4.6 Article

Fluence scan: an unexplored property of a laser beam

Journal

OPTICS EXPRESS
Volume 21, Issue 22, Pages 26363-26375

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OE.21.026363

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Funding

  1. FP7 project RADINTERFACES [NMP3-SL-2011-263273]
  2. Czech [LG13029, CZ.1.07/2.3.00/30.0057, 13-28721S, P108/11/1312, P205/11/0571, P208/10/2302, M100101221]
  3. Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
  4. Grant Agency of the Charles University in Prague [GAUK - 1374213]

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We present an extended theoretical background of so-called fluence scan (f-scan or F-scan) method, which is frequently being used for offline characterization of focused short-wavelength (EUV, soft X-ray, and hard X-ray) laser beams [J. Chalupsky et al., Opt. Express 18, 27836 (2010)]. The method exploits ablative imprints in various solids to visualize iso-fluence beam contours at different fluence and/or clip levels. An f-scan curve (clip level as a function of the corresponding iso-fluence contour area) can be generated for a general non-Gaussian beam. As shown in this paper, fluence scan encompasses important information about energy distribution within the beam profile, which may play an essential role in laser-matter interaction research employing intense non-ideal beams. Here we for the first time discuss fundamental properties of the f-scan function and its inverse counterpart (if-scan). Furthermore, we extensively elucidate how it is related to the effective beam area, energy distribution, and to the so called Liu's dependence [J. M. Liu, Opt. Lett. 7, 196 (1982)]. A new method of the effective area evaluation based on weighted inverse f-scan fit is introduced and applied to real data obtained at the SCSS (SPring-8 Compact SASE Source) facility. (C) 2013 Optical Society of America

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