This study reports an imaging method for gigahertz surface acoustic waves in transparent layers using infrared subpicosecond laser pulses in the ablation regime and an optical pump–probe technique. The reflectivity modulations due to the photoelastic effect of generated multimodal surface acoustic waves were imaged by an sCMOS camera illuminated by the time-delayed, frequency-doubled probe pulses. Moving the delay time between 6.0nsto11.5ns, image stacks of wave field propagation were created.Two representative samples were investigated: wafers of isotropic fused silica and anisotropic x-cut quartz. Rayleigh (SAW) and longitudinal dominant high-velocity pseudo-surface acoustic wave (HVPSAW) modes could be observed and tracked along a circular grid around the excitation center, allowing the extraction of angular profiles of the propagation velocity. In quartz, the folding of a PSAW was observed. A finite element simulation was developed to predict the measurement results. The simulation and measurement were in good agreement with a relative error of 2% to 5%.These results show the potential for fast and full-field imaging of laser-generated ultrasonic surface wave modes, which can be utilized for the characterization of thin transparent samples such as semiconductor wafers or optical crystals in the gigahertz frequency range.
Read full abstract