Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Advances in the Application of Lasers in Materials Science

Edited by
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 135,23 €*
  • * hind on lõplik, st. muud allahindlused enam ei rakendu
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • See e-raamat on mõeldud ainult isiklikuks kasutamiseks. E-raamatuid ei saa tagastada.

DRM piirangud

  • Kopeerimine (copy/paste):

    ei ole lubatud

  • Printimine:

    ei ole lubatud

  • Kasutamine:

    Digitaalõiguste kaitse (DRM)
    Kirjastus on väljastanud selle e-raamatu krüpteeritud kujul, mis tähendab, et selle lugemiseks peate installeerima spetsiaalse tarkvara. Samuti peate looma endale  Adobe ID Rohkem infot siin. E-raamatut saab lugeda 1 kasutaja ning alla laadida kuni 6'de seadmesse (kõik autoriseeritud sama Adobe ID-ga).

    Vajalik tarkvara
    Mobiilsetes seadmetes (telefon või tahvelarvuti) lugemiseks peate installeerima selle tasuta rakenduse: PocketBook Reader (iOS / Android)

    PC või Mac seadmes lugemiseks peate installima Adobe Digital Editionsi (Seeon tasuta rakendus spetsiaalselt e-raamatute lugemiseks. Seda ei tohi segamini ajada Adober Reader'iga, mis tõenäoliselt on juba teie arvutisse installeeritud )

    Seda e-raamatut ei saa lugeda Amazon Kindle's. 

The book covers recent advances and progress in understanding both the fundamental science of lasers interactions in materials science, as well as a special emphasis on emerging applications enabled by the irradiation of materials by pulsed laser systems. The different chapters illustrate how, by careful control of the processing conditions, laser irradiation can result in efficient material synthesis, characterization, and fabrication at various length scales from atomically-thin 2D materials to microstructured periodic surface structures. This book serves as an excellent resource for all who employ lasers in materials science, spanning such different disciplines as photonics, photovoltaics, and sensing, to biomedical applications.







