He-Ne laser beam (10 mW, 633 nm) is used.Using both methods infrared pyrometry with an IR detector cooled with liquid nitrogen and sensitive in the spectral range 1-12 μm, and time-resolved reflectivity with a rapid photodiode, we were able to study complex thermodynamic transitions with nanosecond time resolution. Three different materials are studied by varying the KrF fluence (energy/surface) from 100 to 2000 mJ/cm2: thin films melting (Au/Ni), the threshold of plasma formation (Ti), and complex liquid phase segregation under semi-conductor state (ZnO). The formation of a liquid Zn film induced by temperature gradient is well evidenced by our signals. Also melting of thin films irradiated by low laser fluences (less than 500 mJ/cm2) translates the typical thermodynamic behavior. Finally, wide fluence dynamic (400-2000 mJ/cm2) is analyzed in the case of Ti surface, and results show two distinguished regimes: first one bellow 1000 mJ/cm2 corresponding to the early stage plasma initiation, and second one over 1000 mJ/cm2 to the dynamics of plasma expansion.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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