Modification of Aerosol Gold Nanoparticles by Nanosecond Pulsed-Periodic Laser Radiation.
Kirill KhabarovMessan NouraldeenSergei TikhonovAnna A LizunovaAlexey A EfimovVictor IvanovPublished in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
This study investigates the processes of interaction of nanosecond pulsed-periodic laser radiation with the flow of aerosol agglomerates of gold nanoparticles synthesized in a spark discharge. Nanoparticles in a gas flow are spatially separated nano-objects whose interaction with each other and with the walls of an experimental cell was insignificant. Therefore, the energy absorbed by nanoparticles was used only for their own heating with further shape and size modification and on heat transfer to the surrounding gas. In the research, we used laser radiation with wavelengths of 527 and 1053 nm at pulse energies up to 900 µJ and pulse repetition rates up to 500 Hz. The dynamics of changes in the nanoparticles size during their sintering process depending on the laser pulses energy is characterized by an S-shaped shrinkage curve. Complete sintering of the initial agglomerates with their transformation into spherical nanoparticles is achieved by a series of impacting laser pulses. The result of nanoparticles' laser modification is largely determined by the pulse energy and the efficiency of the nanoparticles' radiation absorption.