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Optical and ultrasonic monitoring of femtosecond laser filamentation in fused silica

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posted on 2024-07-09, 18:02 authored by V. Mizeikis, Saulius JuodkazisSaulius Juodkazis, Tadas Balčiunas, Sergey I. Kudryashov, Vladimir D. Zvorykin, Andrei A. Ionin, Hiroaki Misawa
Millimeter-long filaments and accompanying luminous plasma and defect channels created in fused silica (FS) by single focused femtosecond laser pulses with supercritical powers were probed in situ using optical imaging and contact ultrasonic techniques. Above the threshold pulse energy Eopt = 5 μJ corresponding to a few megawatt power levels pulses collapse due to self-focusing, producing channels filled by electron-hole plasma and luminescent defects, and exhibits predominantly compressive pressure transients. Analysis of the optical and ultrasonic response versus the laser pulse energy suggests that filamentary pulse propagation in the channels occurs with considerable dissipation of about 10 cm−1. The predominant ionization mechanism is most likely associated with avalanche ionization, while the main mechanism of optical absorption is free-carrier absorption via inverse Bremsstrahlung interaction with the polar lattice.

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0169-4332

Journal title

Applied Surface Science

Volume

255

Issue

24

Pagination

2 pp

Publisher

Elsevier

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2009 Elsevier B.V. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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