 
1 Laser Synthesis, Processing, and Spectroscopy of Atomically-Thin Two Dimensional Materials
1(38)
David B. Geohegan
Alex A. Puretzky
Aziz Boulesbaa
Gerd Duscher
Gyula Eres
Xufan Li
Liangbo Liang
Masoud Mahjouri-Samani
Chris Rouleau
Wesley Tennyson
Mengkun Tian
Kai Wang
Kai Xiao
Mina Yoon
1.1 Introduction
2(2)
1.2 Key Challenges in the Synthesis of Atomically-Thin 2D Materials with Controllable Functionality
4(2)
1.3 Laser-Based Synthesis and Processing of 2D Materials
6(9)
1.3.1 Pulsed Laser Deposition of 2D Materials
6(1)
1.3.2 Laser Techniques for "Top-Down" and "Bottom Up" Defect Engineering of 2D Crystals
7(2)
1.3.3 Substrateless Growth of 2D Materials by Laser Vaporization
9(1)
1.3.4 Laser Thinning of Layered Two-Dimensional Materials
10(2)
1.3.5 Laser Conversion of Two-Dimensional Materials
12(1)
1.3.6 Laser Crystallization and Annealing of TMDs
13(1)
1.3.7 Laser-Induced Phase Conversion of Two-Dimensional Crystals
14(1)
1.3.8 Future Directions of Laser Synthesis and Processing of Atomically-Thin 2D Materials
15(1)
1.4 Optical Techniques for 2D Material Characterization
15(15)
1.4.1 Overview
15(3)
1.4.2 Raman Spectroscopy of 2D Materials
18(5)
1.4.3 Photoluminescence Spectroscopy of 2D Materials
23(2)
1.4.4 Second Harmonic Generation Microscopy of 2D Materials
25(1)
1.4.5 Ultrafast Spectroscopy of 2D Materials
26(4)
1.5 Summary
30(9)
References
31(8)
2 The Role of Defects in Pulsed Laser Matter Interaction
39(24)
Oskar Armbruster
Aida Naghilou
Wolfgang Kautek
2.1 Introduction
39(1)
2.2 Intrinsic Defects
40(7)
2.2.1 Field Enhancement by Structural Defects
41(1)
2.2.2 Field Enhancement by Impurities
42(1)
2.2.3 Thermal Damage by Absorber Impurities
42(3)
2.2.4 Irradiation Area Dependence of Laser-Induced Threshold Fluences
45(2)
2.3 Laser-Generated Defects
47(9)
2.3.1 Dielectrics
50(2)
2.3.2 Metals
52(3)
2.3.3 Semiconductors
55(1)
2.4 Conclusion
56(7)
References
58(5)
3 Surface Functionalization by Laser-Induced Structuring
63(26)
Juergen Reif
3.1 Introduction
63(1)
3.2 Functionality of Textured Surfaces
64(7)
3.2.1 Wettability
64(3)
3.2.2 Color
67(2)
3.2.3 Field Enhancement
69(1)
3.2.4 Templates for Biological and Technological Films
70(1)
3.3 Laser Patterning
71(18)
3.3.1 Multi-beam Interference and Ablation
71(2)
3.3.2 Single-Beam Laser Induced Periodic Surface Structures (LIPSS)
73(9)
References
82(7)
4 Laser-Inducing Extreme Thermodynamic Conditions in Condensed Matter to Produce Nanomaterials for Catalysis and the Photocatalysis
89(18)
Alberto Mazzi
Michele Orlandi
Nainesh Patel
Antonio Miotello
4.1 Introduction
90(1)
4.2 Mechanisms Involved in PLD to Synthesize NPs
90(1)
4.3 Thermodynamic Modeling of Phase Explosion in the Nanosecond Laser Ablation of Metals
91(10)
4.3.1 Thermodynamics of Metastable Liquid Metals
91(2)
4.3.2 Heat Diffusion Problem
93(1)
4.3.3 Vaporization
94(1)
4.3.4 Phase Explosion
95(2)
4.3.5 Computational Framework
97(1)
4.3.6 Results and Discussion
98(3)
4.4 Pulsed Laser Deposition of Nanostructured Catalysts: An Application for PEC (Photo-Electrochemical Cell) Technology
101(4)
4.4.1 Porous Versus Compact Catalyst Morphology for Photoanodes Functionalization
101(4)
4.5 Conclusions
105(2)
References
105(2)
5 Insights into Laser-Materials Interaction Through Modeling on Atomic and Macroscopic Scales
107(42)
Maxim V. Shugaev
Miao He
Sergey A. Lizunov
Yoann Levy
Thibault J.-Y. Derrien
Vladimir P. Zhukov
Nadezhda M. Bulgakova
Leonid V. Zhigilei
5.1 Introduction
108(1)
5.2 Transient Response of Materials to Ultrafast Laser Excitation: Optical Properties
109(17)
5.2.1 Metals: Transient Optical Properties
110(12)
5.2.2 Bandgap Materials
122(2)
5.2.3 Semiconductors: Non-thermal Melting and Pump-Probe Experiments
124(2)
5.3 Continuum-Level Modeling of Thermal and Mechanical Response to Laser Excitation at the Scale of the Laser Spot
126(9)
5.3.1 Thermal Modeling of Laser Melting and Resolidification
127(3)
5.3.2 Thermoelastic Modeling of the Dynamic Evolution of Laser-Induced Stresses
130(3)
5.3.3 Material Redistribution Through Elastoplasticity and Hydrodynamic Flow
133(2)
5.4 Molecular Dynamics Modeling of Laser-Materials Interactions
135(7)
5.4.1 Molecular Dynamics: Generation of Crystal Defects
136(5)
5.4.2 Molecular Dynamics: Ablative Generation of Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures
141(1)
5.5 Concluding Remarks
142(7)
References
144(5)
6 Ultrafast Laser Micro and Nano Processing of Transparent Materials---From Fundamentals to Applications
149(42)
Manoj Kumar Bhuyan
Koji Sugioka
6.1 Introduction
150(1)
6.2 Direct Fabrication Using Gaussian Laser Beams
151(10)
6.2.1 Standard Fabrication Approach
152(5)
6.2.2 Near-Field Approach
157(3)
6.2.3 Alternative Technology to Laser Machining: Focused Ion Beam (FD3) Machining
160(1)
6.3 Hybrid Approach
161(4)
6.3.1 Single-Step Processing: Laser Machining in Suitable Environment
162(2)
6.3.2 Multi-step Processing: Laser Irradiation, Followed by Chemical Etching and Heat Treatment
164(1)
6.4 Non-diffractive Approach for Flexible Fabrication
165(19)
6.4.1 Zero-Order Bessel Beams
166(13)
6.4.2 Vortex Beams
179(3)
6.4.3 Curved Beams
182(2)
6.5 Conclusions
184(7)
References
185(6)
7 Molecular Orbital Tomography Based on High-Order Harmonic Generation: Principles and Perspectives
191(26)
Anna Gabriella Ciriolo
Michele Devetta
Davide Facciala
Prabhash Prasannan Geetha
Aditya Pusala
Caterina Vozzi
Salvatore Stagira
7.1 Introduction
192(1)
7.2 High-Order Harmonic Generation
193(7)
7.2.1 Lewenstein Model
196(2)
7.2.2 Saddle Point Approximation
198(1)
7.2.3 Macroscopic Effects
199(1)
7.3 HHG for Atomic and Molecular Spectroscopy
200(2)
7.4 Molecular Orbital Tomography Based on HHG
202(15)
7.4.1 Impulsive Molecular Alignment
203(3)
7.4.2 Theory of HHG-based Molecular Orbital Tomography
206(3)
7.4.3 Experimental Molecular Tomography
209(3)
