Data di Pubblicazione:
2024
Abstract:
Featured Application: The IR pulsed laser ablation of different carbon targets using a Nd:YAG laser is investigated. The produced carbon plasma is characterized in terms of maximum ion energy at a laser intensity of about 3 × 109 W/cm2. The presented study can be applied to the use of carbon ions for their successive acceleration in laser ion sources or for the investigation of carbon-nucleation-generating nanoparticles. This work aimed to understand how the energy released by short laser pulses can produce different effects in carbon targets with different allotropic states. The IR pulse laser ablation, operating at 1064 nm wavelength, 3 ns pulse duration, and 100 mJ pulse energy, has been used to irradiate different types of carbon targets in a high vacuum. Graphite, highly oriented pyrolytic graphite, glassy carbon, active carbon, and vegetable carbon have exhibited different mass densities and have been laser irradiated. Time-of-flight (TOF) measurements have permitted the evince of the maximum carbon ion acceleration in the generated plasma (of about 200 eV per charge state) and the maximum yield emission (96 μg/pulse in the case of vegetal carbon) along the direction normal to the irradiated surface. The ion energy analyzer measured the carbon charge states (four) and their energy distributions. Further plasma investigations have been performed using a fast CCD camera image and surface profiles of the generated craters to calculate the angular emission and the ablation yield for each type of target. The effects as a function of the target carbon density and binding energy have been highlighted. Possible applications for the generation of thin films and carbon nanoparticles are discussed.
Tipologia CRIS:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
carbon targets; charcoal; glassy carbon; graphite; HOPG; IEA spectrometry; laser ablation; laser-generated plasma; plasma characterization; TOF spectrometry
Elenco autori:
Torrisi, Lorenzo; Torrisi, Alfio; Cutroneo, Mariapompea
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: