Abstract

Fused silica surface machined using continuous-wave CO2 laser beams with an energy density of 0.5 J/mm2 presented U-shaped grooves (approximately 47 μm-deep and 250 μm-wide) and asymmetrical craters (2–5 μm high). The fully reacted valley in the groove center exhibited porous microstructures and agglomerated silica nanoparticles in the size of 33–118 nm; whereas, the less reacted peak in the groove edge only presented uneven solidified films from silica ablations. Distinct morphologies in the valley and peak areas were supposed to result from the Gaussian energy distribution of laser beams. The selected area electron diffraction pattern suggested that the laser-reacted silica nanostructures were still amorphous with no obvious composition change. The x-ray photoelectron spectrometric results showed that both Si 2p and O 1s peaks shifted to higher energy sides, implying a more oxidized state of Si4+ and absorbed oxygen or hydroxides on nanostructured silica after CO2 laser machining.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call