Superhydrophobic surfaces are the most commonly used functional surfaces. Femtosecond laser processing technology has emerged as a useful instrument for producing micro- and nanoscale structures on superhydrophobic surfaces because of its extremely high processing accuracy and highly controlled features. The substrate materials used in this work are AH36 steel plates. By varying the laser processing parameters, the microstructure shapes of steel plate surface are produced. After processing, the samples were allowed to rest in air for 30 days before characterizing their hydrophobicity. The optical and scanning electron microscopy were used to analyze its morphology, and the contact angles were measured. The study demonstrated that the surface roughness, microstructure, and hydrophobicity of AH36 steel plate samples vary with laser parameters. As a result, the AH36 steel plate exhibits the creation of a superhydrophobic surface when the contact angle reaches 151.2°, with a scanning interval of 100 μm between two lines, scanning speed of 10 mm/s, and an energy density of 3.67 J/cm². This is an important result for promoting femtosecond laser in preparing hydrophobic structures on marine metal surface.
The High Temperature Co-fired Ceramic (HTCC) substrate boasts advantages such as high structural strength, high thermal conductivity, and good chemical stability, thus showing broad application prospects in high-power microcircuits. As the circuit board material, it is necessary to use mechanical or laser drilling on the raw porcelain, and the aperture of through hole and position accuracy directly affect the yield and final electrical properties of the substrate. In recent years, laser processing technology has the advantages of high precision, high efficiency, stable performance and no contact, which increasingly become one of the most critical processes of multi-layer ceramic packaging technology. In this paper, the ultraviolet (UV) picosecond laser with pulse width of 15 ps was used for HTCC drilling with thickness of 0.14mm. The laser has a maximum power of 30W at a repetition rate of 600 kHz, a spot size of 20 μm after focusing, and a wavelength of 355nm. By optimizing the process parameters, including laser power, frequency, scanning speed, and repetitions, a minimum through-hole with diameter of 100 μm, with an accuracy of ±5 μm for entrance and exit holes were achieved. Under optical microscope, roundness, taper, and Heat-Affected Zone (HAZ) of hole under different conditions were obtained and analyzed. These results prove that ultra-fast laser processing can be an efficient HTCC drilling technique.
At present, laser cutting has emerged as a new technology in the field of glass cutting to achieve a good quality and high efficiency, that is believed to have a very broad application prospect. In this report, the glass cutting by picosecond laser with a high peak power and a long focal-depth Bessel beam was studied. The maximum power of laser is chosen to be 50 W with a spot size of 2 mm, pulse width of 10 ps, and wavelength of 1064 nm. The frequency is adjustable in the range of 50 KHz to 200 KHz. The factors affecting the cutting roughness was analyzed, including the focus position, speed, and power. Meanwhile, the glass is split by a carbon dioxide laser with the wavelength of 10.6 μm and maximum power is 100 W, which breaks due to internal stress induced by heating. By adjusting the speed, power and focusing position, the good processing parameters for the ultra-white glass with thickness of 4 mm were found. High quality cutting with minimum edge breakage less than 3 μm is confirmed by microscope. Moreover, nonstandard-shaped cutting and straight line cutting with a high speed of 300 mm/s have also achieved in this work. All results demonstrates that ultra-fast laser is a promising tool for glass cutting.
A high-resolution fiber turbidity sensor has been developed to measure the wide dynamic range of turbidity. To improve the accuracy of measurements, the high sensitive single-photon detection technique is adopted in the sensor by using an avalanche photodiode (APD) to detect the total intensity of transmitted light and quantize it to the corresponding number of photons. A theoretical model for turbidity measurement is proposed by combining the B-L transmission law with the single photon counting theory. In order to cover a wide dynamic range measurement based on only one measurement system, an optimal optical power for the sensor must be chosen. Therefore, an experiment is designed to measures the different turbidity solutions by gradually changing the power of incident light. The test results show that, with the increasement of light intensity, the measured data fit better with the theoretical one when the measured turbidity is lower than 0.1NTU. However, the light intensity cannot be increased without limit in high turbidity region, especially when the turbidity is high than 1NTU, since there is a corresponding upper limit for the detection of avalanche photodiode (APD). After the processing and analysis of test data, the test results indicated the sensor can obtain the best measurement accuracy when the optical power of incident light at 11mW. The measured turbidity range is as wide as 50dB from 0.01 to 1000NTU. The proposed fiber sensor is robust and can be used for the wide dynamic turbidity detection for drinking water or some remote monitoring of water pollution.
