Session H6: Applications of Free Electron Lasers I

8:30 AM–10:18 AM, Sunday, April 23, 2006
Hyatt Regency Dallas - Cumberland J

Sponsoring Units: DPB FIAP
Chair: Alan Todd, Advanced Energy Systems

Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.APR.H6.2

Abstract: H6.00002 : Infrared Pulsed Laser Deposition: Applications in Photonics and Biomedical Technologies

9:06 AM–9:42 AM

Preview Abstract

Author:

  Richard Haglund
    (Vanderbilt University)

Resonant infrared pulsed-laser deposition (RIR-PLD) shows significant promise for synthesizing thin films of small organic molecules, thermoplastic and thermosetting polymers and biopolymers, without compromising structure or functionality. This contrasts with most attempts at UV-PLD of organic materials, which have often been accompanied by severe photochemical or photothermal degradation of the ablated material. Representative recent successes in RIR-PLD include deposition of: polymers for light emission and hole transport; functionalized polymers and nanoparticles for chemical and biological sensing; and biocompatible polymers suitable for coating medical devices or drug-delivery vehicles. Plume imaging and various other optical- and mass-spectroscopy experiments appear to confirm that polymers or organic molecules ablated by resonant infrared laser irradiation experience a high spatial and temporal density of vibrational excitation, but tend to remain in the electronic ground state. The mechanism of RIR-PLD is observed to depend on the anharmonicity of the mid-infrared absorption modes, their finite relaxation time, mode-specific nonlinear absorption, and rapid changes in polymer viscosity as a function of temperature. Many of the RIR-PLD experiments to date were carried out using a tunable, mid-infrared, picosecond free-electron laser. However, if RIR-PLD is to become a practical tool for making organic thin films, it will be necessary to develop more conventional lasers that can achieve a similar combination of high pulse intensity, low pulse energy, high pulse-repetition frequency and moderate average power. In conclusion, the prospects for developing precisely such table-top RIR-PLD systems will be discussed.

To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.APR.H6.2