1. Introduction
Three dimensional localized crystallization in glasses brings interest as it introduces the possibility of precipitating crystalline phases that present optical non-linear, ferroelectric, or pyroelectric properties. For example, it leads to the formation of non-center-symmetric crystals in optically suitable glasses [
1]. This approach underscores that crystallization, a thermo-kinetics process [
2,
3], is influenced by temperature (and time), occurring between the glass transition temperature (
Tg) and the melting temperature (
Tm) of the given precipitated phase(s), and dictating nucleation and growth rates. While spatially selective crystallization using a femtosecond laser has been extensively demonstrated in various glasses [
1], this process appears more complex than using a continuous-wave (CW) laser, arising from the pulsed nature of the laser (up to several MHz), and its high peak intensity triggering non-linear processes. For example, in lithium niobium silicate glasses (LNS) [
4], crystallization patterns of the LiNbO
3 phase strongly depend on pulse energy or laser polarization.
While some physical aspects of crystallization mechanisms have been understood, we aim to further explain and predict semi-quantitative aspects, particularly the correlation between laser parameters and specific optical or material properties. A goal is to minimize the number of experiments by performing calculations that facilitate a selection of relevant parameters to induce crystallization. For this purpose, a simple analytical solution has been developed in a previous work [
5] to physically describe the thermal dynamics induced by pulsed laser absorption and the subsequent transformations.
In this work, we first simulate the evolution of the temperature distribution induced by a pulsed fs laser. Once the temperature modulation is known, it can be combined with a time–temperature transformation (TTT) diagram for crystallization. The temperature calculation relies on modeling the energy source as spherical, and requires knowledge of several parameters:
(1) The ratio (labeled
Rτ) between the pulse period (
τRR = 1/
RR, with
RR being the pulse repetition rate) and the heat diffusion time (
τD = w2/4
Dth,
w being the light beam waist radius at 1/
e at the focus, and
Dth the heat diffusion coefficient or diffusivity). While
Rτ depends thus on
w, the latter is usually not reliably known due to the complexity of non-linear effects in the light–matter interaction. For this purpose, a compilation of values is extracted from the literature, allowing us to clarify its dependency on the incident pulsed laser energy (please refer to
Appendix A).
(2) The fraction of the incident energy effectively absorbed by the material (labeled
A). Absorption primarily occurs through non-linear absorption (multiphoton ionization). Plasma reflection or scattering is also expected, reducing the coefficient
A. After the absorption of a small part of the pulse energy, the absorption becomes linear due to limitations of the electron plasma density [
6] via a combination of multistep absorption, trapping, and electron–electron or electron–phonon collisions. Given the lack of precise information about all these processes, extracted values from the literature (reported in
Appendix B) enable one to set
A values. As one is not aware of that,
A is a function of the incident pulse energy, the pulse duration, and the material composition.
Another problem more specific to crystallization is the location of the crystallization domain in the TTT diagram to the confined condition of the tightly focused fs pulsed laser. Indeed, the specificities of the process may change the limit of the crystallization domain compared to the classical one [
7,
8,
9]. Due to these uncertainties, the approach is tested using LNS glasses for the laser conditions employed in [
4,
10], for which these aspects are relatively well known.
In this work, brief recall of the classical crystallization process (
Section 2) is provided Thus temperature calculation from a specific hypothesis (
Section 3) is given, describing how crystallization process behaves first within a heat accumulation regime (later defined, see
Section 4) and, secondly, without heat accumulation (see
Section 5, large temperature oscillations). Finally, the results from the approach are compared with several experimental values according to pulse energy and scanning speed (
Section 6) and we draw a conclusion (1) about the optimization of laser parameters, (2) that the width of the crystallization area can be understood, and (3) that the incident light energy fraction may change with the number of pulses.
