Saturable absorption ͑SA͒ and reverse saturable absorption ͑RSA͒ at 532 nm were observed in Ag nanodots prepared by pulsed laser deposition. The real ͓Re ͑3͒ ͔ and imaginary ͓Im ͑3͒ ͔ parts of the third order nonlinearity of these films were measured using the Z-scan technique. At low input irradiances, the decrease in absorption near the focal point results from a negative Im ͑3͒ and yields SA. At higher input irradiance, RSA becomes dominant. The transition from SA to RSA suggests that there is a threshold irradiance at which additional nonlinear process͑es͒ is ͑are͒ involved and become dominant. The recovery time of these nonlinear processes was measured by a degenerate pump-probe experiment. The effects are explained in terms of the electron dynamics in the excited states.
The laser ablation characteristics of yttria-stabilized zirconia ͑YSZ͒ have been investigated as a function of the target microstructure and dopant level for different nanosecond-͓ArF, KrF, and XeCl excimers; Nd:YAG ͑yttrium aluminum garnet͒ ͑fourth harmonic͔͒ and femtosecond-laser sources ͓Ti:sapphire ͑fundamental and third harmonic͔͒. Particle ejection, which compromises the quality of coatings prepared by pulsed laser deposition ͑PLD͒, was analyzed in detail. Nanosecond-laser pulses cause a severe thermomechanical surface cracking and exfoliation of micron-sized fragments on a microsecond to millisecond time scale in the case of 8 -9.5 mol % Y 2 O 3 -doped, fully stabilized zirconia ͑8YSZ and 9.5YSZ͒ targets. As a consequence of the intrinsic material brittleness, fully stabilized YSZ coatings deposited by PLD contained particles for all tested conditions. Lower doped partially stabilized zirconia ͑3YSZ͒ exhibits a superior fracture toughness attributed to a laser-induced partial transition to the monoclinic phase, detected by Raman spectroscopy, which enables the deposition of particle-free dense thin films by conventional PLD using nanosecond-UV laser radiation at moderate fluences of 1.2-1.5 J / cm 2 . The ablation dynamics of ultrashort laser pulses differ fundamentally from the nanosecond regime as evidenced, e.g., by time-resolved shadowgraphy and light scattering experiments. Femtosecond pulses prevent the exfoliation of micron-sized fragments but result invariably in a pronounced ejection of submicron particles. The resulting PLD coatings are porous and reveal a large surface roughness as they consist of an agglomeration of nanoparticles. Femtosecond-NIR pulses provide a factor of 2.5-10 higher material removal rates compared to nanosecond-and femtosecond-UV pulses. The ablation metrics, i.e., threshold fluence and effective absorptivity, mainly depend on the laser wavelength while the pulse duration, target microstructure, and dopant level are of minor importance. Evidence is presented that incubation effects play a significant role in nanosecond-and femtosecond-laser ablations of YSZ enabling material removal at comparatively low fluences for sub-bandgap photon energies.
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