Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5449813 | Optics Communications | 2017 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
A hundred-nanosecond pulsed laser was employed to structure the nickel surface. The effects of laser spatial filling interval and laser scanning speed on the optical absorbance capacity and morphologies on the nickel surface were experimentally investigated. The black nickel surface covered with dense micro/nanostructured broccoli-like clusters with strong light trapping capacity ranging from the UV to the near IR was produced at a high laser scanning speed up to v=100Â mm/s. The absorbance of the black nickel is as high as 98% in the UV range of 200-400Â nm, more than 97% in the visible spectrum, ranging from 400 to 800Â nm, and over 90% in the IR between 800 and 2000Â nm. In addition, when the nickel surface was irradiated in two-dimensional crossing scans by laser with different processing parameters, self-organized and shape-controllable structures of three-dimensional (3D) periodic arrays can be fabricated. Compared with ultrafast laser systems previously used for such processing, the nanosecond fiber laser used in this work is more cost-effective, compact and allows higher processing rates. This nickel surface structured technique may be applicable in optoelectronics, batteries industry, solar/wave absorbers, and wettability materials.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Authors
Jinxiang Fu, Hao Liang, Jingyuan Zhang, Yibo Wang, Yannan Liu, Zhiyan Zhang, Xuechun Lin,