2. Basic: Brief Recall of the Crystallization Process
The appearance of crystals in glass is a two-step process: nucleation and growth [
2,
9]. Crystallization is generally growth-limited at low temperatures and nucleation-limited at higher ones. Moreover, the domain of crystallization is defined from a TTT diagram [
9]. It collects the time (called the incubation time) requested at a given temperature to observe a first seed. This diagram, generally established for isothermal treatment, takes the time origin (
t = 0) when the sample is in the condition to crystallize for a given temperature. This temperature is incident between
Tg and
Tm, with crystallization occurring between these temperatures with only one transformation (otherwise, other temperatures have to be considered). A boundary can be plotted in this TTT diagram delimiting the appearance of typ. 10
−6 part crystallized in the glass volume (thick black line in
Figure 1). The position of the crystallization domain in the TTT diagram is dependent on the treatment pathway. For example, its position will be shifted if the temperature is continuously decreasing (or not) from
Tm [
11]. In that case, the growth is delayed because the nucleation is slowed down. But, for the purpose of this paper, this is ignored and we simply consider the thermal treatment curve experienced by the material at a given spatial position with the coordinates
α0,β0,γ0. The time–temperature function is applied to this position (
T(
α0,β0,γ0,t)). This function of time is simply obtained by the displacement of the temperature distribution function (the variation of the temperature in space) in the static case. This approximation is valid for speeds smaller than the diffusion speed (2
Dth/w, typ. a few cm/s). As recalled above, the thermal treatment should exhibit temperatures in the
Tg to
Tm range. However, heating a material using a pulsed laser, resulting in an oscillatory temperature in volume impacted by non-linear optical processes, is a complex problem that prevents one from easily drawing conclusions for managing the process. The important aspect of solving this issue is to take into account the effect of these parameters while preserving the main physics associated with the induced transformations. Consequently, in [
5] we developed a simplified approach for understanding how
T(
α,β,γ,t) changes according to the laser parameters (pulse energy, pulse repetition rate, beam scanning speed, beam width, and material properties).
3. Temperature Distribution and Its Evolution during Laser Writing
For this purpose, a known fraction of the incident energy is assumed to be transformed completely into heat after a period of time that is much shorter than the diffusion time w2/Dth, where w is the waist radius at 1/e and Dth the thermal diffusivity. For most of the inorganic glasses, the electron–phonon coupling time is around a few ps, and the diffusion time is smaller than µs. This means that the pulse duration is assumed to be smaller than one hundred ns. So, it is largely the case that for the fs laser, the pulse duration is a fraction of a ps. Therefore, the heat diffusion starts after the electron relaxation and occurs only in the lattice phonons if there are no physical or chemical reactions. Consequently, the complicated events occurring at the ps level have no effect on the present calculation; otherwise, if the time averaged temperature, for instance, may change some non-negligible part of the pulse energy, it is not taken into account.
It is also assumed that no endothermic reaction is active in the dark that can use a significant part of the absorbed energy. The band structure of the material is assumed as not changing in the course of the irradiation, as is the non-linear absorption coefficient.
The 3D Fourier equation, with a spherical energy source at the focal volume, assuming a tightly focused laser beam and temperature-independent physico-chemical properties, is employed. Usually, for 3D direct laser writing, the
NA of the focusing objective is above 0.5. This section is mostly drawn from what has been already published in [
5]. The approximations taken into account are that the pulse durations considered are such that the thermal diffusion is not yet active, i.e., <<0.1 µs and that the scanning speed (
v) is much lower than the diffusion speed (typ. few cm/s). Consequently, the shape of the spatial temperature distribution is not time dependent; the only time dependence is introduced by the beam scanning taken in the
α direction and appears as
α + v·t.
β and γ are fixed at the position
β0 and γ
0, with γ direction corresponding to the beam propagation axis. The scanning speed (
v) defines the pulsed number deposited immediately as
Np =
2w·RR/v. The laser pulse energy
Ep defines the maximum temperature increment
T00, introduced by a single pulse above an initial temperature
Tinit:
, with
A the fraction of absorbed energy (previously defined);
ρ and
Cp are the glass density and heat capacity, respectively. Additionally, a normalized radius
rw = r/w is defined, with r being a radial distance from the center of the beam focus.
All calculated temperatures are normalized with respect to T00, as follows: Tnorm = (T − Tinit)/T00. Tnorm is oscillating at periods of 1/RR at any distance from the focus center. This temperature oscillation is occurrent between a maximum (Tmax) and a minimum (Tmin), which varies according to the laser irradiation conditions. After a sufficient number of pulses, both Tmax and Tmin reach a steady state regime. Achieving this steady state regime is dictated by the ratio Rτ as previously defined and taking the form Rτ = 4Dth/RR w2. For instance, for large Rτ values (i.e., >16 for Tmin < 0.03Tmax) the pulse contributions are independent of each other, whereas for smaller Rτ values (<16), heat accumulation from pulse-to-pulse contribution begins to appear (and thus Tmin overcomes 0.03Tmax).
