Burn-through of thin aluminum foils by laser-driven ablation

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Abstract

Aluminum foils 1-75 μm thick were irradiated by 500-psec Nd-glass laser pulses with intensities 6×1012 to 1014 W/cm 2. The reflected and transmitted light and the produced x rays were measured using PIN photodiodes and crystal spectrometers. Two torsion pendula were used to measure the target and the plasma momenta. Both measurements are consistent with a simple hydrodynamic model. We obtain plasma pressures in the range 1.5-13 Mbars, shock-wave velocities between 0.9×106 and 2.6×106 cm/sec, penetration depths of the ablation surface in the domain of 3-10 μm for laser intensities in the range 6×10 12 to 1014 W/cm2. The burn-through times (i.e., the times that a hole is opened in the foil) for foils 25, 50, and 75 μm thick are measured to be 8±5, 18±5, and 25±5 nsec, respectively.

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Arad, B., Eliezer, S., Gazit, Y., Loebenstein, H. M., Zigler, A., Zmora, H., & Zweigenbaum, S. (1979). Burn-through of thin aluminum foils by laser-driven ablation. Journal of Applied Physics, 50(11), 6817–6821. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.325878

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