Publication database
Dynamics of pulsed laser-induced cavities on a liquid–gas interface: from a conical splash to a ‘bullet’ jet
The inception of a cavitation bubble in a liquid by focusing a short and intense laser pulse near its free surface develops not only an upwards directed jet, but a second jet of opposite direction into the bulk liquid. When the laser is focused a few microns below the surface, the rapid deposition of energy produces a splash, whose later sealing gives origin to two particularly elongated opposing jets. Interestingly, the evolution of the downward jet flowing into the liquid pool has many similarities to that observed in free water entry experiments, e.g. the creation of a slender and stable cavity in the liquid. The downward jet can reach speeds of up to 40 m s−1 and travels distances of more than 15 times the maximum radius of the laser induced cavity before losing momentum. The longer lifetime of this so-called ‘bullet’ jet as compared with conventional cavitation based jets, the alignment of the jet perpendicular to the free surface and the possibility of scaling the phenomenon opens up potential applications when generated on small droplets or in shallow liquids. In this work, the underlying mechanisms behind the formation of the bullet jets are initially investigated by performing a set of experiments designed to address specific questions about the phenomenon under study. Those were followed by numerical simulations used to give a quantitative and detailed explanation to the experimental observations.
Heterogeneous cavitation from atomically smooth liquid-liquid interfaces
High-Harmonic Generation from Resonant Dielectric Metasurfaces Empowered by Bound States in the Continuum
Optical bound states in the continuum (BICs) underpin the existence of strongly localized waves embedded into the radiation spectrum. Here we bring the concept of BICs to the field of high-harmonic generation and employ resonant dielectric metasurfaces to generate efficiently optical harmonics up to the 11th order. We design BIC-resonant metasurfaces with a broken in-plane symmetry for the lower harmonics and then observe a transition to the nonlinear regime for higher harmonics. Our approach bridges the fields of perturbative and nonperturbative nonlinear optics on the subwavelength scale.
Second harmonic generation microscopy of otoconia
The origin of second harmonic generation (SHG) signal in otoconia was investigated. SHG signal intensity from otoconia was compared to pure calcite crystals, given calcite is the primary component of otoconia and is known to emit surface SHG. The SHG intensity from calcite was found to be ∼41× weaker than the SHG intensity from otoconia signifying that the SHG signal from otoconia is likely generated from the organic matrix. Furthermore, the SHG intensity from otoconia increased when treated with a chelating agent known to dissolve calcite which confirms that calcite is not the source of SHG. Additionally, polarization-resolved SHG microscopy imaging revealed that the arrangement of the SHG emitters is radial and can form highly ordered domains.
Spatially Variable Wave Plate for Depolarization Compensation Induced in High-Power Yb:YAG Amplifier
In this work we present a novel method for depolarization compensation based on spatially variable wave plate. Thermally induced depolarization losses were reduced from 14.3% to 1.3% and bifocusing eliminated in a double-pass Yb:YAG amplifier.
The Rayleigh prolongation factor at small bubble to wall stand-off distances
The Rayleigh collapse time is the time it would take to shrink an empty spherical bubble in an infinite liquid domain to zero size, which is a function of ambient pressure and initial bubble radius. If a solid boundary is located in the vicinity of the shrinking or collapsing bubble, then liquid flow is hindered, such that the collapse time is prolonged. This can be quantified with the Rayleigh prolongation factor k. Here, we provide k for intermediate to smallest bubble to wall stand-off distances. It is measured with single laser-induced cavitation bubbles in water close to a solid boundary. Maximum bubble radii are determined from microscopic high-speed imaging at one million frames per second. Collapse times are measured acoustically via the acoustic transients emitted during bubble seeding and collapse. The experimental findings are compared, with good agreement, to numerical simulations based on a volume of fluid method. As a result, a polynomial fit of k versus stand-off distance is given for the near-wall bubble collapse in water. Then the influence of the viscosity on k is studied numerically in the near-wall regime.
Thermally Assisted Heterogeneous Cavitation through Gas Supersaturation
We demonstrate that besides gaseous pockets also a gas supersaturated spot on a substrate can be a nucleus for cavitation. The supersaturation is achieved by either a formerly dissolved bubble or by heating locally the surface below the boiling temperature. The experiments are conducted in a thin film of water; one side of the water film is in contact with a gold coated substrate that is heated by a continuous laser through plasmonic heating. For nucleation of a bubble, the pressure at the heated spot is reduced by a transient rarefaction wave. The experimental findings suggest that the local gas supersaturation is responsible to nucleate cavitation and thus connects the phase transitions of cavitation and boiling. Additionally, the pressure waves in the liquid gap are studied numerically.