NSS corresponds to the minimum number of pulses necessary to reach the steady state regime. Its expression is given in Equations (A4) in
Appendix D. This calculation can be performed either for
Tmin and
Tmax.
The temperature–spatial distributions of
Tmax and
Tmin (normalized in the form of
Tnorm) for various
Rτ values are provided in
Figure 2. When
is small (large
RR or small diffusivity),
Tmin and
Tmax have no large relative difference compared to their average values because the oscillation amplitude is always limited to
, whereas for
Tmax and
Tmin amplitude converges to 2/
at the beam center but converges to
elsewhere on heat accumulation. When this situation can be reached, the pulse energy can be adjusted to compensate for an
RR increase. It is also worth noting that, when
decreases, the shape of the curve converges to the
erf(rw)/rw curve (see Equation (A6)
Appendix D). It is a consequence that the temperature distribution decreases much slower at large radius, compared to a gaussian one. This last shape is the shape of the energy source and of the temperature distribution for the case where
is large. Note that in the case of heat accumulation, the overall maximum temperature (actually at the center of the beam) is defined by
A·Ep·RR, i.e., roughly the average incident power.
For large
values, corresponding to a small
RR and/or large
Dth, the oscillations are relatively large as pulse contributions are separated and thus
Tmin appears to have small values (See
Figure 2c). If one considers negligible where
Tmin is smaller than 3% of
Tmax, then
(for values smaller than 6% of
Tmax, then
for
,
Tmin is smaller than 4.4% of
Tmax). This defines the limit of the domain of heat accumulation. The increase in
(
Figure 2a–c) clearly shows that the shape of
Tmax is also converging with the increasing
to the shape of the beam energy distribution (a gaussian beam, with an envelope having a spatial distribution following
), therefore (and in the limited case) becoming independent of
. The maximum absolute temperature at the center is
T00 in this case. It is defined by
Ep only (independent of
and so especially of
RR).
For intermediate
values, exemplified in
Figure 2b,c, the temperature oscillations are limited between
Tmax and
Tmin. This is shown in particular cases with the energy source volume appearing as a shoe box in [
12] for
= 2 and 20 or in [
13] for
.
But, in this paper, it is specified that when
rw > 2, the difference between
Tmin and
Tmax vanishes, as seen in [
14]. Therefore, the conditions of
rw and
for neglecting the temperature oscillations are deduced and the use of an average temperature
Tmean might be applicable (
Appendix D Equations (A6)–(A8)).
Another important point for this current work is the dependence of the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the temperature distribution with respect to . Its variation is less than a factor 2 in the relative radius scale (rw). In fact, the largest change is at the base of the distribution.
4. Case of Low Rτ Values (High RR or Low Dth), i.e., within Heat Accumulation Regime
Here, Rτ is such that it is much smaller than 10, e.g., Rτ = 0.1, due to the use of a large repetition rate or a weakly thermally diffusing material Tmin is very close to Tmax (Rτ = 10 is the limit for Tmin = 4.4% Tmax). In that case, a pulse contribution has no time to vanish significantly before the next pulse absorption induces another temperature increase. This is the case of heat accumulation, and the behavior is like that of Continuous Wave (CW) lasers.
In this section, we deal with conditions where the pulse number received at the same point (Np as defined earlier) is above the number of pulses required to reach the steady state (Nss). This situation yields two possibilities for which the temperature is higher than Tg: (i) the temperature remains lower than Tm, and (ii) the temperature overcomes Tm for some distance from the center of the beam focus during the thermal treatment. Each situation is described below.
- (i)
Moderate Ep leading to a temperature lower than Tm
To describe the temperature evolution and for illustration purposes, the laser parameters are set so that the temperature values fall within an acceptable temperature interval. In this section, we took as an example
Tg = 579 °C coming from the physico-chemical properties of LNS glass and
Tm = 1257 °C (
Tm is the melting temperature of the formed LiNbO
3 crystals in LNS). Additional data requested for the calculation are provided in the
Table A3 in
Appendix C. Therefore, low absorption fraction (
A) and pulse energy (
Ep) values are used, as provided in the caption of
Figure 3. The beam width at 1/
e has been fixed to a “reasonable value” for such a small pulse energy, i.e.,
w = 1 µm. In this condition, similarly to
Figure 2a, the oscillations (Equation (A2) in
Appendix D) are small enough to be neglected. This can be observed in
Figure 3, rendering
Tmean a valid approximation if requested.
