Ablation of polymers and tissue by ultraviolet lasers
R. Srinivasan
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
Irradiation of liquid benzene with laser pulses (248 nm, ≈ 20 ns fwhm) at fluences > 0.2 J/cm2 caused ablation of the liquid surface. The shock wave which was transmitted through the liquid when the ablated material left the surface was detected by a piezoelectric transducer. When the liquid surface was constrained by a quartz plate, the threshold for ablation increased ( > 0.4 J/cm2),the intensity of the shock wave was amplified by an order of magnitude, and carbon was formed abundantly as a product. Ablation was observed with 308 nm laser pulses also even though there is no corresponding one-photon absorption. Ablation of benzene is attributed to the absorption of more than 2 photons per molecule. © 1988.
R. Srinivasan
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
Barbara J. Garrison, R. Srinivasan
Journal of Applied Physics
R. Srinivasan, R.J. von Gutfeld, et al.
Chemical Physics Letters
R. Srinivasan, V. Mayne-Banton
Applied Physics Letters