Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5369346 | Applied Surface Science | 2008 | 5 Pages |
The effects of high power laser on aluminum and copper targets are investigated experimentally. Shadowgraph imagining is used to observe the expulsion of the material, plasma-plume formation and shock wave generation. Confocal microscopy is used for crater depth analysis, which showed that two distinctive regimes exist. At irradiances lower than 1011Â W/cm2 the crater depth increases monotonically with the increase of irradiation. At higher irradiances, crater depth of aluminum reaches a limit value while in the case of copper, the crater depth decreases between 1011 and 2Â ÃÂ 1012Â W/cm2, and then increases again. The present results clarify the effect of plasma shielding on limiting crater depths by providing first time measurements for metals at high irradiance regime.