Shuhei Kodama
Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan
Title: Effects of Pulse Duration and Heat on Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures
Biography:
Shuhei Kodama has completed his PhD at the age of 27 years from Tohoku University. He is an Assistant Professor of Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology. His research activities focus on short-pulsed laser-induced periodic surface structures (SPLIPSS) to clarify principles and phenomena, to control LIPSS and to provide a material surface with various functionalities such as reduction of friction, water repellency, anti-reflection and bioaffinity. He gave 9 presentations and 3 lectures about SPLIPSS at international and domestic conferences, and published 8 papers in reputed journals. He is passionate about precision processing.
Abstract
Compared with traditional nanotexturing methods, an ultrashort-pulsed laser is an efficient technology of fabricating nanostructures called laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) on material surfaces. LIPSS are easily fabricated when the pulse duration is shorter than collisional relaxation time (CRT). Accordingly, ultrashort-pulsed lasers have been mainly used to study LIPSS, but they unstably irradiate while requiring high costs. Although long-pulsed lasers have low cost and high stability, the phenomena (such as the effect of pulse duration, laser wavelength, and heat) of the LIPSS fabricated using short-pulsed lasers with the pulse duration close to the maximum CRT, which is greater than femtosecond, have not been clarified. However, the nanosecond pulse laser has been reported to produce LIPSS, but those were unclear and ununiform. In this study, the short-pulsed laser with the pulse duration of 20 ps, which is close to the maximum CRT, was employed to clarify the effects of pulse duration and heat on the fabrication of LIPSS and to solve problems associated with ultrashort-pulsed lasers. First, a finite-difference time-domain simulation was developed at 20-ps pulse duration to investigate the effects of irradiation conditions on the electric-field-intensity distribution. Subsequently, experiments were conducted using the 20-ps pulse laser by varying conditions. The aspect ratio of the LIPSS obtained was greater than that of the LIPSS fabricated using ultrashort-pulsed lasers, but LIPSS were not fabricated at 355- and 266-nm laser wavelength. In addition, the short-pulsed laser experienced thermal influences and a cooling material was effective for the fabrication of LIPSS with high-aspect-ratio. This demonstrates the effects of pulse duration close to the CRT and heat on the fabrication of LIPSS.
- Advanced Laser Processing
- Advanced Optical and Magnetic Material
- Advanced Materials & Functional Devices
- Micro patterning and Nano processing
- Drilling, Brazing and Soldering
- Beam delivery system
- Micro and remote welding
- Industrial application of Laser
- Laser-based Additive Manufacturing
- Advanced Nanomaterials- production, Synthesis and Processing
- Laser detectors
- Gas, solid and diode laser