Tissue photothermal effect based on photoacoustic temperature feedback control
Hotothermal therapy (PTT) is an alternative to surgery, which is commonly used to treat tumors in intracavitary organs. PTT involves heating the diseased tissue with radiation energy, resulting in tumor necrosis. In order to improve the safety and effectiveness of PT, it is necessary to monitor the tissue temperature in real time and regulate the laser power during PTT. Photoacoustic imaging (PAI) is a non-invasive and non-ionizing imaging method with high resolution and high accuracy. Due to the dependence of the thermal expansion coefficient on temperature, the Grüneisen parameter is linearly proportional to temperature, and the variation of the amplitude of the photoacoustic signal is related to the variation of the Grüneisen parameter. In this study, we propose a system for laser dose regulation with photoacoustic signal temperature feedback based on PID algorithm. The pulsed laser is irradiated on the sample surface, the ultrasonic probe receives the photoacoustic signal generated by the sample, and the photoacoustic signal is collected by the oscilloscope and transmitted to the computer, which generates the corresponding command to the heating laser according to the signal and changes the output power of the heating laser. The experimental results show that this method can effectively control the photothermal damage range.
Utilising nanosecond sources in diffuse optical tomography
Diffuse optical tomography (DOT) use near-infrared light for imaging optical properties of biological tissues. Time-domain (TD) DOT systems use pulsed lasers and measure time-varying temporal point spread function (TPSF), carrying information from both superficial and deep layers of imaged target. In this work, feasibility of nanosecond scale light pulses as sources for TD-DOT is studied. Nanosecond sources enable using relatively robust measurement setups with standard analogue-to-digital converter waveform digitizers, such as digital oscilloscopes. However, this type of systems have some properties, such as variations in source pulses and limited temporal sampling, that could limit their usage. In this work, these different aspects and possible limitations were studied with simulations and experiments. Simulations showed that information carried by TD data of diffuse medium is on low frequencies. This enables usage of relatively slow response time measurement electronics, and image processing using Fourier-transformed TD data. Furthermore, the temporal sampling in measurements needs to be high enough to capture the TPSF, but this rate can be achieved with standard digital oscilloscopes. It was shown that, although variations in light pulses of nanosecond lasers are larger than those of picosecond sources, these variations do not affect significantly on image quality. Overall, the simulations demonstrated the capability of nanosecond sources to be utilised in TD-DOT in diffuse medium. In this work, a prototype TD-DOT experimental system utilising a high-energy nanosecond laser was constructed. The system is relatively robust consisting of a nanosecond Nd:YAG laser combined with optical parametric oscillator for light input and optical fibres for guiding the light, and avalanche photodetector and high-bandwidth oscilloscope for TPSF measurements. The system was used in both absolute and difference imaging of two phantoms. The experiments verified that both absorbing and scattering objects can be reconstructed with good accuracy with TD-DOT using a nanosecond laser.
Computationally Efficient Forward Operator for Photoacoustic Tomography Based on Coordinate Transformations
Photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is an imaging modality that utilizes the photoacoustic effect. In PAT, a photoacoustic image is computed from measured data by modeling ultrasound propagation in the imaged domain and solving an inverse problem utilizing a discrete forward operator. However, in realistic measurement geometries with several ultrasound transducers and relatively large imaging volume, an explicit formation and use of the forward operator can be computationally prohibitively expensive. In this work, we propose a transformation-based approach for efficient modeling of photoacoustic signals and reconstruction of photoacoustic images. In the approach, the forward operator is constructed for a reference ultrasound transducer and expanded into a general measurement geometry using transformations that map the formulated forward operator in local coordinates to the global coordinates of the measurement geometry. The inverse problem is solved using a Bayesian framework. The approach is evaluated with numerical simulations and experimental data. The results show that the proposed approach produces accurate 3-D photoacoustic images with a significantly reduced computational cost both in memory requirements and time. In the studied cases, depending on the computational factors, such as discretization, over the 30-fold reduction in memory consumption was achieved without a reduction in image quality compared to a conventional approach.