Single femtosecond laser pulse interaction with mica
Saurabh Awasthi, Douglas J. Little, A. Fuerbach, D.M. Kane

TL;DR
This study investigates how a single femtosecond laser pulse interacts with mica, revealing unique modification behaviors likely due to its mineral water content, contrasting with typical dielectric responses.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a single femtosecond laser pulse can induce various modifications in mica, highlighting the role of mineral water in its laser interaction, which differs from standard dielectrics.
Findings
Single femtosecond pulse causes diverse topologies in mica.
Mica's water content influences its laser response.
Optical profiling effectively characterizes modifications.
Abstract
Ultrafast, femtosecond laser pulse interaction with dielectric materials has shown them to have significantly higher laser fluence threshold requirements, as compared to metals and semiconductors, for laser material modification, such as laser ablation. Examples of dielectrics are crystalline materials such as quartz and sapphire, and amorphous glasses. The interaction between femtosecond laser pulses, at a wavelength with negligible linear absorption, and a dielectric has been found to be weak, and multiple pulse irradiation is therefore typically used in order to see significant and quantifiable effects. In this study the dielectric is the crystalline, layered, natural mineral muscovite, a mica with formula KAl_2 (Si_3 Al) O_10 (OH)_2. Muscovite, newly cleaved, is used in a wide range of technological and scientific applications including as an insulating material in electronics and…
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