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Author

David Graper

Bio: David Graper is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Ultrashort pulse. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications receiving 7 citations.

Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
08 Sep 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, a modified Michelson interferometer was used to measure transverse coherence of the beam as it propagates in a cylindrical channel, and the authors showed that as the beam propagates down the channel, it will decompose over the dispersive waveguide modes, and this will affect the beam coherence, ultimately limiting the maximum depth that the beam can reach.
Abstract: Pulsetrain-burst machining has been shown to have advantages over single-pulse laser processing of materials and biological tissues. Ultrafast lasers are often able to drill holes in brittle and other difficult materials without cracking or swelling the target material, as is sometimes the case for nanosecond-pulse ablation; further, pulsetrain-bursts of ultrafast pulses are able to recondition the material during processing for instance, making brittle materials more ductile and striking advantages can result. In the work we report, we have investigated hole-drilling characteristics in metal and glass, using a Nd:glass pulsetrain-burst laser (1054 nm) delivering 1-10 ps pulses at 133 MHz, with trains 3-15 μs long. We show that as the beam propagates down the channel being drilled, the beam loses transverse coherence, and that this affects the etch-rate and characteristics of channel shape: as the original Gaussian beam travels into the channel, new boundary conditions are imposed on the propagating beam principally the boundary conditions of a cylindrical channel, and also the effects of plasma generated at the walls as the aluminum is ablated. As a result, the beam will decompose over the dispersive waveguide modes, and this will affect the transverse coherence of the beam as it propagates, ultimately limiting the maximum depth that laser-etching can reach. To measure transverse beam coherence, we use a Youngs two-slit interference setup. By measuring the fringe visibility for various slit separations, we can extract the transverse coherence as a function of displacement across the beam. However, this requires many data runs for different slit separations. Our solution to this problem is a novel approach to transverse coherence measurements: a modified Michelson interferometer. Flipping the beam left-right on one arm, we can interfere the beam with its own mirror-image and characterise the transverse coherence across the beam in a single shot.

3 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
28 Sep 2005
TL;DR: In this article, a pulsetrain-burst micromachining was used to mitigate damage in fused silica, dielectric coatings, and inorganic crystals such as KD*P crystals.
Abstract: Ultrafast-laser micromachining has promise as an approach to trimming and 'healing' small laser-produced damage sites in laser-system optics--a common experience in state-of-the-art high-power laser systems. More-conventional approaches currently include mechanical micromachining, chemical modification, and treatment using cw and long-pulse lasers. Laser-optics materials of interest include fused silica, multilayer dielectric stacks for anti-reflection coatings or high-reflectivity mirrors, and inorganic crystals such as KD*P, used for Pockels cells and frequency-doubling. We report on novel efforts using ultrafast-laser pulsetrain-burst processing (microsecond bursts at 133 MHz) to mitigate damage in fused silica, dielectric coatings, and KD*P crystals. We have established the characteristics of pulsetrain-burst micromachining in fused silica, multilayer mirrors, and KD*P, and determined the etch rates and morphology under different conditions of fluence-delivery. From all of these, we have begun to identify new means to optimize the laser-repair of optics defects and damage.

2 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
21 May 2006
TL;DR: In this article, the background science and application to mitigation of high-power laser-induced damage is described, and the application of laser pulsetrain-burst processing is discussed.
Abstract: Ultrafast-laser pulsetrain-burst processing (microsecond bursts at 100 MHz) is an option for fluence-delivery which leads to exceptional characteristics of morphology and processing-rates; we describe the background science and application to mitigation of high-power laser-induced damage.

1 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
22 May 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe studies in fused silica and crystals and describe how damage to optics caused by lasers may be mitigated by material-processing with ultrafast lasers, where high repetition rate pulsetrains afford special control of residual heat.
Abstract: Damage to optics caused by lasers may be mitigated by material-processing with ultrafast lasers. Ultrahigh (<100 MHz) repetition-rate pulsetrains afford special control of residual heat. We describe studies in fused silica and crystals.

