Paper
29 July 1992 Transient stress evolution and crystallization in laser-irradiated amorphous titania sol-gel films
Gregory J. Exarhos, Nancy J. Hess, Susanne Wood
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Abstract
Amorphous Ti02 sol-gel films are irreversibly transformed to a crystalline anatase phase when heated to temperatures in excess of 575 K or subjected to intense pulsed or CW laser irradiation. The laser-induced transformation is initiated as a result of impurity absorption and subsequent heating, and results in densification and relative changes in compressive stress of the film. Isothermally annealed films exhibit a decrease in compressive stress as crystallization proceeds while an increase in compressive stress followed by a decrease in stress is observed when crystallization is laser-induced. Raman spectroscopy has been used to characterize the crystallization ingrowth kinetics and is used in this work as a real time probe of both film temperature and localized stress which can be evaluated from shifts in lattice phonon frequencies measured in real time during laser irradiation. The laser not only induces the phase transformation but excites inelastic Raman scattering from which film stress and temperature can be estimated. A second approach for the determination of these parameters requires incorporation of a thin ruby film between the titania and silica substrate. Here, the wavelength shift of the laser-induced ruby fluorescence can be used to quantify interfacial stress; the fluorescence lifetime measurements are used to determine temperature. The advantages and limitations of these techniques for evaluating transient stress and temperature evolution in thin titania films subjected to CW laser irradiation will be discussed.
© (1992) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gregory J. Exarhos, Nancy J. Hess, and Susanne Wood "Transient stress evolution and crystallization in laser-irradiated amorphous titania sol-gel films", Proc. SPIE 1624, Laser-Induced Damage in Optical Materials: 1991, (29 July 1992); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.60094
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Cited by 9 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Crystals

Laser crystals

Laser irradiation

Sol-gels

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