Chapter 7

Photophysics and Photochemistry of Ultrafast Laser Materials Processing

Richard F. Haglund Jr.

Richard F. Haglund Jr.

Vanderbilt University, Department of Physics and Astronomy and W M Keck Free Electron Laser Center, Box 1807, Station B 6301 Stevenson, Nashville, TN 37235, USA

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 06 June 2006

Summary

This chapter contains sections titled:

  • Introduction and Motivation

  • Ultrafast Laser Materials Interactions: Electronic Excitation

    • Metals: The Two-temperature Model

    • Semiconductors

      • Ultrafast Laser-induced Melting in Semiconductors

      • Ultrafast Laser Ablation in Semiconductors

      • Theoretical Studies of Femtosecond Laser Interactions with Semiconductors

    • Insulators

      • Ultrafast Ablation of Insulators

      • Self-focusing of Ultrashort Pulses for Three-dimensional Structures

      • Color-center Formation by Femtosecond Laser Irradiation

  • Ultrafast Laser-materials Interaction: Vibrational Excitation

    • Ablation of Inorganic Materials by Resonant Vibrational Excitation

    • Ablation of Organic Materials by Resonant Vibrational Excitation

  • Photochemistry in Femtosecond Laser-materials Interactions

    • Sulfidation of Silicon Nanostructures by Femtosecond Irradiation

    • Nitridation of Metal Surfaces Using Picosecond MIR Radiation

  • Photomechanical Effects at Femtosecond Timescales

    • Shock Waves, Phase Transitions and Tribology

    • Coherent Phonon Excitations in Metals

    • Ultrafast Laser-induced Forward Transfer (LIFT)

  • Pulsed Laser Deposition

    • Near-infrared Pulsed Laser Deposition

    • Infrared Pulsed Laser Deposition of Organic Materials on Micro- and Nanostructures

  • Future Trends in Ultrafast Laser Micromachining

    • Ultrashort-pulse Materials Modification at High Pulse-repetition Frequency

    • Pulsed Laser Deposition at High Pulse-repetition Frequency

      • Deposition of Inorganic Thin Films

      • Deposition of Organic Thin Films

    • Picosecond Processing of Carbon Nanotubes

    • Sub-micron Parallel-process Patterning of Materials with Ultraviolet Lasers

  • Summary and Conclusions

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.