The propagation of ultrashort sound pulses in water has been studied by using the picosecond ultrasonic technique and a pulse time-of-flight technique for measuring the depths of deep channels in Si-based nanostructure was demonstrated. The sound pulses were generated when light was absorbed in a metal transducer film and detected by a time-delayed probe light pulse. First, the attenuation and velocity of sound of frequency 4.8 GHz in water were measured through an analysis of the Brillouin frequency oscillations in the reflectivity of the probe light. Measurements at frequencies up to about 11 GHz were made by sending a sound pulse across a thin layer of water and measuring the change in shape of the returning echo due to the attenuation of the different Fourier components. Second, we also report on proof-of-concept ultrasonic experiments to acquire spatial profile information from nanostructures, where sound pulses propagate down narrow channels in patterned nanostructures. We have been able to detect acoustic echoes for sound propagating along a channel as narrow as 35 nm.
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