Ultrafast Laser Interaction Processes for LIBS and other Sensing Technologies

Army Office of Research
Ultrafast, Non-Equilibrium Laser-Material Interactions

Program Summary

This program is driven by the impact a comprehensive understanding of the interaction of intense ultra-short laser with matter will have on the use of Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) for point-source, man-portable and stand-off detection of chemical and biological agents, explosives like IED’s and suicide belts, and other threats. This technique has up to now relied largely on conventional (ns) pulsed lasers, since they are available in compact, rugged packages at reasonable cost. Femtosecond lasers, at present complex, costly and immobile, have not for the most part been considered practical for LIBS. However new generations of compact, modular efficient ultrafast fiber, diode or thin-disc lasers are on the horizon.

Femtosecond lasers offer many advantages for LIBS; light coupling, ablation and plasma formation are deterministic, background signals from plasma light and atmospheric plasma mixing are reduced. Beyond these however, because ultrafast lasers interact with materials primarily through nonlinear processes, they present totally new pathways that will transform the landscape for LIBS and the detection of explosives and chemical and biological agents. These nonlinear processes will open new paradigms for LIBS, manipulating the pulse format, wavelengths, and plasma states for different target matrices in ways of providing higher spectral emission and selectivity. Moreover, a unique feature promises to negate partially the range issue with stand-off LIBS. Femtosecond laser self-channeling (FLSC) is a phenomenon where intense ultra-fast laser pulses propagating through the atmosphere defy the normal laws of divergence and instead slowly self-focus, transforming themselves into self-sustaining microscopic optical waveguides, packing an energy density potentially capable of ionizing material at kilometer distances. If FLSC can be combined with LIBS, sensing at distances over hundred meters will be possible with modest-size lasers.

This program seeks to understand, and then exploit, the interaction of femtosecond laser light with materials towards maximizing spectroscopic signatures of weak contaminants in a range of chemical matrices.  To this end we have assembled a team of experts in a diverse range of disciplines (ultra-fast laser interaction science, dense plasma physics, nano-particle science, plasma plume chemistry, spectroscopy and energetic materials) to achieve this goal with two primary objectives.

  • We will systematically assemble a comprehensive understanding of all the physical and chemical processes that can occur in high intensity femtosecond interaction with matter in ambient gas environments. We expect this to be in the form of an interleaving matrix of models, validated and developed with the aid of specific experiments, describing all facets of laser light interaction, plasma dynamics, plume formation, atomic, molecular and chemical dynamics and spectroscopic emission over a broad range of laser irradiation and target scenarios.
  • We will use this knowledge to develop specific interaction regimes, with tuned laser characteristics, that maximize spectroscopic identification of weak contaminants, in a variety of formats (solids, thin films, aerosols, liquids, particulates, etc). This new discipline of ultrafast plasma design will open new options for detection technologies. Not only will it extend LIBS techniques as we know them today, but it may introduce new and more powerful methods for spectro-chemical analysis. Our interaction models, and the regimes we invent using them will be the basis of new detection technologies, perhaps incorporating interdiction techniques, for personnel and asset protection on the battlefield, perimeter defense, homeland security, narcotics-detection, and other applications.
Participants
Martin Richardson
Laser Plasma Laboratory, College of Optics & Photonics, CREOL
University of Central Florida, 4000, Central Florida Blvd, Orlando 35816-2700
Tel: 407 823 6819
Fax 407 823 6880
Email: mcr@creol.ucf.edu
In collaboration with Co-Investigators
Dennis R. Alexander
Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE
Tel:402 472 3091
Email: dalexander1@unl.edu
Paul J. Dagdigian
Department of Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
Tel: (410) 516 8420
Email: pjdagdigian@jhu.edu
Lewis E. Johnson
Department of Physics, Florida A&M University, Tallahassee, FL
Tel: 850 599 8456
Email: lewis@cennas.nhmfl.gov
Michael E. Sigman
Department of Chemistry & Assistant Director National Center for Forensic Science
University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL 32816
Tel: (407) 823 6469
Email: msigman@mail.ucf.edu

And

Michael J Nusca
US Army Research Laboratories, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD
Tel (410) 278 6108
Email: nusca@arl.army.mil
Richard E. Russo
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley CA
Tel (510) 486-4258
Email: rerusso@lbl.gov
Robert Fedosejevs
Dept Electr. Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, CAN Tel: (780) 492 5330
Email: rfed@ee.ualberta.ca
Roy Walters
Ocean Optics Inc., Winter Park, FL Tel: 407 673 0041
Email: royw@oceanoptics.com


Found 12935 publications.

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Books
2025
Bahaa E. A. Saleh. "Quantum Photonics Bimodes, Qubits, and Biphotons". Springer Cham
2024
Jean-Claude Diels, Martin C. Richardson and Ladan Arissan. "Light Filaments: Structures, challenges and applications". SciTech Publishing
2020
Jiun-Haw Lee, David N. Liu and Shin-Tson Wu. "Introduction to Flat Panel Displays, Second Edition". Wiley ISBN: 978-1-119-28227-3
2020
Jiun-Haw Lee, I-Chun Cheng, Hong Hua, and Shin-Tson Wu. "Introduction to Flat Panel Displays, 2nd Edition". Wiley
2020
Konstantin L. Vodopyanov. "Laser-based Mid-infrared Sources and Applications". Wiley
2019
Ivan Divliansky - editor. "Advances in high-power fiber and diode laser engineering". ISBN-13: 978-1-78561-751-5, 2019
2017
K.L. Vodopyanov, K. Schepler. "Nonlinear frequency generation and conversion: materials, devices, and applications XVI". Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XV, Proceedings of SPIE, 10088
2016
K.L. Vodopyanov, K. Scheppler. "Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XV". Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XV, Proceedings of SPIE, Volume 9731
2015
K.L. Vodopyanov. "Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XIV". Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XIV, Proceedings of SPIE, Volume 9347
2014
Deng-Ke Yang and Shin-Tson Wu. "Fundamentals of Liquid Crystal Devices (Second Edition)". Wiley
2014
Dengke Yang and Shin-Tson Wu. "Fundamentals of Liquid Crystal Devices, 2nd edition". Wiley
2014
Matthieu Baudelet (editor). "Laser spectroscopy for sensing: Fundamentals, techniques and applications". Matthieu Baudelet, “Laser spectroscopy for sensing: Fundamentals, techniques and applications”, Woodhead Publishing Ltd (2014)
2014
Konstantin L. Vodopyanov. "Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XIII". Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XIII, Proceedings of SPIE, Volume 8964
2013
Konstantin Vodopyanov, Yehoshua Kalisky. "Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XII". Konstantin L. Vodopyanov, Yehoshua Kalisky (ed.), "Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XII," Proceedings of SPIE, Volume 8604
2012
R. Driggers, M. Friedman, and J. Nichols. "Introduction to Infrared and Electro-Optical Systems: Second Edition". Artech House
2012
H. Ren and S. T. Wu. "Introduction to Adaptive Lenses". Wiley
2012
Konstantin L. Vodopyanov. "Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XI". Konstantin L. Vodopyanov (ed.), “Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials, Devices, and Applications XI,” Proceedings of SPIE, Volume 8240, 2012
2012
S. Fathpour and B. Jalali, Editors. "Silicon Photonics for Telecommunications and Biomedicine". CRC Press (2012).
2011
Z. Chang. "Fundamentals of Attosecond Optics". CRC Press
2011
B. E. A. Saleh. "Introduction to Subsurface Imaging". Cambridge University Press
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