DocumentCode :
1807589
Title :
Microplasmas produced with sub-millijoule laser pulses for laser induced breakdown spectroscopy
Author :
Rieger, G.W. ; Taschuk, Michael ; Tsui, Y.Y. ; Fedosejevs, Robert
Author_Institution :
Alberta Univ., Edmonton, Alta., Canada
fYear :
2001
fDate :
17-22 June 2001
Firstpage :
483
Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. Laser induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) is a powerful technique for fast determination of the chemical composition of materials based on measuring line emission from ions and neutral atoms in a transient laser produced plasma. The technique is considered almost non-destructive since only a small amount of material is ablated. In the current study we are undertaking to optimize the plasma conditions of a sub-millijoule laser produced plasma to optimize the emission of radiation for material identification and to achieve high spatial resolution on the 10 micron scale. Scaling studies have been carried out of the emission levels from metallic target materials as a function of laser pulse energy in the range of 10 to 500 microjoules and as a function of observation delay time for ultraviolet (248 nm) KrF laser pulses of 10 ns duration. Our data show that as a consequence of the smaller amount of the heated mass, time constants of the plasma emission are much shorter than the ones typically encountered in LIBS using much higher laser energies. We are currently conducting LIBS experiments with 50 ps pulses, at 248 nm in the same energy range. Few studies have looked at the scaling of plasma emission with pulse length in the picosecond regime for UV pulses. We present initial experimental results and compare these to expectations based on the scaling of the laser plasma parameters.
Keywords :
metals; plasma applications; plasma diagnostics; plasma production by laser; spectrochemical analysis; 10 to 500 muJ; 248 nm; 50 ps; KrF; LIBS experiments; UV pulses; chemical composition; emission levels; energy range; heated mass; ions; laser induced breakdown spectroscopy; laser plasma parameters; laser pulse energy; line emission; material identification; materials; metallic target materials; microplasmas; neutral atoms; nondestructive technique; observation delay time; picosecond regime; plasma conditions; plasma emission; pulse length; scaling; scaling studies; spatial resolution; sub-millijoule laser produced plasma; sub-millijoule laser pulses; time constants; transient laser produced plasma; ultraviolet KrF laser pulses; Atom lasers; Atomic measurements; Chemical lasers; Electric breakdown; Optical materials; Optical pulses; Plasma chemistry; Plasma materials processing; Plasma measurements; Power lasers;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Plasma Science, 2001. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7141-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PPPS.2001.961267
Filename :
961267
Link To Document :
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