Photonics, Vol. 12, Pages 1067: The Influence of Ultrashort Laser Pulse Duration on Shock Wave Generation in Water Under Tight Focusing Conditions


Photonics, Vol. 12, Pages 1067: The Influence of Ultrashort Laser Pulse Duration on Shock Wave Generation in Water Under Tight Focusing Conditions

Photonics doi: 10.3390/photonics12111067

Authors:
Nikita Rishkov
Nika Asharchuk
Vladimir Yusupov
Evgenii Mareev

The control of mechanical effects, such as shock waves, induced by ultrashort laser pulses in water is crucial for applications in biomedicine and material processing. However, optimizing these effects requires a detailed understanding of how laser parameters, particularly pulse duration, influence the underlying energy deposition mechanisms. This study systematically investigates the dependence of shock wave amplitude on fluence (up to 10 J/cm2) and pulse duration (200 fs to 10 ps) of near-infrared laser pulses under tight focusing conditions (Numerical aperture NA = 0.42), using a combined experimental and numerical approach based on the dynamical rate equation model. Our key finding is that the shock wave amplitude is governed by the total kinetic energy of the electrons in the laser-induced plasma, leading to a distinct maximum at approximately 5 ps (confidence interval: 4.5–5.5 ps) and saturation at fluences ~7 J/cm2. This optimum arises from a balance between the increasing effectiveness of avalanche ionization for longer pulses and the competing effects of electron recombination and reduced photoionization efficiency. Consequently, these results identify a practical parameter window—pulse durations of 4–6 ps at moderate fluences—for optimizing laser-induced mechanical effects in applications such as laser surgery in aqueous media.



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