Then, the temperature distribution is transformed into the time domain to obtain thermal treatment curves (
Figure 4b,c, T-t dependency), replacing the static normalized radius
by the coordinate of the place looked at in the moving material
, taking the beam center as a reference (see
Figure 4a). The relative position in the beam of this point is related to relative time from the following relation:
. Then, the time origin of the treatment for crystallization is defined when
T starts to overcome
Tg. This occurs at a distance
d from the center of the temperature distribution, i.e., at an abscissa
d dependent on
β (distance from the line axis), i.e.,
.
; the radius of the isotherm
Tg is then obtained by solving
Tmean(,Rτ) = Tg/T00, where
Tmean is an average temperature defined in
Appendix D Equation (A6).
is also the maximum width of the crystallized region.
Figure 4 displays a time–temperature thermal treatment. Therefore, provided that the crystallization domain is known (TTT diagram, see above), the scanning speed must be adjusted to ensure the thermal curve intersects with the crystallization domain, as in
Figure 5, at a speed of
v1 or
v2. For a speed higher than
vlim, the curve does not touch the domain anymore and crystallization is not possible. One can also see that for speed
v1, crystallization starts from the bottom side of the domain and then crosses it and is thus not limited in growth. However, if
Tmax is not so large (
Tmax <
Tm), the growth can be controlled. For
v2, crystallization starts from the growth side and is sensitive to the pre-existence of nucleation seeds.
It is also important to note that
is in principle larger than the half-width of the crystallized region. Indeed,
is a circle where t = 0, but crystallization occurs eventually after some incubation time that could be longer than at the center, due to the decrease in
Tmax when going to the line’s edge. This contributes to a narrowing of the line, but this effect is small, as shown in Figure 4 of [
15]. In addition, at the speed limit, the width is not vanishing. The disappearance of the crystallization is thus arising from the process described in
Figure 5. The width of the crystallization area is weakly sensitive to the scanning speed for a solid-to-solid transformation. This validates the crystallization criterion for
T to be between
Tg and
Tm, used in our approach.
At the periphery of the line (e.g., for
β = 1.2 in
Figure 4), the temperature is smaller than that at the center, but the crystallization condition remains somewhat similar: the treatment curves cross the crystallization domain almost at the same incubation time. From this viewpoint, the results are rather intuitive. First, a lower scanning speed would lead to a larger crystal growth. Second, there is a minimum laser power (P =
Ep·RR) necessary to overcome
Tg, with a maximum scanning speed necessary for the thermal treatment curve to cross the crystallization boundary. As the power increases, the speed limit increases until the maximum in space of the average temperature reaches
Tm. Beyond this point, the crystallization process is different, and is the topic of the next section.
- (ii)
larger Ep leading to a temperature larger than Tm
A large
Ep yields temperatures greater than
Tm. In this case, if crystallization occurs, it starts from the liquid phase, with the system potentially crystallizing as the temperature decreases below
Tm. Similar to the previous situation,
d(
β) is defined by
.
, which is the radius of the isotherm
Tm (i.e., a circle with a radius smaller than the one for
Tg), and is then obtained by solving the following equation that includes
Tm:
Tmean(,
Rτ) =
Tm/
T00.
is also the maximum size of the melted region.
β <
is represented by the dashed blue curve in
Figure 6. When
(green curve), the results of section (i) apply. Then, the scanning speed should be adjusted to ensure the treatment curve reaches the crystallization domain. In this case, the entry into the crystallization domain is necessarily from the top side (nucleation limited). It is sensitive to side stimulation because the side has crystallized before.
5. Case of High Rτ Values (Low RR and Large Dth), i.e., out of Heat Accumulation Regime
Here,
Rτ is such that it is larger than 10, due to the use of a small repetition rate or a strong thermally diffusing material. In that case, a pulse contribution has enough time to vanish significantly before the next pulse absorption arrival. There is no heat accumulation, but in
Figure 2c this is true only for when
is smaller than a value of approximately 3. For the periphery of the heat-affected region, there is a smoothening of the temperature oscillations due to heat diffusion.
On the contrary, for a smaller reduced radius,
Tmin is close to zero, and the temperature oscillates between
Tmin and
Tmax during each period. Assuming that the pulse number received punctually (
Np) is above the pulse number required to reach the stationary state (
Nss formula Equation (A4)
Appendix D), the temperature oscillations at the steady state can be simulated simply. Note that the oscillation at this stage is due to a series of pulse contributions collected in the function
, where
x (between 0 and 1) is the temporal position in the period and is thus the floating value of
t·RR. The simulation function of the temperature called
SimpulseT is
(see Equation (A9)
Appendix D) with
defined as in the previous section and related to the time origin for crystallization according to one of the two cases for which the temperature is above or below the melting temperature
Tm.
