Search results for "ABLATION"
showing 10 items of 322 documents
A novel method of nanocrystal fabrication based on laser ablation in liquid environment
2008
Abstract Metal nanoparticles can be prepared by a novel technique that consists of the laser ablation of a solid target immersed in a water solution of a metal salt. Silicon was chosen as the most adequate target to synthesize silver and gold nanoparticles from a water solution of either AgNO3 or HAuCl4. The influence of both the silver nitrate concentrations and the irradiation time of the Si target on the optical properties of the Au and Ag nanoparticles have been investigated. The crystalline nature of the metal nanoparticles has been determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD). Average size and particle size distribution have been measured by means of TEM. The absorbance spectra show the char…
Laser ablation of a turbid medium : Modeling and experimental results.
2006
International audience; Q -switched Nd:YAG laser ablation of a turbid medium (paint) is studied. The optical properties (absorption coefficient, scattering coefficient, and its anisotropy) of a paint are determined with a multiple scattering model (three-flux model), and from measurements of reflection-transmission of light through thin layers. The energy deposition profiles are calculated at wavelengths of 532 nm and 1.064 $\mu$m. They are different from those described by a Lambert-Beer law. In particular, the energy deposition of the laser beam is not maximum on the surface but at some depth inside the medium. The ablated rate was measured for the two wavelengths and compared with the en…
Laser ablation of a silicon target in chloroform: formation of multilayer graphite nanostructures
2013
With the use of high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, selected area electron diffraction and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy methods of analysis we show that the laser ablation of a Si target in chloroform (CHCl3) by nanosecond UV pulses (40 ns, 355 nm) results in the formation of about 50–80 nm core–shell nanoparticles with a polycrystalline core composed of small (5–10 nm) Si and SiC mono-crystallites, the core being coated by several layers of carbon with the structure of graphite (the shell). In addition, free carbon multilayer nanostructures (carbon nano-onions) are also found in the suspension. On the basis of a comparison with similar laser ablation experiments implement…
Structural and optical properties of novel surfactant-coated Yb-TiO2 nanoparticle
2010
Abstract In this paper a novel hybrid approach to synthesise composite nanoparticles is presented. It is based on the laser ablation of a bulk target (Yb) immersed in a reversed micellar solution which contains nanoparticles of a different host material (TiO2 nanoparticles) previously synthesised by chemical method. This approach thus exploits the advantages of the chemical synthesis through reversed micellar solution (size control, nanoparticle stabilisation), and of the laser ablation (‘‘clean’’ synthesis, no side reactions). Central role is played by the microscopic processes controlling the deposition of the ablated Yb atoms onto the surface of TiO2 nanoparticles which actually behave a…
Gallium nitride thin films as processed by several techniques: Their possible applications for PV-devices
2011
We present in this work the characterization studies carried on GaN — thin films as processed by the Close Spaced Vapor Technique (CSVT), Laser Ablation (LA), and Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE), under particular growth parameters for each of the three techniques. The films characterization was performed by x-ray diffraction (X-RD), Photoluminescence (PL), Raman spectroscopy, optical transmission, energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). With these results an analysis of the samples was done, with an aim for a possible application of these thin films for PV-devices.
Ge-doped silica nanoparticles: production and characterisation
2016
Silica nanoparticles were produced from germanosilicate glasses by KrF laser irradiation. The samples were investigated by cathodoluminescence and scanning electron microscopy, providing the presence of nanoparticles with size from tens up to hundreds of nanometers. The emission of the Germanium lone pair center is preserved in the nanoparticles and atomic force microscopy revealed the presence of no spherical particles with a size smaller than ~4 nm. The absorption coefficient enhancement induced by Ge doping is reputed fundamental to facilitate the nanoparticles production. This procedure can be applied to other co-doped silica materials to tune the nanoparticles features.
Oxidation of silicon nanoparticles produced by nanosecond laser ablation in liquids
2014
We investigated nanoparticles produced by laser ablation of silicon in water by the fundamental harmonic (1064 nm) of a ns pulsed Nd:YAG. The silicon oxidation is evidenced by IR absorption features characteristic of amorphous SiO2 (silica). This oxide is highly defective and manifests a luminescence activity under UV excitation: two emission bands at 2.7 eV and 4.4 eV are associated with the twofold coordinated silicon, =SiO••.
CNT and Graphene Growth: Growing, Quality Control, Thermal Expansion and Chiral Dispersion
2017
The chapter presents and discusses the production of graphene sheets of carbon nanotubes (CNT) of various types. The Iijima arc discharge method, following the purification methods, is described identifying advantages and disadvantages. Several types of non-regularities such as the Stone–Wales defect and corner effect, which locally increases reactivity, are described from the structural point of view. The laser ablation method is presented as one of the most prominent methods in the production of CNTs. The catalytic chemical vapour deposition (CVD) method is a very effective tool for the controlled production of different carbon shells. The sporadic and simulated growth of CNTs depends on …
Laser plasma plume structure and dynamics in the ambient air: The early stage of expansion
2011
Laser ablation plasma plume expanding into the ambient atmosphere may be an efficient way to produce nanoparticles. From that reason it would be interesting to study the properties of these laser induced plasmas formed under conditions that are known to be favorable for nanoparticles production. In general, plume behavior can be described as a two-stage process: a “violent” plume expansion due to the absorption of the laser beam energy (during the laser pulse) followed by a fast adiabatic expansion in the ambient gas (after the end of the laser pulse). Plasma plume may last a few microseconds and may have densities 10−6 times lower than the solid densities at temperatures close to the ambie…
Multi-color resonance ionization of laser ablated gadolinium at high laser power
2005
Abstract Spectroscopic and analytical properties of a trace analytical method using multi-step resonance ionization at high laser intensities (>kW/cm 2 ) have been investigated with gadolinium as a test element. Strongly saturated transitions are observed, which have been used for a temperature determination of the atoms in the laser ablated plume. Regimes of multi-step resonance ionization and multiphoton ionization could be distinguished. Analytical performances due to resonance enhancement and resulting discrimination against non-resonant background, precision in isotope ratio determination and overall detection efficiency are discussed.