Nanomaterials (Jun 2024)

(Sub-)Picosecond Surface Correlations of Femtosecond Laser Excited Al-Coated Multilayers Observed by Grazing-Incidence X-ray Scattering

  • Lisa Randolph,
  • Mohammadreza Banjafar,
  • Toshinori Yabuuchi,
  • Carsten Baehtz,
  • Michael Bussmann,
  • Nicholas P. Dover,
  • Lingen Huang,
  • Yuichi Inubushi,
  • Gerhard Jakob,
  • Mathias Kläui,
  • Dmitriy Ksenzov,
  • Mikako Makita,
  • Kohei Miyanishi,
  • Mamiko Nishiuchi,
  • Özgül Öztürk,
  • Michael Paulus,
  • Alexander Pelka,
  • Thomas R. Preston,
  • Jan-Patrick Schwinkendorf,
  • Keiichi Sueda,
  • Tadashi Togashi,
  • Thomas E. Cowan,
  • Thomas Kluge,
  • Christian Gutt,
  • Motoaki Nakatsutsumi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano14121050
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 12
p. 1050

Abstract

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Femtosecond high-intensity laser pulses at intensities surpassing 1014 W/cm2 can generate a diverse range of functional surface nanostructures. Achieving precise control over the production of these functional structures necessitates a thorough understanding of the surface morphology dynamics with nanometer-scale spatial resolution and picosecond-scale temporal resolution. In this study, we show that single XFEL pulses can elucidate structural changes on surfaces induced by laser-generated plasmas using grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS). Using aluminium-coated multilayer samples we distinguish between sub-picosecond (ps) surface morphology dynamics and subsequent multi-ps subsurface density dynamics with nanometer-depth sensitivity. The observed subsurface density dynamics serve to validate advanced simulation models representing matter under extreme conditions. Our findings promise to open new avenues for laser material-nanoprocessing and high-energy-density science.

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