The characteristic emission features of a laser-produced plasma strongly depend strongly on the laser fluence. We investigated the spatial and temporal dynamics of neutrals and ions in femtosecond laser (800 nm, ˜ 40 fs, Ti:Sapphire) induced copper plasma in vacuum using both optical emission spectroscopy (OES) and spectrally resolved two-dimensional (2D) imaging methods over a wide fluence range of 0.5 J/cm2-77.5 J/cm2. 2D fast gated monochromatic images showed distinct plume splitting between the neutral and ions especially at moderate to higher fluence ranges. OES studies at low to moderate laser fluence regime confirm intense neutral line emission over the ion emission whereas this trend changes at higher laser fluence with dominance of the latter. This evidences a clear change in the physical processes involved in femtosecond laser matter interaction at high input laser intensity. The obtained ion dynamics resulting from the OES, and spectrally resolved 2D imaging are compared with charged particle measurement employing Faraday cup and Langmuir probe and results showed good correlation.
Revised: January 17, 2017 |
Published: November 14, 2016
Citation
Anoop K.K., S.S. Harilal, R. Philip, R. Bruzzese, and S. Amoruso. 2016.Laser Fluence Dependence on Emission Dynamics of Ultrafast Laser Induced Copper Plasma.Journal of Applied Physics 120, no. 18:Article No. 185901.PNNL-SA-119809.doi:10.1063/1.4967313