Paper
22 September 1987 Surface Treatment By Laser Generated Shock Waves
Ph. Bournot, D. Dufresne, M. Autric, P. Giovanneschi-Testud, C. Coquerelle
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0801, High Power Lasers: Sources, Laser-Material Interactions, High Excitations, and Fast Dynamics; (1987) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.941258
Event: Fourth International Symposium on Optical and Optoelectronic Applied Sciences and Engineering, 1987, The Hague, Netherlands
Abstract
A study of surface treatment by laser generated shock waves was carried out on various materials. A plasma trapping device enabled intense shock waves to be obtained with attenuated thermal effects. A hardening of 50 % over 1 mm of thickness was obtained on aluminium samples. Amongst the different surface treatment techniques which seem the most promising is that using a high power pulse laser. With the new technique it is possible to obtain intense shock waves over large surfaces of whatever form at the same time as attenuated thermal effects without creating bulk deformation. An experimental study of surface treatment by shock waves generated by an Nd-YAG pulse laser (30 J, 25 ns) was carried out on metals (aluminium, titanium, steel). To obtain high pressures (40 Kbar) with moderate energies and not very high laser intensities (109 W/cm2), a containment device for the plasma resulting from the interaction and the easily vaporizable materials was used. A analysis showed a hardening of more than 50 % over a surface of 0.6 cm2 throughout the thickness of an aluminium sample (1 mm). No hardening effect was observed for the other metals. These results were obtained without optimization of the trapping technique. Better control of this will enable a hardening effect to be obtained on other metals.
© (1987) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ph. Bournot, D. Dufresne, M. Autric, P. Giovanneschi-Testud, and C. Coquerelle "Surface Treatment By Laser Generated Shock Waves", Proc. SPIE 0801, High Power Lasers: Sources, Laser-Material Interactions, High Excitations, and Fast Dynamics, (22 September 1987); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.941258
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KEYWORDS
Plasma

Thermal effects

High power lasers

Metals

Pulsed laser operation

Aluminum

Glasses

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