Title :
Laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) on polymer surfaces
Author :
Heitz, Johannes ; Reisinger, Bettina ; Fahrner, Marc ; Romanin, Christoph ; Siegel, Jakub ; Svorcik, Vaclav
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Appl. Phys., Johannes Kepler Univ. Linz, Linz, Austria
Abstract :
Frequently observed structures in laser-surface processing are ripples, also denoted as laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS). Ripples originate from the interference of the incident/refracted laser light with the scattered or diffracted light near the surface. For many polymer surfaces, organized nano-ripple structures surfaces can be induced by irradiation with pulsed UV lasers with pulse lengths in the order of some nanoseconds at fluences well below the ablation threshold and with a large number of laser pulses N. After exposure to linearly polarized radiation at normal incidence, the lateral period of the observed LIPSS is close to the wavelength λ. This type of structures is usually called low spatial frequency LIPSS (LSFL). For femto-second laser light, ripples at polymer surfaces are also observed at a laser fluence above the ablation threshold, even with low numbers of laser pulses N. Under special conditions, another type of ripples with periods as small as λ/3 has been reported. This type of ripples is called high spatial frequency LIPSS (HSFL). We summarize here our work on LIPSS generation at polymers and describe potential applications in the field of self-organized formation of gold nano-wires and nano-structure induced alignment of biological cells cultivated on polymer substrates.
Keywords :
laser ablation; nanostructured materials; polymers; surface structure; surface treatment; ablation threshold; biological cells; diffracted light; femtosecond laser light; gold nanowires; high spatial frequency laser-induced periodic surface structures; incident laser light interference; irradiation; laser fluence; laser-induced periodic surface structure generation; laser-surface processing; lateral period; linearly polarized radiation; low spatial frequency laser-induced periodic surface structures; nanostructure induced alignment; normal incidence; organized nanoripple structure surfaces; polymer substrates; polymer surfaces; pulse lengths; pulsed UV lasers; refracted laser light interference; scattered light; self-organized formation; Chemical lasers; Laser ablation; Nanobioscience; Optical surface waves; Polymers; Radiation effects; Surface emitting lasers; biological cells; gold nano-structures; laser-induced nanostructures; polymer surfaces; ripples;
Conference_Titel :
Transparent Optical Networks (ICTON), 2012 14th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Coventry
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2228-7
Electronic_ISBN :
2161-2056
DOI :
10.1109/ICTON.2012.6253723