Abstract

Ultrafast laser-induced guided acoustic waves in thin, freely suspended films are important for many applications adopting the laser-ultrasonics technique. These waves show unique dispersion relations, leading to minimal propagation losses and acoustic energy confinement. While this principle has been known, the separation of various physical effects in the formation of measured signals involving these guided acoustic waves has not been clearly elaborated. Here, we present a combined experimental and theoretical study on all-optical excitation and detection of these waves in a thin, freestanding aluminum membrane. The acoustic dynamics is excited and measured by using a femtosecond time-resolved pump-probe technique with controlled probing position, enabling spatially resolved detection. The measured signals are compared with an advanced numerical model that we developed earlier [H. Zhang et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 13, 014010 (2020)], showing excellent agreement. The combination of experiment and simulation allows us to decode various physical effects in the signal formation, including different acoustic field components. Unknown material properties, such as acoustic attenuation coefficients, and the two complex photoelastic constants are quantitatively retrieved by fitting the measured signals. Furthermore, we provide evidence of nonlinear propagation of the excited guided acoustic waves.

Highlights

  • Laser-induced high-frequency (GHz-THz range) elastic waves in solids are extensively used in both industrial and academic research

  • Earlier studies on laser-induced elastic waves were mostly focused on the investigation of one-dimensional propagation of excited longitudinal phonons [9,10,11,12,13,14], which have yielded remarkable results about the phonon generation mechanism itself

  • We found that the best match between the measured data and simulations, especially the determined lateral propagation speed of the Lamb waves, was found when a scaling factor of 0.8 was applied to these values of the probing distance

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Laser-induced high-frequency (GHz-THz range) elastic waves ( referred to as acoustic waves or hypersound) in solids are extensively used in both industrial and academic research. Almost all solids are transparent to sound, including many optically opaque media For this reason, many noninvasive methods for evaluating bulk materials based on laser-induced elastic excitations are established. Further progress in the field has enabled the generation and detection of shear phonons [15,16,17] and surface acoustic waves [16,18,19]. Among these more complex types of waves,.

Objective
POSITION-DEPENDENT PUMP-PROBE MEASUREMENTS
The numerical model
Least-squares fitting the measured data
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
SUMMARY
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