Abstract :
Enhancement of material ablation and photoacoustic excitation by an artificially deposited liquid film in the process of pulsedlaser
ablation (PLA) is investigated in this paper. Ablation threshold, ablation rate, surface topography, and acoustic-transient
emission are also measured for dry and liquid film-coated surfaces. The physical mechanisms of enhanced ablation in the liquidassisted
process are analyzed at relatively low laser fluences with negligible effect of laser-produced plasma. Particularly,
correlation between material ablation and acoustic-transient generation is examined. In the experiment, aluminum thin-films and
bulk foils are ablated by Q-switched Nd:YAG laser pulses. The dependence of ablation rate and laser-induced topography on
liquid film thickness and chemical composition is also examined. Photoacoustic emission is measured by the probe beam
deflection method utilizing a CW HeNe laser and a microphone. In comparison with a dry ablation process, the liquid-assisted
ablation process results in substantially augmented ablation efficiency and reduced ablation threshold. The results indicate that
both increased laser-energy coupling, i.e., lowered reflectance, and amplified photoacoustic excitation in explosive vaporization
of liquid are responsible for the enhanced material ablation.
# 2003 Published by Elsevier B.V.
Keywords :
Pulsed-laser ablation , Photoacoustic effect , Explosive vaporization , Liquid