- (i)
Moderate Ep such that the temperature is not overcoming Tm
As it is seen in
Figure 7, the punctual thermal treatment is beginning when
Tmax·
T00 is overcoming the melting temperature for the first time during the scanning. The relative position in the beam is translated in relative time from the following relation:
:
d(β) defined by with
the solution of
Tmax(,
Rτ)=
Tg/
T00.
However, the existence of oscillations between Tmin and Tmax is such that there are dead times, defined as the time for which the temperature decreases below Tg. Consequently, the efficiency, taken as the ratio between the active time (during which Tg < T < Tm) and the thermal treatment time, is much smaller than one. This is different from small values, again for which Tmax is close to Tmin, and Tmean can be employed.
The time for which crystallization is possible (as per the definition of efficiency before) is computed by solving the following equation:
SimpulseT(rw,x,Rτ) =
Tg. This gives the temporal interval
x1,
x2, graphically defined in
Figure 8a during the pulse period and for which the temperature is above
Tg according to
rw, i.e., the normalized distance to the beam center.
At a given point in the material, the temperature is oscillating between
Tmax(r,t) and
Tmin(r,t) depending on
Rτ and
T00. For contributing to the treatment of crystallization, the temperature must stay between
Tg and
Tm. Below
Tg, the kinetics are too slow and above
Tm the material is in the liquid state. When
Rτ and
T00 is such that
T(r,t) is out of this interval, the treatment is inefficient. In this case, just a part of the
T oscillation is active in contributing to crystallization treatment; this is defined in
Figure 8b. As seen in
Figure 8b, the efficiency of the thermal treatment (defined as
x1-x2) is a function of the distance of the position away from the beam center (
rw). This reduction in efficiency means that to reach crystallization around the periphery of the beam, the scanning speed must significantly be decreased. In fact, in those conditions, the thermal treatment time is much smaller than the irradiation time. Furthermore, beyond some departure from the center (e.g., here
β > 0.7, i.e., in the direction perpendicular to the scanning direction, with the parameters used in
Figure 7), the crystallization is no more possible for kinetics reasons (
T <
Tg).
defines the maximum width of the crystallization region.
- (ii)
Large Ep such that the temperature is overcoming Tm
In that case, a new treatment begins when a pulse oscillation is decreasing below Tm, assuming that the material melted before.
The use of the
SimpulseT function is valid. Using this expression, the position in the period (
x3 in
Figure 9a) for which the temperature has overcome
Tm and returns below it is detected. This position is the starting time for thermal treatment that ends at position
x1. But, if the next temperature pulse induces the temperature becoming greater than
Tm, as the material is expected to melt and thus lose its memory, there will be a new time origin to compute from the next pulse. So, the last pulse defines the beginning of the treatment that goes on afterwards, i.e., when
Tmax is decreasing below
Tm in the course of the scanning. This is obtained by solving
SimpulseT(rw,x,Rτ) =
Tm. This yields positions
x3 and
x4 in the period, as shown in
Figure 9b.
As seen in
Figure 9, just a part of the pulse is “active” to induce crystallization (
x2-x1 < 1) and the involvement of just a part of the temperature distribution is also possible. Following the picture in
Figure 9b, only the tail of the temperature distribution is used. When
T is no longer overcoming
Tm, and as shown in
Figure 10 with
d = 1.92 for
β = 0,
x3 and
x4 do not exist anymore and, until
x1 and
x2 do, the temperature is larger than
Tg.
From
Figure 9a above, it can be noticed that the efficiency for crystallization is again smaller than 100% and that the writing speed must be decreased to trigger crystallization. Regarding the sides of the line (
β ≠ 0), the maximum of
Tmax decreases with
y and the process described here will stop when
Tmax will no longer increase above
Tm (
<
β <
). For these
β, the situation is the same as the one described at the beginning of this section. The transition is solid–solid and starts from the front of the
T distribution, i.e., before the line center (in reference to the laboratory clock).
