Abstract
The knowledge of early laser-induced plasma and cavitation bubble dynamics are of great importance for a better understanding of underwater laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy. In this work, we investigated the temporal evolution of the plasma and bubble at an early stage before 2 μs, by using fast imaging and shadowgraph techniques. It showed that the initial plasma forms at the laser focal point and then grows up toward the incident laser. As time evolves, the plasma expands simultaneously forward and backward to its peripheral region and a sub-plasma structure can be observed at low laser energies. The plasma has a good pulse-to-pulse repeatability during the laser pulse, while soon after the laser pulse (from 20 to 50 ns), it undergoes a severe pulse-to-pulse fluctuation with an inhomogeneous emission distribution. At longer times, the plasma becomes much stable again. To clarify the interrelationship between the bubble dynamics and the plasma characteristics, shadowgraph images of the bubble were shown and compared with the plasma images. It showed that the morphology of the bubble and its evolution have a good consistency with the morphology of plasma. The bubble radius as a function of time can be well expressed by the equation R=at0.4, and a is a constant related to the laser energy. By inspecting the evolution curve of the bubble wall and the bubble pressure calculated based on the Gilmore model, a transition phase from 20 to 50 ns can be identified between the moving breakdown phase and the thermal expansion phase. In this transition phase, both the bubble expansion speed and the bubble pressure drop drastically that may account for the severe plasma fluctuations as observed in this period. These results of early bubble dynamics provide insights into the critical role of bubble-plasma interaction on the characterization of laser-induced plasma in water.
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