Publication | Closed Access
Near-ultraviolet absorption and nanosecond-pulse-laser damage in HfO2 monolayers studied by submicrometer-resolution photothermal heterodyne imaging and atomic force microscopy
55
Citations
10
References
2011
Year
Atomic Force MicroscopyEngineeringLaser ApplicationsAbsorption SpectroscopyChemistryHfo2 MonolayersOptical PropertiesSpatial DistributionNanometrologyNanoscale SciencePulsed Laser DepositionHafnium DioxideMaterials ScienceNanotechnologyLaser-assisted DepositionLaser PhotochemistryLaser-induced BreakdownSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsThin FilmsNear-ultraviolet AbsorptionHafnia Thin Films
Localized absorption in hafnium dioxide used as a high-index component in multilayer coatings for near-ultraviolet, nanosecond-pulse-laser applications is directly linked to laser-induced damage. The nature of the absorbing species and their physical properties remains unknown because of their extremely small sizes. Previous experimental evidence provided by the atomic force microscopy mapping of damage morphology points to a few-nanometer scale of these absorbers. This work demonstrates the submicrometer-resolution mapping of 355-nm absorption in HfO2 monolayers using a recently developed photothermal heterodyne imaging technique. The comparison of absorption maps with the atomic force microscopy investigation of pulsed-laser-induced damage morphology allows one to better estimate the spatial distribution of nanoscale absorbing defects in hafnia thin films. Possible defect-formation mechanisms are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1