posted on 2010-06-24, 10:27authored byColin F. Dowding, Jonathan Lawrence, Andrew Holmes
A closed flowing thick film filtered water immersion technique ensures a controlled geometry
for both the optical interfaces of the flowing liquid film and allows repeatable control of
flow-rate during machining. This has the action of preventing splashing, ensures repeatable
machining conditions and allows control of liquid flow velocity. To investigate the impact of
this technique on ablation threshold, bisphenol A polycarbonate samples have been machined
using KrF excimer laser radiation passing through a medium of filtered water flowing at a
number of flow velocities, that are controllable by modifying the liquid flow rates. An
average decrease in ablation threshold of 7.5% when using turbulent flow velocity regime
closed thick film filtered water immersed ablation, compared to ablation using a similar beam
in ambient air; however, the use of laminar flow velocities resulted in negligible differences
between closed flowing thick film filtered water immersion and ambient air. Plotting the
recorded threshold fluence achieved with varying flow velocity showed that an optimum flow
velocity of 3.00 m/s existed which yeilded a minimum ablation threshold of 112 mJ/cm2. This
is attributed to the distortion of the ablation plume effected by the flowing immersion fluid
changing the ablation mechanism: at laminar flow velocities Bremsstrahlung attenuation
decreases etch rate, at excessive flow velocities the plume is completely destroyed, removing
the effect of plume etching. Laminar flow velocity regime ablation is limited by slow
removal of debris causing a non-linear etch rate over ‘n’ pulses which is a result of debris
produced by one pulse remaining suspended over the feature for the next pulse. The impact of
closed thick film filtered water immersed ablation is dependant upon beam fluence: high
fluence beams achieved greater etch efficiency at high flow velocities as the effect of
Bremsstrahlung attenuation is removed by the action of the fluid on the plume; low fluences
loose efficiency as the beam makes proportionally large fluence losses at it passes through the
chamber window and immersion medium.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
DOWDING, C.F., LAWRENCE, J. and HOLMES, A., 2010. Effects of closed immersion filtered water flow velocity on the ablation threshold of bisphenol A polycarbonate during excimer laser machining. Applied Surface Science, 256(12), pp.3705-3713