DocumentCode
1150334
Title
Metal evaporation under powerful optical radiation
Author
Prokhorov, A.M. ; Batanov, V.A. ; Bunkin, F.V. ; Fedorov, V.B.
Author_Institution
P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute, Academy of Sciences, Moscow, USSR
Volume
9
Issue
5
fYear
1973
fDate
5/1/1973 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
503
Lastpage
510
Abstract
The experimental results of our studies of metal evaporation under powerful optical radiation are presented. The theory of this phenomenon based on a liquid-vapor phase transition is developed. An approximate solution of the Clapeyron-Clausius equation is applied to the present problem. The method permits calculations of metal surface temperature versus incident light intensity I0 . When a certain critical intensity is exceeded (
W .cm-2) a new effect is shown to arise due to disappearance of the metallic properties of the target. The new effect is a "transparency wave" in whose front a liquid metal turns into a liquid dielectric. For
it is the surface "transparent" (dielectric) layer that is evaporated. Its temperature is no longer raised and it remains below a critical value. This layer is separated from the metal by the transparency wave front, which propagates towards the interior of the metal. The transparency wave causes some other effects to arise, such as a sharp drop of the reflectivity from the metal surface, an essential change in the dependence of the observed evaporation front speed on I0 , and, finally, occurrence of a maximum on the curve of specific recoil impulse versus I0 . These other effects may be used to identify the transparency wave. The experimental results support some corollaries of our theoretical model. The vapor dynamics of metal evaporation under powerful millisecond optical radiation are investigated. Vapor heating near the target under laser light has been observed. The initial conditions of vapor motion are studied. From the gas-dynamic measurements the mass flow of the gas phase j1 is calculated. The dependence of j1 upon the incident light intensity is indicative of the fact that the metal surface has attained the temperature
, which corresponds to the liquid metal-liquid dielectric transition.
W .cm-2) a new effect is shown to arise due to disappearance of the metallic properties of the target. The new effect is a "transparency wave" in whose front a liquid metal turns into a liquid dielectric. For
it is the surface "transparent" (dielectric) layer that is evaporated. Its temperature is no longer raised and it remains below a critical value. This layer is separated from the metal by the transparency wave front, which propagates towards the interior of the metal. The transparency wave causes some other effects to arise, such as a sharp drop of the reflectivity from the metal surface, an essential change in the dependence of the observed evaporation front speed on I
, which corresponds to the liquid metal-liquid dielectric transition.Keywords
Dielectric liquids; Equations; Gas lasers; Heating; Laser modes; Laser theory; Optical surface waves; Reflectivity; Surface waves; Temperature;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9197
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JQE.1973.1077511
Filename
1077511
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