6. Application to the Case of LNS Glass
The next section is dedicated to applying the above findings to an experimental case using LNS glasses. The objective of this section is to show how the width of the thermally transformed region is linked to laser parameters, especially to the pulse energy. It is based on a real case for which the beam waist and the fraction of absorbed pulse energy (
A in
T00 expression, Equation (A10)
Appendix D) are crucial information, believed to be much smaller than shown in this paper. After data analysis from different authors, it is pointed out that the dependence on pulse energy of the beam waist
w is not very sensitive to the material when comparing silica and the LNS family (
Appendix A). On the contrary, the pulse energy dependence of
A (
Appendix B) is sensitive to the pulse duration and to the material. Therefore, the methodology in this section is to start with the pulse energy, the numerical aperture, and the pulse duration, to show that (1) the beam waist and the fraction of absorbed energy can be defined with enough accuracy for the purpose of this paper, and (2) then, with these quantities and their dependence on the laser parameters established reliably enough, to draw conclusions on the laser-induced crystallization process.
Let us start from a low pulse energy (0.5–1 μJ). The experimental half-width of the crystallized area is measured to be 1.65 μm (using 0.7 μJ in [
4]) with the following laser parameters: wavelength 1030 nm, pulse duration 300 fs,
RR = 300 kHz,
NA = 0.6, and
v = 5 μm/s [
4]. With these values, solid–solid transformation (crystallization, ref. [
16]) is shown to occur. On the other hand, the presence of nanogratings [
17] indicates the size of the laser beam as these structures are only created by light.
w = 1.65 μm is deduced. However,
A has to be adjusted. There are different processes that contribute to this fraction. The first one is the reflection of light (from Fresnel, or from the electron plasma mirror that is formed by the electron excitation in the conduction band or also from some light scattering). The second one is that, if a part is absorbed, a part is also transmitted as the absorption is never total in transparent materials with non-linear absorption. Since the modification is a solid–solid transformation, the temperature does not overcome
Tm (as shown in the previous sections), and the value of
A has to be smaller than 0.09 for 0.7 μJ. This value falls within the values found in the literature and presented in
Appendix B Figure A2. Once all of these parameters are known, the simulation can be carried out similarly to its presentation in the previous sections.
The results are summarized in
Figure 11 and below:
- -
The possible crystallization would fall within a fraction of a second for
v = 5 µm/s provided that the efficiency was 100%, but this is obviously not the case. On the contrary, the maximum efficiency is 22% here (see
Figure 11b). The real treatment time is thus (
x1-x2) multiplied by the time scale of
Figure 11c. On the other hand, as crystallization is actually observed in LNS for
v up to 125 µm/s [
15] in a 0.5–1 µJ interval, with the following values: 1030 nm,
NA = 0.6,
τRR = 250 fs,
RR = 200 kHz, and
w = 1.6 µm (for which the steady state is reached). This leads to a position where the crystallization nose is in the time range of 10 ms, i.e., an order of magnitude lower than the isothermal treatments in a conventional furnace, in a large volume without a stress field [
18].
- -
The calculated crystallized half-width is close to that of the beam waist, with the criterion that the temperature should be above Tg. It can be concluded that there is almost no line broadening originating from the thermal effect for this pulse energy as it is experimentally observed.
Now, and based on the above discussion, one can wonder how width evolves when Ep is increased. To answer this aspect, two distinct examples are considered, at low and higher pulse energies.
First example: It is known that solid–solid transformation occurs until 1.0 µJ and that for higher pulse energy, a part of the crystallized region originates from a liquid-to-solid transformation. For instance, let us consider the pulse energy 1.3 µJ. For this value, the half-width of the crystallized region is 3.73 µm. The laser beam radius is collected from [
4] and reported in
Figure A1 at 2.6 µm.
Rτ thus decreases from 4.4 to 1.8 with the pulse energy increase. The indirect variation of
Rτ with the pulse energy was not expected. It pushes the system to be in a heat accumulation regime even if
RR is constant. Additionnally,
A increases itself to 0.15. Using these data, the computation is summarized in
Figure 12.
The provided results indicate the following:
- -
The efficiency is close to 100% due to the effect of heat accumulation that increases Tmin above Tg.
- -
The calculated crystallized radius is found to be 1.25 w. There is thus a small broadening of 25% compared to the beam waist w. There is thus a crystallized part that is not submitted to the beam where there is no submicrostructuring induced by the laser light. There is also a melted region smaller than the beam waist (half-width = 0.48 w). It is also noted that there is no obvious correlation between the beam width and the melted region.
For completeness, another experimental result available for 1.8 µJ has been computed and reported in
Table 1. It shows reasonable agreement with the experimental results.
