4.7 Article

Locally varying formation of nanoclusters across a low-intensity ultra-short laser spot

Journal

NANOSCALE HORIZONS
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 55-62

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2nh00386d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [MO 960/25-1, EXC 2033 - 390677874 - RESOLV]

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Ultra-short laser illumination can be used to engineer materials by light, particularly in adjusting surface properties and nanoscale surface restructuring. In this study, we observed the formation of nanoscale clusters on a copper sample below its ablation threshold, and found that the size and shape of these clusters varied significantly across the laser spot. Our findings highlight the importance of local fluence for specific types of nanoclusters.
Ultra-short laser illumination is an intriguing tool for engineering material by light. It is usually employed at or above the ablation threshold. Practical applications profit from tailoring surface properties, for instance, by structural changes to the surface layer of an irradiated target. A target-orientated restructuring of surfaces on the nanoscale is much less explored. In particular, an intrinsic intensity variation across a laser spot has not yet been considered or employed. We image the unexpected nanoscale clusters formed on the Cu(111) surface upon illumination of a Cu sample far below its ablation threshold by femtosecond laser light, employing a specifically-developed multi-scale approach. We unravel that these clusters vary significantly in size and shape across the micrometer-scale 400 nm 50 fs laser spot (repetition rate: 250 kHz). There are three qualitatively different regions separated by sharp changes. The observations highlight the importance of local fluence for specific types of nanoclusters. Ultra-short laser illumination represents a non-trivial interplay between photo-thermal and electron-induced mechanisms, transport of heat and electrons, and material properties, which we discuss for identifying the underlying principles. Our study demonstrates that a multitude of as yet unconsidered processes are involved in the tailoring of nanoscale materials by ultra-short laser light.

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