4.6 Article

Pulse Burst Generation and Diffraction with Spatial Light Modulators for Dynamic Ultrafast Laser Materials Processing

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15249059

Keywords

ultrafast; materials micro-structuring; spatial light modulators; pulse burst processing; laser induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS)

Funding

  1. SEM SRF Albert Crewe Centre for Electron Microscopy (Liverpool)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A pulse burst optical system has been developed that can transform an energetic, ultrafast output pulse train into an intra-burst frequency of 323 MHz while maintaining a 5 kHz repetition rate. By utilizing an optical delay line and Spatial Light Modulators, the system enables independent modulation of the pulses. With this novel technique, it is possible to achieve simultaneous multi-spot periodic surface micro-structuring with orthogonal linear polarisations and cylindrical vector beams on stainless steel.
A pulse burst optical system has been developed, able to alter an energetic, ultrafast 10 ps, 5 kHz output pulse train to 323 MHz intra-burst frequency at the fundamental 5 kHz repetition rate. An optical delay line consisting of a beam-splitting polariser cube, mirrors, and waveplates transforms a high-energy pulse into a pulse burst, circulating around the delay line. Interestingly, the reflected first pulse and subsequent pulses from the delay line have orthogonal linear polarisations. This fact allows independent modulation of these pulses using two-phase-only Spatial Light Modulators (SLM) when their directors are also aligned orthogonally. With hybrid Computer Generated Holograms (CGH) addressed to the SLMs, we demonstrate simultaneous multi-spot periodic surface micro-structuring on stainless steel with orthogonal linear polarisations and cylindrical vector (CV) beams with Radial and Azimuthal polarisations. Burst processing produces a major change in resulting surface texture due to plasma absorption on the nanosecond time scale; hence the ablation rates on stainless steel with pulse bursts are always lower than 5 kHz processing. By synchronising the scan motion and CGH application, we show simultaneous independent multi-beam real-time processing with pulse bursts having orthogonal linear polarisations. This novel technique extends the flexibility of parallel beam surface micro-structuring with adaptive optics.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available