Abstract

Titanium ions were implanted at the energy of 30 keV and fluence of 1×10 17 cm −2 into fused silica and soda-lime glasses. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses showed the formation of titanium silicide clusters in the implanted region. Specimens were subsequently irradiated with high-power light pulses from a Nd:YAG laser, at various intensities. Above an intensity threshold, related to the actual absorbed energy, we observed that:(i) the light transmittance increased; (ii) silicon and titanium oxides formed at the expenses of titanium silicides, which, in turn, became titanium-rich; (iii) the value of the intensity-dependent refractive index had the same order of magnitude (10 −12 m 2/W in the picosecond range) for both the as-implanted and the laser-irradiated samples. Mechanisms responsible for the observed behavior are discussed.

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