Thermo-electron accumulation in light and heavy water during MHz-burst laser ablation

dc.contributor.authorMoskal, Denys
dc.contributor.authorMartan, Jiří
dc.contributor.authorLang, Vladislav
dc.contributor.authorHonner, Milan
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-27T10:09:52Z
dc.date.available2025-06-27T10:09:52Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.date.updated2025-06-27T10:09:52Z
dc.description.abstractLaser-induced water ablation triggers various physical effects, including atom ionization, optical breakdown of the liquid, phase explosion, cavitation, and shockwave propagation. These effects may be further amplified in heavy water by deuterium-deuterium fusion reactions, which require extremely high energy levels. Laser pulses can be grouped in bursts to achieve the necessary energy within the ablation plasma plume. This study aims to compare the ablation plasma glow and thermal effects in light and heavy water under both single-pulse and burst-mode ultrashort laser irradiation. Notably, this research introduces the novel application of burst laser ablation in heavy water for the first time. The ablation was conducted beneath the water surface along a circular, laser-scanned trajectory, with two distinct ablation regimes: burst mode and single-pulse mode, utilizing lenses with varying focal lengths and different pulse durations. Absorption processes and plasma glow were monitored using visible and infrared detectors, a fast silicon detector, and a thermocouple. The study revealed that the burst regime in heavy water produced the most intense plasma glow when 1 ps laser pulses were used, with shorter pulses yielding less intense glow and the longest pulses yielding the least. Surprisingly, plasma glow at a lower initial power density of 2.6 & sdot;1013 W/cm2 was four times higher than at a higher power density of 8 & sdot;1013 W/cm2. These findings were compared with existing theories on plasma formation in water by ultrashort laser pulses. The observed increase in pulse-to-pulse plasma glow in burst mode was attributed to thermo-electron accumulation effects. The density of excited and hydrated electrons, and temperature changes of ablated water were calculated using both strong-field ionization and avalanche ionization models. The results of thermocouple measurements were compared with thermal balance calculation. Additionally, the influence of pulse parity on burst ablation glow in heavy water was discussed.en
dc.format14
dc.identifier.document-number001389685600001
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2024.126573
dc.identifier.issn0017-9310
dc.identifier.obd43946489
dc.identifier.orcidMoskal, Denys 0000-0003-3919-8651
dc.identifier.orcidMartan, Jiří 0000-0002-5832-4425
dc.identifier.orcidLang, Vladislav 0000-0003-0775-2822
dc.identifier.orcidHonner, Milan 0000-0003-1064-0936
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11025/61905
dc.language.isoen
dc.project.IDEH22_008/0004634
dc.relation.ispartofseriesINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER
dc.rights.accessA
dc.subjectburst heavy water ablationen
dc.subjectultrashort laser pulsesen
dc.subjectplasma glowen
dc.subjectheat accumulationen
dc.subjecthydrated electrons densityen
dc.subjectIR-radiationen
dc.titleThermo-electron accumulation in light and heavy water during MHz-burst laser ablationen
dc.typeČlánek v databázi WoS (Jimp)
dc.typeČLÁNEK
dc.type.statusPublished Version
local.files.count1*
local.files.size8994100*
local.has.filesyes*
local.identifier.eid2-s2.0-85211996602

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