7.4.4 Open Issues and Possible Solutions
212(2)
7.4.5 Conclusions and Perspectives
214(1)
References
214(3)
8 Laser Ablation Propulsion and Its Applications in Space
217(30)
Claude R. Phipps
8.1 What Is Laser Ablation Propulsion and What Use Is It?
217(1)
8.2 Photon Beam Propulsion
218(1)
8.3 Laser Ablation Propulsion
218(1)
8.4 Pulsed Laser Ablation Propulsion Details
219(4)
8.5 Optima
223(1)
8.6 Why not CW?
224(2)
8.7 Breakthrough Starshot
226(1)
8.8 Theory for Calculating Cmopt
226(1)
8.9 Plasma Regime Theory for Ablation Propulsion
226(2)
8.10 Vapor Regime Theory
228(1)
8.11 Combined Theory
229(2)
8.12 Ultrashort Pulses
231(2)
8.13 Diffraction and Range as They Affect Space System Design
233(1)
8.14 Thermal Coupling with Repetitive Pulses
234(2)
8.15 Practical Case: Thermal Coupling for a Laser Rocket
236(1)
8.16 Applications
236(11)
8.16.1 Interplanetary Laser Rocket
236(3)
8.16.2 L'ADROIT
239(2)
8.16.3 Something Good for the Environment
241(1)
8.16.4 Fiber Laser Arrays Versus Monolithic Solid State Lasers
241(2)
8.16.5 Repetitive Pulse Monolithic Diode Pumped Solid State Lasers
243(1)
8.16.6 Perspective
243(1)
References
244(3)
9 Laser Structuring of Soft Materials: Laser-Induced Forward Transfer and Two-Photon Polymerization
247(28)
Flavian Stokker-Cheregi
Alexandra Palla-Papavlu
Irina Alexandra Paun
Thomas Lippert
Maria Dinescu
9.1 Introduction
247(3)
9.2 Laser-Induced Forward Transfer (LIFT)
250(10)
9.2.1 LIFT in Solid Versus Liquid Phase
250(6)
9.2.2 LIFT for Device Fabrication: Towards Industrial Applications
256(3)
9.2.3 Conclusions and Future Prospects
259(1)
9.3 Laser Direct Writing Via Two Photon Polymerization (LDW Via TPP)
260(15)
9.3.1 3D Biomimetic Structures for Tissue Engineering
260(1)
9.3.2 Basics of LDW via TPP
261(2)
9.3.3 LDW Via TPP of 3D Structures
263(6)
9.3.4 Conclusions and Future Prospects
269(1)
References
270(5)
10 UV- and RIR-MAPLE: Fundamentals and Applications
275(34)
Anna Paola Caricato
Wangyao Ge
Adrienne D. Stiff-Roberts
10.1 Introduction
275(2)
10.2 Conventional UV-MAPLE
277(4)
10.3 UV-MAPLE: Applications
281(8)
10.4 RIR-MAPLE: Motivation for Emulsion Targets
289(1)
10.5 RIR-MAPLE: Frozen Emulsion Targets
290(2)
10.6 RIR-MAPLE: Film Formation from Emulsion Targets
292(2)
10.7 RIR-MAPLE: Impact of Primary Solvent, Secondary Solvent, Surfactant and Matrix in Frozen Emulsion Targets
294(3)
10.8 RIR-MAPLE: Emulsion Targets for Hydrophilic Polymers
297(4)
10.9 RIR-MAPLE: Applications Using Emulsion Targets
301(1)
10.10 Conclusions
302(7)
References
303(6)
11 Combinatorial Laser Synthesis of Biomaterial Thin Films: Selection and Processing for Medical Applications
309(30)
Emanuel Axente
Carmen Ristoscu
Adriana Bigi
Felix Sima
Ion N. Mihailescu
11.1 Introduction
309(3)
11.2 Combinatorial Laser Synthesis Approaches
312(3)
11.3 Biomaterials Selection for Biomedical Applications
315(15)
11.3.1 Compositional Gradient Thin Films of Sr-Substituted and ZOL Modified HA
315(5)
11.3.2 Combinatorial Maps Fabricated from Chitosan and Biomimetic Apatite for Orthopaedic Applications
320(4)
11.3.3 Combinatorial Fibronectin Embedded in a Biodegradable Matrix by C-MAPLE
324(6)
11.4 Discussion
330(1)
11.5 Conclusions and Perspectives
331(8)
References
332(7)
12 Laser Synthesized Nanoparticles for Therapeutic Drug Monitoring
339(22)
Matteo Tommasini
Chiara Zanchi
Andrea Lucotti
Enza Fazio
Marco Santoro
Salvatore Spadaro
Fortunato Neri
Sebastiano Trusso
Emilio Ciusani
Ugo de Grazia
Marina Casazza
Paolo M. Ossi
12.1 Historical Background
340(5)
12.1.1 Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM)
342(1)
12.1.2 Epilepsy
342(1)
12.1.3 Parkinson's disease (PD)
343(1)
12.1.4 Analytical techniques
343(2)
12.2 Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS)
345(6)
12.2.1 SERS Sensors Obtained by Pulsed Laser Deposition
346(5)
12.3 Application of PLA-Synthesized Nanostructured Gold Sensors to Detect Apomorphine and Carbamazepine
351(8)
12.3.1 Apomorphine (APO)
351(4)
12.3.2 Carbamazepine (CBZ)
355(4)
12.4 Conclusion and Perspectives
359(2)
References
359(2)
13 Nonlinear Optics in Laser Ablation Plasmas
361(26)
Mohamed Oujja
Mikel Sanz
Rebeca de Nalda
Marta Castillejo
13.1 Introduction
361(2)
13.2 Fundamentals of Harmonic Generation
363(4)
13.3 Experimental Systems for Frequency up-Conversion in Laser Ablation Plasmas
367(2)
13.4 Harmonic Generation in Nanosecond Laser Ablation Plasmas of Solid Targets
369(13)
13.4.1 Third and Fifth Harmonic Generation in Nanosecond Laser Ablation Plasmas of Dielectrics
369(2)
13.4.2 Low-Order Harmonic Generation in Laser Ablation Plasmas of Metals
371(3)
13.4.3 Harmonic Generation by Atomic and Nanoparticle Precursors in Nanosecond Ablation Plasma of Semiconductors
374(4)
13.4.4 Low-Order HG in Nanosecond Laser Ablation Plasmas of Carbon Containing Materials
378(2)
13.4.5 Frequency Mixing in the Perturbative Regime in Laser Ablation Plasmas
380(2)
13.5 Conclusions
382(5)
References
383(4)
Subject Index 387
Paolo M. Ossi is Associate Professor of Physics of Matter at the Politecnico di Milano. His main research interests include modeling the interaction between energetic beams (photons; particles) and solid surfaces, the controlled nanoparticle synthesis (oxides, transition and noble metals) by Pulsed Laser Deposition in dense gases and liquids, the growth and evolution under solar irradiation of snow nanocrystals (natural and artificial). He is author, or co-author of about 200 publications in International journals, numerous invited contributions to international volumes. He is co-editor of five books/proceedings. He authored the books Disordered Materials An Introduction (Springer, Berlin, 2nd Ed., 2006) and Plasmi per Superfici (Polipress, Milano, 2006). He is holder of two patents and Co-Editor of the Springer Series Topics in Applied Physics. 







