MODEL AND SIMULATION OF LASER PULSE ABSORPTION IN LASER-INDUCED PLASMA MICRO-MACHINING (LIPMM)

被引:0
|
作者
Xie, Jiaxi [1 ]
Ehmann, Kornel [1 ]
Cao, Jian [1 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Univ, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Ultrashort Laser; Micro Machining; Pulse absorption; FDTD; INDUCED BREAKDOWN THRESHOLDS; FEMTOSECOND; COMPUTATION; IONIZATION; ABLATION;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Direct laser ablation removes material by directly focusing the laser on the material surface so its performance highly depends on the surface condition. Laser-Induced Plasma Micro-Machining (LIPMM) removes the material by focusing an ultrashort laser pulse in an auxiliary dielectric layer above the material and inducing dielectric breakdown to achieve more accurate energy deposition. The physical process of LIPMM can be divided into two stages: pulse absorption and material removal. This work focuses on modeling the pulse absorption stage by implementing the Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) method to provide a unified simulation framework for the ultrashort laser-matter interaction. The simulation model can be divided into three steps: 1) the evolution of the laser field, which is described by FDTD with current and a lightly focused beam with Gaussian entry utilized to approximate the unperturbed laser field near focus; 2) the metal absorption of a ultrashort laser pulse, where a two-temperature model is used and the current is described by the Drude model with mean free time approximated by a three stage model and 3) the water breakdown, which is described by Kennedy's first order model. Combining the above approaches, the unified framework demonstrates its utility on the example of the water-aluminum boundary in the LIPMM process.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Excimer laser micro-machining laboratory
    不详
    OPTICS AND LASER TECHNOLOGY, 1997, 29 (01): : R3 - R3
  • [22] Developments in laser micro-machining techniques
    Rizvi, NH
    Apte, P
    JOURNAL OF MATERIALS PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY, 2002, 127 (02) : 206 - 210
  • [23] Laser micro-machining in the microelectronics industry
    Sun, YL
    Swenson, EJ
    LASERS IN MATERIAL PROCESSING AND MANUFACTURING, 2002, 4915 : 17 - 22
  • [24] Recent advances in laser micro-machining
    Beck, WA
    SARATOV FALL MEETING '99: LASER PHYSICS AND SPECTROSCOPY, 2000, 4002 : 2 - 15
  • [25] Laser micro-machining for medical devices
    Kleine, Klaus
    LIA Today, 2002, 10 (04):
  • [26] Micro-machining with copper bromide laser
    Balchev, II
    Minkovski, NI
    Sabotinov, NV
    Kostadinov, IK
    12TH INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL ON QUANTUM ELECTRONICS: LASER PHYSICS AND APPLICATIONS, 2003, 5226 : 372 - 376
  • [27] Physical model-guided machine learning for accelerating laser induced plasma micro-machining process optimization
    Zhang, Zhen
    Jia, Mengyu
    Wang, Lifei
    Yu, Yu
    Yang, Zenan
    Wang, Jinliang
    Wang, Yulei
    Wang, Chenchong
    Lv, Zhiwei
    Xu, Wei
    OPTICS AND LASER TECHNOLOGY, 2025, 183
  • [28] Influence of Laser Beam Polarization on Laser Micro-Machining of Molybdenum
    Torres, Remi
    Kaempfe, Thomas
    Delaigue, Martin
    Parriaux, Olivier
    Hoenninger, Clemens
    Lopez, John
    Kling, Rainer
    Mottay, Eric
    JOURNAL OF LASER MICRO NANOENGINEERING, 2013, 8 (03): : 188 - 191
  • [29] Study on machining characteristics of magnetically controlled laser induced plasma micro-machining single-crystal silicon
    Zhang, Yanming
    Zhang, Zhen
    Zhang, Yi
    Liu, Denghua
    Wu, Jie
    Huang, Yu
    Zhang, Guojun
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED RESEARCH, 2021, 30 : 39 - 51
  • [30] Effect of laser-induced zinc micro-spheres on enhanced absorption of subsequent pulse laser
    Chen Ming
    Li Shuang
    Cui Qing-Qiang
    Liu Xiang-Dong
    ACTA PHYSICA SINICA, 2013, 62 (16)