Second example: there is a much higher pulse energy, let us say 4.2 µJ, as used by Veenhuizen et al. [
10], with laser parameters as follows: 175 fs, 200 kHz, and a varied scanning speed
v. The authors of the aforementioned reference observed a crystallization full width of 31.3 µm for 15 µm/s and 9.82 µm for 75 µm/s, i.e., a significant variation. From
Figure A1 in
Appendix A, w seems to be around 4.5 µm and thus
Rτ = 0.9;
A can be seen to be 0.32 from
Figure A2 in
Appendix B. The results are shown in
Figure 13.
Figure 13 allows a comparison of the treatment originating from the solid region and from the melted regions. The two curves penetrate the crystallization domain after a similar incubation time. However, in real time, the first one starts in front of the beam at a distance 3.4 w from its center, that is, before the temperature maximum, whereas the second starts 1.7 w after the temperature maximum. Consequently, the thermal treatment curve of the periphery is penetrating the crystallization domain before that of the center. The periphery is thus in a situation to stimulate the nucleation of the melted region. In addition, as both of the treatment curves have almost no oscillations, the efficiency is obviously 100%.
Let us now examine the effect of the scanning speed reported in [
10]. A large variation in the width of the crystallization region was found (by a factor of three), whereas the speed varied by a factor of five. The origin of this variation is not primarily caused by the time shift of the treatment curves with the speed, as seen in
Figure 5. The effect is quite small. Another possibility could be from the pulse number received punctually and that could be smaller than the quantity required for reaching the steady state. The steady state is reached after
Nss = 7.6 × 10
4 pulses (from Equation (A4)
Appendix A), whereas the number of pulses received punctually
Np is 1.2 × 10
4 pulses for
v = 15 µm/s. However, for
v = 75 µm/s,
Np = 2400, which is significantly lower than
Nss (>30 times less). Consequently, the steady state situation is not reached at those speeds. On the other hand,
Figure 2 shows what the width at the beginning of the irradiation is like for a large
Rτ, i.e., separated pulse contribution and increases in the course of irradiation due to heat accumulation. To compute the width in the transitory stage, it is assumed here that
T(
) crosses
Tg for
> 2. The use of
Tmean is thus a good approximation. Therefore, the equation below has to be solved by deducing
according to the number of pulses. It reads as follows (from Equation (A8)
Appendix D):
The increase in the width as a function of the pulse number is plotted in
Figure 14. There is a broadening with the number of pulses that arises from heat accumulation as
Rτ is around 1.
= 3.5 is found for the speed in consideration, i.e., a decrease from 3.8, the value at the steady state. This does not account for variation by a factor of three of the crystallization width. Even if the beginning of the irradiation is considered (
Np = 1), the possible variation would only be by a factor of two. On the contrary, the results reported in [
15] and used in
Figure 11 are in agreement with this explanation (the laser parameters are as follows:
λ = 1030 nm;
RR = 200 kHz;
NA = 0.6; pulse duration = 250 fs). In that case,
Nss is around 50 whereas
Np > 5280 for a speed lower than 125 µm/s. The steady state is always reached and the width is weakly varying as experimentally observed (this explanation is given for
Figure 5).
The question is thus: are there other reasons to change the crystallization width? The difference between the beginning and the steady state could be the change in absorption due to the creation of defects in addition to the non-linear one that plays the role of trapping centers of excited electrons produced by previous pulses. It is worth noticing that, only a variation of A from 0.135 to 0.32 may explain that changes from 1.6 to 3.8.
On the other hand, it is observed in [
10] that for a given pulse energy above some speed, the crystallization which occurs is only solid-to-solid transformation. This means that, according to the calculation,
Tmax is no longer overcoming
Tm. This is in agreement with lower absorption at a larger speed. Furthermore, the observation of the change in this turning point (here called
vt) with pulse energy leads one to consider that a particular dose
D0 is necessary for the absorption increase and for A to reach the value at the steady state. One would have, therefore, the following relation:
Ep·2w·RR/vt = D0. So, it would be possible to have an increase in temperature disconnected from the heat accumulation but arising from an increase in absorption related to defect creation.
Finally,
Table 1 shows that the steady state width of the crystallized region varies with the pulse energy for two reasons: because the beam waist increases with
Ep, and the temperature distribution expands relatively with the beam waist,
Rτ decreases and the interaction is thus more and more sensitive to heat accumulation, and also because
A increases with the pulse energy.
