Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/3530

TítuloThe mesoscopic modeling of laser ablation
Autor(es)Stoneham, A. M.
Ramos, Marta M. D.
Ribeiro, R. M.
Palavras-chaveGap single-crystals
Semiconductor surfaces
Radiation
MgO
Defects
DataDez-1999
EditoraSpringer Verlag
RevistaApplied Physics A: Materials Science & Processing
Citação"Applied Physics A : Materials Science & Processing". ISSN 0947-8396. 69:Suppl.1 (1999) 81-86.
Resumo(s)It is common to look at the atomic processes of removal of atoms or ions from surfaces. At this microscopic scale, one has to understand which surface ions are involved, which excited states are created, how electrons are transferred and scattered, and how the excitation leads to ion removal. It is even more common to look at continuum models of energy deposition in solids, and at the subsequent heat transfer In these macroscopic analyses, thermal conduction is combined with empirical assumptions about surface binding. Both these pictures are useful, and both pictures have weaknesses. The atomistic pictures concentrate on relatively few atoms, and do not recognize structural features or the energy and carrier fluxes on larger scales. The continuum macroscopic models leave out crystallographic information and the interplay of the processes with high nonequilibrium at smaller scales. Fortunately, there is a middle way: mesoscopic modeling, which both models the key microstructural features and provides a link between microscopic and macroscopic. In a mesoscopic model, the length scale is determined by the system; often this scale is similar to the grain size. Microstructural features like grain boundaries or dislocations are considered explicitly. The time scale in a mesoscopic model is determined by the ablation process (such as the pulse length:) rather than the short time limitations of molecular dynamics, yet the highly nonequilibrium behavior is adequately represented. Mesoscopic models are especially important when key process rates vary on a short length scale. Some microstructural feature (like those in dentine or dental enamel) may absorb light much more than others; other features (like grain boundaries) may capture carriers readily, or allow easier evaporation, or capture and retain charge (like grain boundaries); it is these processes which need a mesoscopic analysis. The results described will be taken largely from the work on MgO of Ribeiro, Ramos, and Stoneham for ablation by sub-band Sap light.
TipoArtigo
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/3530
DOI10.1007/s003399900249
ISSN0947-8396
Versão da editorahttp://www.springerlink.com/(spxry155h4vowd20rrwug555)/app/home/main.asp?referrer=default
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso aberto
Aparece nas coleções:CDF - FCT - Artigos/Papers (with refereeing)

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