Threefold Efficiency Enhancement and Narrowed Nanoparticle Size Distribution in Laser Ablation of Gold in Water by GHz-Burst Irradiation
Maximilian Spellauge, Ramon Auer, Vincent Taebling, Anna R. Ziefuss, Daniel J. Foerster, Heinz. P. Huber

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that GHz-burst laser ablation of gold in water significantly improves efficiency and narrows nanoparticle size distribution by mitigating cavitation effects through temporal pulse shaping.
Contribution
The paper introduces GHz-burst irradiation as a novel method to enhance ablation efficiency and nanoparticle quality in laser ablation in liquids.
Findings
Ablation efficiency increased up to three times with GHz-burst irradiation.
Nanoparticle size distribution was narrowed twofold.
Cavitation bubble size and lifetime remained unchanged.
Abstract
Laser ablation in liquids enables the synthesis of surfactant-free nanoparticles but remains limited in productivity due to intrinsic constraints imposed by the liquid environment. These constraints include nonlinear optical losses, material redeposition, and cavitation bubble-induced shielding. Temporal intensity shaping of the incident laser pulse offers a potential route to mitigate these limitations. Here, ultrashort GHz-burst ablation is applied to laser ablation of gold in water. By distributing the pulse energy into a sequence of picosecond sub-pulses arriving within the nanosecond time window preceding cavitation bubble formation, GHz-burst irradiation enables energy delivery before the onset of bubble-induced shielding. This increases the threshold fluence for nonlinear losses and yields an ablation efficiency enhancement of up to a factor of three compared to single-pulse…
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