Title of article
On the incubation effect on two thermoplastics when irradiated with ultrashort laser pulses: Broadening effects when machining microchannels
Author/Authors
David Go´mez *، نويسنده , , Igor Goenaga، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
7
From page
2230
To page
2236
Abstract
In the present work, the incubation effect on polycarbonate (PC) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) foils has been investigated when
irradiated with femtosecond pulses (400 nm in wavelength, 90 fs in pulse length and 1 kHz in pulse repetition rate). First, craters produced with
different number of pulses (N = 1, 50, 100, 200 and 500) have been obtained and crater diameters measured by means of atomic force microscopy
for single-shot craters (N = 1) and confocal optical microscopy for multi-shot craters. Taking into account the gaussian shape of the laser beam, the
dependence of crater diameter with fluence has been well established according to a conventional description and, then, fluence thresholds
extracted as function of the number of pulses. These values show a good agreement with the incubation model and the incubation coefficient, j, has
been obtained for both materials (j = 0.68 for polycarbonate and j = 0.61 for poly(methyl methacrylate)). This result supports well the observed
fact that the incubation effects play a more important role in some thermoplastics than in any other kind of material, where j usually lies between
0.8 and 0.95. In the second part of this work, these results have been considered in the machining of microchannels, since the number of pulses is
directly connected to the relative motion of laser beam and the sample through the feedrate of the stages. So, the observed broadening of
microchannels with feedrate for a given fluence can be successfully explained and widths predicted with an uncertainty below 2 mm. Finally, the
channel depth is investigated and the well known transition between a gentle and a strong phase behaviour is showed in the case of polycarbonate.
Keywords
Femtosecond phenomena , Laser ablation , Micromachining
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Record number
1003161
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