Paper
12 May 2008 Laser-induced plasma from pure and doped water-ice at high fluence by ultraviolet and infrared radiation
J. Schou, A. Matei, K. Rodrigo, M. Dinescu
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Ice made of ultrapure water or water doped with 1 % polymer (polyethylene glycol, "PEG") was irradiated by laser light with fluences between 2 and 80 J/cm2 in the ultraviolet (UV) regime at 355 nm and in the infrared (IR) regime at 1064 nm in vacuum. In the UV regime there is a threshold for plasma formation at 3.5 J/cm2, whereas the threshold is at 8.5 J/cm2 in the IR regime. The ions from the plasma plume were studied by a Langmuir probe. The ion yield was much higher for UV laser irradiation than for IR laser irradiation. The peak of the time-of-flight spectra comprises ions of velocity from 60 to 110 km/s. Generally, the ion yield was slightly larger for ice samples doped with PEG than for pure ones. The threshold behavior was much more pronounced in the IR regime than in the UV regime. These results indicate that the behavior of the plasma current can be understood in terms of ionization breakdown at the ice surface.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. Schou, A. Matei, K. Rodrigo, and M. Dinescu "Laser-induced plasma from pure and doped water-ice at high fluence by ultraviolet and infrared radiation", Proc. SPIE 7005, High-Power Laser Ablation VII, 70050X (12 May 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.785427
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Plasma

Ultraviolet radiation

Ions

Molecules

Ionization

Infrared radiation

Infrared lasers

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