Publications
Variable Laser Ignition Pathways in Al/Pt Reactive Multilayers across 10 Decades of Pulse Duration
Abere, Michael J.; Yarrington, Cole D.; Kotula, Paul G.; McDonald, Joel P.; Adams, David P.
Pulsed laser irradiation is used to investigate the local initiation of rapid, self-propagating formation reactions in Al/Pt multilayers. The single pulse direct laser ignition of these 1.6 μm thick freestanding foils was characterized over 10 decades of pulse duration (10 ms to 150 fs). Finite element, reactive heat transport modeling of the near-threshold conditions has identified three distinct ignition pathways. For milli- to microsecond pulses, ignition occurs following sufficient absorption of laser energy to enable diffusion of Al and Pt between layers such that the heat released from the corresponding exothermic reaction overcomes conductive losses outside the laser-irradiated zone. When pulse duration is decreased into the nanosecond regime, heat is concentrated near the surface such that the Al locally melts, and a portion of the top-most bilayers react initially. The favorable kinetics and additional heat enable ignition. Further reducing pulse duration to hundreds of femtoseconds leads to a third ignition pathway. While much of the energy from these pulses is lost to ablation, the remaining heat beneath the crater can be sufficiently concentrated to drive a transverse self-propagating reaction, wherein the heat released from mixing at each interface occurs under kinetic conditions capable of igniting the subsequent layer.