Title of article
Comparing study of subpicosecond and nanosecond wet etching of fused silica
Author/Authors
Cs. Vass، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
5
From page
4768
To page
4772
Abstract
The effectiveness of the laser induced backside wet etching (LIBWE) of fused silica produced by subpicosecond (600 fs) and nanosecond
(30 ns) KrF excimer laser pulses (248 nm) was studied. Fused silica plates were the transparent targets, and naphthalene–methyl-methacrylate
(c = 0.85, 1.71 M) and pyrene–acetone (c = 0.4 M) solutions were used as liquid absorbents.We did not observe etching using 600 fs laser pulses,
in contrast with the experiments at 30 ns, where etched holes were found. The threshold fluences of the LIBWE at nanosecond pulses were found to
be in the range of 360–450 mJ cm 2 depending on the liquid absorbers and their concentrations. On the basis of the earlier results the LIBWE
procedure can be explain by the thermal heating of the quartz target and the high-pressure bubble formation in the liquid. According to the theories,
these bubbles hit and damage the fused silica surface. The pressure on the irradiated quartz can be derived from the snapshots of the originating and
expanding bubbles recorded by fast photographic setup. We found that the bubble pressure at 460 mJ cm 2 fluence value was independent of the
pulse duration (600 fs and 30 ns) using pyrene–acetone solution, while using naphthalene–methyl-methacrylate solutions this pressure was 4, 5
times higher at 30 ns pulses than it was at 600 fs pulses. According to the earlier studies, this result refers to that the pressure should be sufficiently
high to remove a thin layer from the quartz surface using pyrene–acetone solution. These facts show that the thermal and chemical phenomena in
addition to the mechanical effects also play important role in the LIBWE procedure
Keywords
Wet etching , fused silica , Transparent materials , Subpicosecond krF laser system
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Record number
1002073
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