Shock waves are generated by pulse discharges in the cavity of excimer lasers. The shock waves cause arcing, nonhomogeneous excitation of laser gas and limitation of repetition rate of a high-repetition-rate excimer laser. Distribution of temperature rise by pulse discharge is an essential factor for generation and propagation of shock waves. Gas temperature profiles in the discharge region of the excimer laser cavity are measured by a laser schlieren method for single-pulse operations. The results show that the temperature distribution depends on the xenon concentration. In the cases of pure helium and higher xenon concentration, the temperature distributions are steeper than those in the cases of lower xenon concentration.
There have been few experimental reports on cryogenic two-phase fluids and cavitation phenomena using the irradiation of pulsed high-power laser. This paper describes an investigation of the behavior of laser induced cavitation bubble in cryogenic liquid nitrogen. The bubble is produced by a pulsed ruby laser focused in the special cryostat. The production, growth, and rebound phenomena of the bubbles are visualized by diffusive shadowgraph technique with an image-converter camera. To compare with the experimental results, a numerical study has also been performed on the dynamics of a single spherical bubble in liquid nitrogen under the conditions of nonequilibrium phase change.
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