Abstract

ABSTRACTMegahertz is the highest femtosecond laser repetition rate that the state-of-the art technology can achieve. In this article, a single femtosecond laser pulse is burst into multiple femtosecond laser pulses to process aluminum. The temporal gap between two consecutive burst pulses is 2 picoseconds, which is much shorter than the temporal gap between two consecutive pulses at the repetition rate of megahertz. By taking the thermophysical scenarios of femtosecond laser induced of electron thermalization, electron heat conduction, electron–phonon-coupled heat transfer and atomic motion into account, a multiscale framework integrating ab initio quantum mechanical calculation, molecular dynamics and two-temperature model are constructed. The effect of femtosecond laser pulse number on the incubation phenomenon is studied. Comparing with the single pulse-processing aluminum film, the femtosecond laser in burst mode leads to smaller thermal stress, which is favorable to reduce the thermal mechanical damage of the material beneath the laser-irradiated surface. Appreciable differences among the simulation results by using electron thermophysical parameters from ab initio quantum mechanical calculation and those from experimental measurement, empirical estimation and calculation are found, indicating the essentials to precisely model the electron thermal response subject to femtosecond laser excitation.

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