Influence of inertial confinement on laser-induced bubble generation and shock wave emission
Xiao-Xuan Liang, Alfred Vogel

TL;DR
This paper extends a bubble dynamics model to analyze how inertial confinement affects laser-induced bubble formation and shock wave emission, revealing that femtosecond pulses cause more disruptive bubbles than nanosecond pulses.
Contribution
The authors develop a generalized bubble dynamics model that accounts for inertial confinement effects during laser-induced breakdown, enabling detailed simulation of bubble and shock wave behavior.
Findings
Femtosecond laser pulses produce more disruptive bubbles than nanosecond pulses.
Inertial confinement influences energy partitioning and shock wave emission.
Model predictions inform process control in microsurgery and microfluidics.
Abstract
Laser-induced breakdown with ultrashort laser pulses is isochoric and inertially confined. It is characterized by a sequence of nonlinear energy deposition and hydrodynamics events such as shock wave emission and cavitation bubble formation. With nanosecond pulses, inertial confinement is lost especially during micro- and nanobubble generation and energy deposition and hydrodynamic events occur concurrently. The onset of bubble expansion during the laser pulse reduces peak pressure, bubble wall velocity, conversion into mechanical energy, and prevents shock wave formation. Here we present an extension of the Gilmore model of bubble dynamics in a compressible liquid that enables to describe the interplay between particle velocity during acoustic transient emission and bubble wall acceleration in the inertial fluid at any degree of confinement. Energy deposition during a finite laser…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser-Ablation Synthesis of Nanoparticles · Ocular and Laser Science Research · Laser Design and Applications
