On the role of surface plasmon polaritons in the formation of laser-induced periodic surface structures upon irradiation of silicon by femtosecond-laser pulses
Federal Institute For Materials Research and Testing · Max-Born-Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy
Abstract
The formation of nearly wavelength-sized laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSSs) on single-crystalline silicon upon irradiation with single or multiple femtosecond-laser pulses (pulse duration τ=130 fs and central wavelength λ=800 nm) in air is studied experimentally and theoretically. In our theoretical approach, we model the LIPSS formation by combining the generally accepted first-principles theory of Sipe and co-workers with a Drude model in order to account for transient intrapulse changes in the optical properties of the material due to the excitation of a dense electron-hole plasma. Our results are capable to explain quantitatively the spatial periods of the LIPSSs being somewhat smaller than…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.02
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Femtosecond
- Materials science
- Laser
- Fluence
- Silicon
- Surface plasmon polariton
- Optics
- Irradiation