Tuning the period of femtosecond laser induced surface structures in steel: from angled incidence to quill writing
Yasser Fuentes-Edfuf, Jos\'e A. S\'anchez-Gil, Marina Garcia Pardo,, Rosal\'ia Serna, George D. Tsibidis, Vincenzo Giannini, Javier Solis, and Jan, Siegel

TL;DR
This study investigates how the period of femtosecond laser-induced surface structures in steel can be precisely tuned by controlling the laser incidence angle and movement direction, revealing complex physical mechanisms and a novel non-reciprocal writing effect.
Contribution
The paper extends a surface plasmon polariton model to absorbing metals and demonstrates the influence of incidence angle and movement direction on ripple periods in steel.
Findings
Two ripple periods coexist and scale inversely with angle, related to surface plasmon polaritons.
A quill writing effect causes ripple period changes when reversing sample movement.
The extended model accurately predicts the angle dependence of surface structures.
Abstract
Exposure of metal surfaces to multiple ultrashort laser pulses under certain conditions leads to the formation of well-defined periodic surface structures. We show how the period of such structures in steel can be tuned over a wide range by controlling the complex interaction mechanisms triggered in the material. Amongst the different irradiation parameters that influence the properties of the induced structures, the angle of incidence of the laser beam occupies a prominent role. We present an experimental and theoretical investigation of this angle dependence in steel upon irradiation with laser pulses of 120 fs duration and 800 nm wavelength, while moving the sample at constant speed. Our findings can be grouped into two blocks. First, we observe the spatial coexistence of two different ripple periods at the steel surface, both featuring inverse scaling upon angle increase, which are…
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