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Time resolved study of photopolymer assisted laser-induced forward transfer of thin ceramic films

Time resolved study of photopolymer assisted laser-induced forward transfer of thin ceramic films
Time resolved study of photopolymer assisted laser-induced forward transfer of thin ceramic films
Laser-Induced Forward Transfer (LIFT) is an important direct-write technique for controlled printing of materials and devices with micron and sub-micron resolution [1, 2]. In the conventional LIFT method, melting or ablation of the material to be printed (donor) provides the thrust required for forward transfer, which leads to its damage. To overcome this problem an intermediate thin dynamic release layer (DRL) is sandwiched between the donor and its supporting substrate (carrier) to absorb the incident laser energy in a complementary LIFT technique known as DRL-LIFT. A tailor-made UV-absorbing triazene polymer (TP) has recently shown potential as a DRL material for transferring materials and functional devices [3]. A complete understanding of dynamics of the ablation/transfer mechanism and the dependence on the operating parameters is significant for optimizing various scientific and technological applications. In this paper, recent results of time-resolved study of TP-DRL assisted LIFT of solid phase ceramic materials, gadolinium gallium oxide (Gd-Ga-O) and ytterbium doped yttrium aluminium oxide (Yb:YAG), using conventional ns shadowgraphy technique [4] are presented. The influence of key parameters such as laser fluence, donor and DRL material thicknesses on the transfer process dynamics and quality of the ejected donor (flyer) was also investigated and is discussed here.
Kaur, K.S.
fe008163-e435-41c1-9131-3d4571fb5cf5
Fardel, R.
deddfacf-a8c0-4813-bad6-a7d57a5dc611
May-Smith, T.C.
5f1ae4a3-6ae4-4e0f-9748-b26fd43a2811
Nagel, M.
adec457e-748c-4bf2-9eca-f8d2276a7516
Banks, D.P.
134b4e3e-9c17-4155-a3e6-bd16d5f94be4
Grivas, C.
7f564818-0ac0-4127-82a7-22e87ac35f1a
Lippert, T.
1c958337-d6fe-4ec5-a191-7297f18ba2cd
Eason, R.W.
e38684c3-d18c-41b9-a4aa-def67283b020
Kaur, K.S.
fe008163-e435-41c1-9131-3d4571fb5cf5
Fardel, R.
deddfacf-a8c0-4813-bad6-a7d57a5dc611
May-Smith, T.C.
5f1ae4a3-6ae4-4e0f-9748-b26fd43a2811
Nagel, M.
adec457e-748c-4bf2-9eca-f8d2276a7516
Banks, D.P.
134b4e3e-9c17-4155-a3e6-bd16d5f94be4
Grivas, C.
7f564818-0ac0-4127-82a7-22e87ac35f1a
Lippert, T.
1c958337-d6fe-4ec5-a191-7297f18ba2cd
Eason, R.W.
e38684c3-d18c-41b9-a4aa-def67283b020

Kaur, K.S., Fardel, R., May-Smith, T.C., Nagel, M., Banks, D.P., Grivas, C., Lippert, T. and Eason, R.W. (2009) Time resolved study of photopolymer assisted laser-induced forward transfer of thin ceramic films. 5th International Congress on Laser Advanced Materials Processing (LAMP 2009), Kobe, Japan, Kobe, Japan. 28 Jun - 01 Jul 2009.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Laser-Induced Forward Transfer (LIFT) is an important direct-write technique for controlled printing of materials and devices with micron and sub-micron resolution [1, 2]. In the conventional LIFT method, melting or ablation of the material to be printed (donor) provides the thrust required for forward transfer, which leads to its damage. To overcome this problem an intermediate thin dynamic release layer (DRL) is sandwiched between the donor and its supporting substrate (carrier) to absorb the incident laser energy in a complementary LIFT technique known as DRL-LIFT. A tailor-made UV-absorbing triazene polymer (TP) has recently shown potential as a DRL material for transferring materials and functional devices [3]. A complete understanding of dynamics of the ablation/transfer mechanism and the dependence on the operating parameters is significant for optimizing various scientific and technological applications. In this paper, recent results of time-resolved study of TP-DRL assisted LIFT of solid phase ceramic materials, gadolinium gallium oxide (Gd-Ga-O) and ytterbium doped yttrium aluminium oxide (Yb:YAG), using conventional ns shadowgraphy technique [4] are presented. The influence of key parameters such as laser fluence, donor and DRL material thicknesses on the transfer process dynamics and quality of the ejected donor (flyer) was also investigated and is discussed here.

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More information

Published date: 2009
Venue - Dates: 5th International Congress on Laser Advanced Materials Processing (LAMP 2009), Kobe, Japan, Kobe, Japan, 2009-06-28 - 2009-07-01

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 79009
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/79009
PURE UUID: 1fbf02d5-2371-4fc8-a65b-2d634f211911
ORCID for R.W. Eason: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9704-2204

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 18 Mar 2010
Last modified: 11 Dec 2021 02:44

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Contributors

Author: K.S. Kaur
Author: R. Fardel
Author: T.C. May-Smith
Author: M. Nagel
Author: D.P. Banks
Author: C. Grivas
Author: T. Lippert
Author: R.W. Eason ORCID iD

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