Abstract

Laser fluence thresholds of ultrafast excitation of vapor bubbles around gold nanoparticles are determined experimentally. An optical scattering technique of limited minimum bubble size resolution is employed and analyzed for that purpose. Measurements were performed for spherical gold nanoparticles of varying sizes (40-200 nm) and for laser pulses of varying pulse width (55 fs to 4.3 ps) to estimate the limits where the evaluated thresholds are attributed to either plasma-mediated or photothermal cavitation. Furthermore, thresholds were obtained by double 55 fs pulsed excitation (varying delay 0.0-4.3 ps), providing insights into the dynamics of the excited plasma. A relationship is established between particle properties, (size, near-field amplification factor, and absorption efficiency) and the crossover pulse width of the transition from plasma-mediated to photothermal cavitation. Further, by comparing theory and experiments, we examine the approximative optical breakdown density of ∼10-21 cm-3 at a distance of 1-2 nm from the particle surface as a criterion of plasma-mediated cavitation around gold nanoparticles in analogy to the spinodal criterion for photothermal cavitation. For a given pulse width, the breakdown density appears to be nearly size-independent, establishing the aforesaid criterion applicable. However, a small pulse width dependence of the breakdown density is still observed. Based on these criteria, a comparison is further provided between theoretical thresholds of cavitation and the ones of detectable bubbles. An increasing discrepancy is observed between them with decreasing size for the case of photothermal cavitation. For plasma-mediated cavitation, the latter discrepancy is seemingly smaller, presumably due to the highly nonlinear nature of the process.

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