7. Discussion
Considering laser-induced crystallization, an analytical formula can be used to compute the temperature oscillations in time when the steady state is reached. These oscillations are limited between a maximum and minimum temperature, whatever the laser parameters and material properties, and established in the frame of a spherically symmetric energy source [
5]. The broadening effect when increasing the pulse energy or the pulse density (inversely proportional to the beam scanning speed) was simulated.
Previously, it has been shown how the spatial distribution and specifically its FWHM is changing during the transition to a steady state depending on the ratio between the pulse period and the heat diffusion time (defined as
Rτ). On the other hand, the temperature magnitude is defined by the beam waist and the fraction of absorbed incident energy (
A). Thus, when applied to a real case and a reliable simulation is requested, it is necessary to consider 1) an increase in the beam waist (
w) with the pulse energy, and 2) the increase in the
A factor with the pulse energy and the pulse duration. Such constraints that originate from a non-linear effect in the solid can, for the most part, only currently be extracted from the experimental results available in the literature (see
Appendix A and
Appendix B) as mechanisms in the case of fs laser absorption are not clear enough for a robust simulation.
In such a way, within the validity of the used approximation, the following is deduced:
(1) The crystallization management is facilitated in a heat accumulation regime (Rτ << 10). This allows the temperature oscillations to be quite small compared to average temperature values; thus, the laser parameters (i.e., Ep, R) can be easily adjusted to be completely above Tg and below Tm during the thermal treatment time that is starting when the temperature is rising above Tg. Thermal treatment curves are computed. The scanning speed is also straightforward for the thermal curve to efficiently penetrate the crystallization domain. The crystallization process will originate from a solid–solid transition, and the width of the crystallized area is close to the beam waist. For the inorganic oxides, the thermal diffusivity is usually around 10−6 m2/s (within a factor of two) so the diffusion time from a source with a beam waist of 1 µm is around <0.5 µs. The above conditions apply when the repetition rate frequency is much larger than 0.4–0.2 Mhz. However, if the focusing is not so tight, let us say w = 2 µm, the heat diffusion time is four times larger and reaches 1–2 µs. So, the repetition rate has to be much larger than 5–10 MHz. However, in organic materials for which the diffusion time is 10–20 times longer, the heat accumulation regime is more easily reached and the thermal width more easily predictable.
If the pulse energy is increased such that the temperature is becoming larger than the melting temperature around the center of the written line, the process changes; the starting time of the incubation is no longer when the temperature becomes larger than Tg but when T decreases below Tm, as the process is a liquid-to-solid transformation. The crystallization domain is penetrated from the growth side, which renders the process sensitive to external stimulation, in particular to crystallization induction from the periphery where the temperature does not overcome Tm. When departing from the center, the temperature maximum of the treatment curve decreases below Tm; a solid-to-solid transformation is occurring again. There are two regions in the crystallized line. It is shown that the solid-to-solid transformation region crystallizes sooner than the melted one and thus is a source of nucleation for the melted one. The size of the crystallized region becomes larger than the beam waist in that case. The texture orientation of the line (if any) is thus defined by the peripheral region outside of the beam and so defined mainly by the temperature gradient orientation. The large broadening with the pulse energy is defined in this case mainly by the base of the temperature distribution (which follows a hyperbolic shape (T~1/rw), although the beam waist and absorption fraction also give rise to a broadening contribution. We also pointed out an unexpected result: the stimulation of the heat accumulation regime on a pulse energy increase and not only on RR.
(2) On the other hand, when heat accumulation is small or negligible (Rτ > 10, small RR, large diffusion time), the above processes are the same according to the pulse energy, but the temperature oscillates significantly. As a consequence, just a small part of the oscillation is efficient (a few or ten %). This contributes to a proportional decrease in the scanning speed in addition to a repetition rate that could here be smaller.
However, the weak efficiency of the growth rate and a moderate pulse energy allows for the penetration of the crystallization on the growth-limited side of the crystallization domain, and may allow for the production of independent nanocrystals that have been revealed to be orientable with laser polarization in the case of LNS glasses [
19].
(3) An absorption increase may be observed in the course of the irradiation and produce a large increase in temperature, changing the crystallization process (from solid/solid to liquid/solid). This effect could be dose dependent (D0 = Ep·2w·RR/vt) and leads to a transition speed vt varying with the pulse energy. We suggest that this phenomenon arises from the formation of defects that are more easily ionized.