Formation of high-aspect-ratio nanocavity in LiF crystal using a femtosecond of x-ray FEL pulse
Sub-picosecond optical laser processing of metals is actively utilized for modification of a heated surface layer. But for deeper modification of different materials a laser in the hard x-ray range is required. Here, we demonstrate that a single 9-keV x-ray pulse from a free-electron laser can form...
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Zusammenfassung: | Sub-picosecond optical laser processing of metals is actively utilized for
modification of a heated surface layer. But for deeper modification of
different materials a laser in the hard x-ray range is required. Here, we
demonstrate that a single 9-keV x-ray pulse from a free-electron laser can form
a um-diameter cylindrical cavity with length of ~1 mm in LiF surrounded by
shock-transformed material. The plasma-generated shock wave with TPa-level
pressure results in damage, melting and polymorphic transformations of any
material, including transparent and non-transparent to conventional optical
lasers. Moreover, cylindrical shocks can be utilized to obtain a considerable
amount of exotic high-pressure polymorphs. Pressure wave propagation in LiF,
radial material flow, formation of cracks and voids are analyzed via continuum
and atomistic simulations revealing a sequence of processes leading to the
final structure with the long cavity. Similar results can be produced with
semiconductors and ceramics, which opens a new pathway for development of laser
material processing with hard x-ray pulses. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.03625 |