Abstract

Ultra-fast electronic and thermal processes for the energy deposition mechanism during femtosecond laser ablation of Si have been identified by means of atomic force microscopy and Raman scattering techniques. For this purpose, Si targets were exposed with 800-nm, 25-fs Ti:sapphire laser pulses for different laser fluencies in air and under UHV (ultra high vacuum) conditions. Various nano- and microstructures on the surface of the irradiated samples are revealed by a detailed surface topography analysis. Ultra-fast electronic processes are dominant in the lower-fluence regime. Therefore, by starting from the ablation threshold three different fluence regimes have been chosen: a lower-fluence regime (0.06–0.5 J cm−2 single-shot irradiation under UHV condition and 0.25–2.5 J cm−2 single-shot irradiation in ambient condition), a moderate-fluence regime (0.25–1.5 J cm−2 multiple-shot irradiation), and a higher-fluence regime (2.5–3.5 J cm−2 multiple-shot irradiation). Around the ablation threshold fluence, most significant features identified at the Si surface are nanohillock-like structures. The appearance of these nanohillocks is regarded as typical features for fast electronic processes (correlated with existence of hot electrons) and is explained on the basis of Coulomb explosion. The growth of these typical features (nanohillocks) by femtosecond laser irradiation is an element of novelty. At moderate irradiation fluence, a ring-shaped ablation with larger bumps and periodic surface structures is observed and is considered as a footprint of ultra-fast melting. Further increase in the laser fluence, i.e. a higher-fluence regime, resulted in strong enhancement of the thermal process with the appearance of larger islands. The change in surface topography provides an innovative clue to differentiate between ultra-fast electronic processes, i.e. Coulomb explosion (sub-100 fs) at a lower-fluence regime and ultra-fast melting (hundreds of fs) at a moderate-fluence regime, and slow thermal processes (ps time scale) at a higher-fluence regime. These fast electronic and thermal processes are well correlated to structural and crystallographic alterations, inferred from Raman spectroscopy.

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