In this presentation, we will show the latest advances in the context of the European H2020 Horizon project LaserImplant. Functionalized surfaces by ultrashort laser texturing were developed with the aim of improving the biocompatibility and efficiency of medical screws. Both osteoblast cell repellent surfaces as well as surfaces promoting osteogenesis were studied and characterized by bone cells’ growth and wettability tests.
Beam delivery strategies were anticipated for future industrial requirements. Compromises had to be found to implement different textures in one unique solution. Targeted processing times as well as quality robustness were at stake for complex cylindrical shapes with multiple dimensions. Upscaling experiments put in evidence thermal effects due to energy deposition acceleration. Solutions were finally found to overcome speed limitations by selecting dedicated optical systems together with adapted synchronized processes.
Laser processing of material surfaces has been very known for the last five decades. Femtosecond LIPSS, are created generally on the surface, they could be classified into two groups depending on the periodicity of the structures: LSFL showing a periodicity lower than the incident wavelength (λ_l), and HSFL with a periodicity well below λ_l that could sit below the optical diffraction limit. In this paper, we show an unprecedented resolution of a noninvasive label-free optical method to observe such structures, that does not require a priori knowledge of the surface. We demonstrate that using a modified reflectance confocal microscope reflection (CMR), the characterization of HSFL(̴Λ_HSFL∽120 nm @ λ_l=257 nm) is possible and efficient. These results, pave the way toward a new, better, and more resolved optical technique to observe nanostructures below the diffraction limit.
The use of ultrafast Cylindrical Vector Vortex beams in laser-matter interaction permits to harness new ablation features from inhomogeneous distributions of polarization and beam energy distribution geometry. As a consequence, the ablation process can yield higher ablation efficiency compared to the conventional Gaussian beams. Cylindrical Vector Vortex beams prevent surface quality degradation during ablative processes. When processing stainless steel and titanium, the average surface roughness obtained by deploying Cylindrical Vector beam is up to 94% lower than the Gaussian case, and the processing efficiency is 80% higher.
The cylindrical geometry of optical fibers produces an astigmatic distortion in a wavefront focused within it. In the case of femtosecond lasers, this produces a fluence loss that decreases its processing performance. In this work, the phase change produced by an astigmatic femtosecond laser beam (direct exposition to the) and a corrected beam (applying a simple adaptive optics process) is compared. The astigmatic correction decreases the modification threshold by approximately a magnitude order and changes the sign of the refractive index change at low pulse energies.
In this paper, a 6 mm hybrid Mach-Zehnder Interferometer (MZI) has been manufactured within a standard optical fiber using multiscan inscription with femtosecond laser. This technique allows the employ of cladding waveguides (CWG) as sensing arms for the interferometer. Refracted Near Field (RNF) profilometry and Quantitative Phase Microscopy (QPM) consistently suggest that CWG exhibit a smooth Type I refractive index change (RIC) that increases with the number of scans. This makes the scan number a potential way to control the coupling and Free Spectral Range (FSR) of the manufactured MZI. Its combination with a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) inscribed in the core makes possible to discriminate between different parameters.
In this paper, we present research on the use of femtosecond lasers to develop a two-dimensional bending sensor by inscribing a 4 mm fiber Bragg grating (FBG) in each of the four cores of a multicore fiber (MCF) Fibercore SM-4C1500. The sensor located at the end of the fiber is spliced to a 50/125 multimode fiber (MMF). Due to the geometry of the MCF, part of its cores do not directly attach to the core of the multimode fiber, so that different curvatures cause variations in the reflected power. In this way, a reflection configuration and a commercial spectrometer are used to study its power response, simplifying the sensing, since it is not necessary to have WDM elements for the handling of wavelengths that vary tenths of nm in this type of sensors. Likewise, by carefully controlling the laser parameters and the motor stage position we are able to inscribe the FBGs by means of the point-by-point (PbP) method.
In this work, an In-fiber Mach-Zehnder Interferometer has been manufactured within a standard optical fiber using direct inscription with a femtosecond laser. Different geometries have been tested in order to enhance the sensitivity of manufactured devices to high temperature sensing, reducing the total device up to 300μm. The achieved results exhibit a remarkably good response for temperature sensing up to 650°C.
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