We proposed an all-fiber tunable distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) laser rangefinder, which realized high-accuracy measurement of the absolute distance in the range of 1.88 to 3.33 m based on the self-mixing effect. The theoretical analysis of the all-fiber tunable DBR laser shows that wavelength tuning range and frequency of the laser can influence the measurement range and resolution. In addition, the experimental results indicate that the influence factors of measurement accuracy and sensitivity in absolute distance measurement are modulation response linearity, experimental equipment, and circuit bandwidth, which is in good agreement with theory analysis. Moreover, increasing the linear wavelength tuning range of the tunable DBR laser is an essential method to improve the measurement accuracy and sensitivity of the absolute distance measurement system.
A compact external cavity fiber laser has been proposed by using a silver diaphragm as the end-coupled cavity of Distributed Bragg Reflector. In this paper, structure and performance of the optimized all-fiber laser with external cavity is in good agreement with the theoretical analysis and numerical simulation. Meanwhile, experimental results demonstrate that the external cavity laser based on Distributed Bragg Reflector fiber laser could reduce threshold pump power from 25.6mW to 24.0mW and narrow the linewidth from 28.3kHz to 16.4kHz.
In this paper, a simple structure, low-cost all-fiber laser self-mixing vibration sensing system is designed for monitoring the health status of thin-walled structures which are workpieces in machining, for resolving the interferential problems with the existing vibration measurement system, caused by the cruel environment such as electromagnetic interference, humidity. In this system, a distributed feedback all-fiber laser with ultra-short cavity length is used as the light source, and the real-time monitoring of vibration state of plate under different positions of forced vibration sources is observed. The experimental results show that when the forced vibration source located at the free end or the restricted end of the plate, the measurable self-mixing signals (signal-to-noise ratio up to 30dB) is available at any position. Moreover, it will help us to analysis the specification and the physical mechanism of the forced vibration, by studying this all-fiber laser self-mixing vibration sensor in detail.
An all-fiber structure detection system based on single photon detection technique(SPDT) has been developed to measure the ultra-low turbidity ofliquids. To assure the measurement accuracy,the total intensity of transmission light has been detected and quantified as number of photons by avalanche photodiode (APD) which has the advantage of high sensitivity.A fresh all-fiber structure optical fiber probe based on SPDT is applied in the system to reduce the volume and fluctuation of traditional transmission-light measurement system,in which the all-fiber structure probe is used to delivery and collection of transmission light.On the basis of Beer-Lambert (B-L) transmission law,a test system has been established and carried out a series of experiments.By combining B-Llaw with the principle of SPDT,a novel model for detecting turbidity has been proposed to explain the experimental results.The results have shown a well exponential relationship over the range of 0.01–1NTU (Nephelometric Turbidity Units).It also has showna good linear relationship with a resolution as high as 0.01NTUin the range of 0.01-0.09 NTU.When it is 1 secondofthe sampling time,the mean error of measurement result can be controlled within 5% of full scale.In addition,the new detection structure proposed in this paper, which makes the system more compact and more suitable in the small special space.
In this paper, we presented a waveform reconstruction method based on the self-mixing interference of DFB fiber laser by phase modulating technique, which is superior to the traditional vibration measurement system due to the wider measurement range and higher accuracy. In our sinusoidal phase modulation technology, the vibration information of the external target is extracted by the Fourier transformation method. For restoring the micro-vibration of the external target effectively with high precision, theoretical analysis and numerical simulations of phase modulation method based on the Distribution Feedback Bragg fiber laser are introduced in detail.
A method for the measurement of the absolute distance based on wavelength tuning technology of DBR fiber laser is presented. Experimental results show that the fringe number of the self-mixing signal and the target distance can reach a good linear relationship which agreed with the simulation results well. This paper demonstrate that DBR fiber laser present a powerful tool for the self-mixing technique and provide measurement of the distance up to 3.33 meters.
In this paper, a laser diode vibrometer based on the self-mixing interference effect is proposed. A prototype of the laser
diode self-mixing vibrometer has been assembled and optimized. The self-mixing signals have been observed in the laser
diode self-mixing vibration measurement system when the external object (PZT) is driven by function generator.
Experimental result is given and discussed. The self-mixing vibrometer could reach high resolution with a wide dynamic
measurement range up to 22 KHz.
In this paper, numerical simulation and analysis of the sensitivity of Strength-based Optical Fiber Sensors (SOFS) have
been reported .The results simulated show that suitable operating point can improve sensitivity of the sensing system
greatly even up to 3.6%. This conclusion can provide theoretical support for optimizing actual strength-based optical
fiber sensors with higher sensitivity.
We present a theoretical analysis and a comparison to experimental results on self-mixing interference. From the theoretical analysis and experiment, the error of the velocity measurement, which is caused by a speckle pattern, has been investigated and optimization of the laser diode velocity system by selecting suitable experiment parameters and proper signal processing methods has been reported. The actual measurement error is <3.1% over a wide velocity range (5.2-479 mm/s).
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.