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The role of photoelectronic processes in the formation of a fluorescent plume by 248-nm laser irradiation of single crystal NaNO3

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Abstract.

 Visible fluorescent “plumes” are readily produced when nominally transparent ionic materials are exposed to pulsed UV laser irradiation. Over a wide range of laser fluences where plumes are observed, however, the photon and electron densities are inadequate to support multiphoton ionization and inverse bremsstrahlung, which are often used to explain plasma production and excitation of atomic spectral lines. We present evidence that the great majority of charged particles (electrons and positive ions) comprising the plume at the onset of formation in defect-laden NaNO3 are emitted directly from the surface. A model is described wherein the required electron energy to excite and eventually ionize neutral atoms is provided by electrostatic interactions in the expanding plume. The time evolution of the “overlap” between the expanding charge cloud and thermally emitted neutrals accounts for the time evolution of the atomic line emissions after the laser pulse.

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Received: 15 August 1996/Accepted: 16 August 1996

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Shin, JJ., Ermer, D., Langford, S. et al. The role of photoelectronic processes in the formation of a fluorescent plume by 248-nm laser irradiation of single crystal NaNO3. Appl Phys A 64, 7–17 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003390050438

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003390050438

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