1 citations


Cited by
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Patent
01 Aug 2013
TL;DR: An apparatus, method, and process that includes a substantially transparent substrate having a first surface, a second surface, and an edge extending around at least a portion of a perimeter of the transparent substrate, wherein the edge being a laser induced channel edge having enhanced edge characteristics is described in this article.
Abstract: An apparatus, method, and process that includes a substantially transparent substrate having a first surface, a second surface, and edge extending around at least a portion of a perimeter of the substantially transparent substrate, wherein the edge being a laser induced channel edge having enhanced edge characteristics.

38 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that ultrafast laser pulses delivered in a pulse-train burst mode of radiant exposure can access new degrees of control of the interaction process and of the heat left behind in tissues.
Abstract: Ultrafast laser pulses ( ≤ 1 ps) are qualitatively different in the nature of their interaction with materi- als, including biotissues, as compared to nanosecond or longer pulses. This can confer pronounced advan- tages in outcomes for tissue therapy or laser surgery. At the same time, there are distinct limitations of their strong-field mode of interaction. As an alternative, it is shown here that ultrafast laser pulses delivered in a pulse-train burst mode of radiant exposure can access new degrees of control of the interaction process and of the heat left behind in tissues. Using a laser system that delivers 1 ps pulses in 20 μ s pulse-train bursts at 133 MHz repetition rates, a range of heat and energy-trans- fer effects on hard and soft tissue have been studied. The ablation of tooth dentin and enamel under various conditions, to assess the ablation rate and character- ize chemical changes that occur, are reported. This is compared to ablation in agar gels, useful live-cell-cul- ture phantom of soft tissues, and presenting different mechanical strength. Study of aspects of the optical science of laser-tissue interaction promises to make qualitative improvements to medical treatments using lasers as cutting and ablative tools.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A 3D living-cell culture in hydrogel has been developed as a standardized low-tensile-strength tissue proxy for study of ultrafast, pulsetrain-burst laser-tissue interactions, giving a preliminary upper limit for genetic damage following laser treatment.
Abstract: A 3D living-cell culture in hydrogel has been developed as a standardized low-tensile-strength tissue proxy for study of ultrafast, pulsetrain-burst laser-tissue interactions. The hydrogel is permeable to fluorescent biomarkers and optically transparent, allowing viable and necrotic cells to be imaged in 3D by confocal microscopy. Good cell-viability allowed us to distinguish between typical cell mortality and delayed subcellular tissue damage (e.g., apoptosis and DNA repair complex formation), caused by laser irradiation. The range of necrosis depended on laser intensity, but not on pulsetrain-burst duration. DNA double-strand breaks were quantified, giving a preliminary upper limit for genetic damage following laser treatment.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 800 nm femtosecond laser pulses to carry out the drilling while monitoring the plasma emission with a spectrometer system and reported detection of a metal layer buried deep inside silicon by creating an access hole through the semiconductor.
Abstract: Femtosecond laser micromachining together with Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) allows us to drill precise hole in materials to internal buried layers as well as characterize the materials while drilling. We report detection of a metal layer buried deep inside silicon by creating an access hole through the semiconductor. We used 800 nm femtosecond laser pulses to carry out the drilling while monitoring the plasma emission with a spectrometer system. Higher drilling rates of 1 μm per shot were achieved using a Gaussian laser beam profile with peak fluences of 42 J/cm2. Lower drilling rates of 30 nm per pulse with better accuracy could be achieved using lower intensity flat top beam profiles at fluences of 1.4 J/cm2.

14 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
12 May 2013
TL;DR: Closely grouped pulses with pulse-to-pulse separation in the order of a few nanoseconds have a potential for increasing material removal rates and thereby reducing the thermal effects as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: There are a number of applications that would avail a pulse pattern in the form of closely grouped and uniformly spaced pulses, i.e., bursts. Closely grouped pulses with pulse to pulse separation in the order of a few nanoseconds have a potential for increasing material removal rates and thereby reducing the thermal effects. Besides, keeping the burst repetition period in the order of thermal relaxation time has the advantage of keeping the overall average power at lower levels in order to prevent the cumulative heating of the material.

3 citations