Antonio Miotello is full professor of Experimental Physics at Trento University. His main research interests include microscopic processes involved in growth of thin films by using deposition techniques: Physical Vapor Deposition and Laser-Ablation, synthesis of nanoparticles of composite materials having catalytic properties for hydrolysis of chemical hydrides and development of related reactor chambers,  synthesis of photocatalysts for water purification or splitting for hydrogen production with photolectrochemical cells, modeling the growth of nanostructures using Density Functional Theory and Monte Carlo simulation. He is author, or co-author of more than 350 peer reviewed papers published in international journals and holder of two patents.











Maria Dinescu is Senior Scientist 1st degree, research group leader (Photonic Processing of Advanced Materials: ppam.inflpr.ro), National Institute for Lasers, Plasma and Radiation Physics (INFLPR), Bucharest, Romania. Her main research interests include Laser materials processing (Laser Induced forward transfer-LIFT, Matrix assisted pulsed laser evaporation (MAPLE), Pulsed laser deposition (PLD)), ferroelectrics, high k dielectrics, materials for energy. She is author or co-author of more than 250 peer reviewed papers published in international journals, 9 book chapters. She is co-editor of seven books/proceedings. She serves as Co-editor of Applied Surface Science.







David B. Geohegan is Distinguished Research Staff of Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Group Leader Functional Hybrid Materials at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society. His main research interests include understanding and controlling the synthesis of thin films and nanostructured materials through the development of time resolved laser spectroscopy and imaging diagnostic techniques; fundamental studies of growth mechanisms of single-walled carbon nanotubes and nanohorns, graphene and two-dimensional metal chalcogenide crystals, nanoparticles, inorganic and organic nanowires; laser interactions with materials for synthesis, characterization, and processing of nanoscale materials which exhibit new nanoscale properties; exploring the functionality of nanoscale materials for energy, including hydrogen storage, solid state lighting, and photovoltaics. He is author, or co-author, of more than 250 peer reviewed papers published in international journals and holder of seven patents.