Abstract :
The dynamics of a titanium plasma species, induced in air by coupling a fs-ablating laser pulse with an orthogonal ns-reheating laser source
placed at the fixed distance of 1.0 mm from the target surface, has been followed by temporally resolved emission spectroscopy. The temporal
evolutions of plasma features such as excitation temperatures and electron densities have been evaluated by using two different laser energies of the
first fs-ablating laser pulse (0.8 mJ and 3.0 mJ). Optimum inter-pulse delay times, experimentally determined, of 250 ms and 500 ms were used for
the fs laser energy of 3.0 mJ and 0.8 mJ, respectively. By experimental inspections of the main plasma species electronic transitions so obtained, a
strong enhancement was evaluated up to one and two orders of magnitude for Ti(I) and Ti(II), respectively. Independently from the fs laser energy
employed, the plasma features showed the same temporal behaviour implying that the ns-reheating characteristics of this process belong to the
reheating mechanism itself. The experimental results have been discussed and the excited species evolutions and elementary processes involved, as
well as, the local thermodynamic equilibrium departures, have been outlined
Keywords :
Laser induced emission spectroscopy , Dual pulse LIBS , Laser pulsed orthogonal reheating , Emission enhancement , LTE departure , Fs laser pulsedablation , Titanium