Cyril Hnatovsky
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Cyril Hnatovsky.
Optics Letters | 2005
Cyril Hnatovsky; R. S. Taylor; Eli Simova; V. R. Bhardwaj; David M. Rayner; P. B. Corkum
We fabricate microchannels in fused silica by femtosecond laser irradiation followed by etching in diluted hydrofluoric acid. We show a dramatic dependence of the etch rate on the laser polarization, spanning 2 orders of magnitude. We establish the existence of an energy-per-pulse threshold at which etching of the laser-modified zones becomes highly polarization selective. The enhanced selective etching is due to long-range, periodic, polarization-dependent nanostructures formed in the laser-modified material.
Applied Physics Letters | 2005
Cyril Hnatovsky; R. S. Taylor; P. P. Rajeev; Eli Simova; V. R. Bhardwaj; David M. Rayner; P. B. Corkum
Femtosecond laser radiation tightly focused in bulk fused silica is used to generate self-ordered nanogratings when the sample is translated under the lens at constant speed. The nanogratings are preserved over a length scale of millimeters. We demonstrate that nanogratings are formed for all pulse durations tested, ranging from 40to500fs, and that the pulse energy threshold for this phenomenon increases with decreasing pulse duration. We use high spatial resolution diagnostics based upon selective chemical etching followed by atomic force microscopy and scanning electron microscopy to reveal the morphology of the nanogratings.
Optics Letters | 2010
Cyril Hnatovsky; Vladlen Shvedov; Wieslaw Krolikowski; Andrei Rode
In this Letter we present the first (to our knowledge) demonstration of material modification using tightly focused single femtosecond laser vortex pulses. Double-charge femtosecond vortices were synthesized with a polarization-singularity beam converter based on light propagation in a uniaxial anisotropic medium and then focused using moderate- and high-NA optics (viz., NA=0.45 and 0.9) to ablate fused silica and soda-lime glass. By controlling the pulse energy, we consistently machine micrometer-size ring-shaped structures with <100nm uniform groove thickness.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2005
Cyril Hnatovsky; R. S. Taylor; Eli Simova; V. R. Bhardwaj; David M. Rayner; P. B. Corkum
An ultrahigh-resolution (20nm) technique of selective chemical etching and atomic force microscopy has been used to study the photoinduced modification in fused silica produced at various depths by tightly focused femtosecond laser radiation affected by spherical aberration. We demonstrate that shapes of the irradiated zones near the threshold for modification can be predicted by taking proper account of spherical aberration caused by the refractive index mismatched air–silica interface. We establish a depth dependence of the pulse energy required to initiate modification and characterize the relationship between numerical aperture of the writing lens and practically achievable writing depth. We also show that spatial characteristics of the laser-modified zones can be controlled by a specially designed focusing system which allows correction for a variable amount of spherical aberration.
Optics Letters | 2004
V. R. Bhardwaj; P. B. Corkum; David M. Rayner; Cyril Hnatovsky; Eli Simova; R. S. Taylor
We identify two states of stress induced in waveguides fabricated by femtosecond lasers in fused silica and show how they can be relieved by annealing. In-plane stress and stress concentration are revealed through birefringence and loss measurements. Another kind of laser-induced stress appears in the form of swelling of the glass surface when waveguides are written near the surface and is a manifestation of confined rapid material quenching. By annealing the sample we reduce the losses by approximately 30% (at 633 nm) and decrease the birefringence by a factor of 4 in fused silica.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2003
R. S. Taylor; Cyril Hnatovsky; Eli Simova; David M. Rayner; V. R. Bhardwaj; P. B. Corkum
Ultra-high spatial resolution index of refraction profiles of femtosecond laser modified structures in silica glass have been measured using the combination of chemical etching and atomic force microscopy.
Optics Letters | 2007
R. S. Taylor; Cyril Hnatovsky; Eli Simova; P. P. Rajeev; David M. Rayner; P. B. Corkum
Tightly focused, linearly polarized, femtosecond laser radiation can produce highly birefringent nanograting structures inside fused silica glass. Here we report that when the polarization direction of the femtosecond light is changed, old nanogratings are erased and simultaneously replaced with new ones whose orientation is solely determined by the polarization of the rewrite beam. We also show that these volume nanogratings can be rewritten 1000 times with little degradation in their quality.
Journal of Physics B | 2007
P. P. Rajeev; Marina Gertsvolf; Cyril Hnatovsky; Eli Simova; R. S. Taylor; P. B. Corkum; David M. Rayner; V. R. Bhardwaj
Intense ultrashort light pulses interacting inside dielectrics can create nanoplasmas due to localized inhomogeneous nonlinear ionization. These nanoplasmas are bound inside the dielectric and are transient as their density changes during the light pulse—from underdense to quasi-metallic plasma densities. Interaction of light at the transient plasma–dielectric interface can lead to local field enhancements, similar to that observed in the metal-dielectric interface, which control the growth of nanoplasmas. We discuss the differences in the interaction of light at these two interfaces and demonstrate that transient nanoplasmonics can imprint periodic nanostructures inside the dielectric.
Optics Express | 2013
Alex Turpin; Shvedov; Cyril Hnatovsky; Yury V. Loiko; J. Mompart; Wieslaw Krolikowski
We employ conical refraction of light in a biaxial crystal to create an optical bottle for photophoretic trapping and manipulation of particles in gaseous media. We show that by only varying the polarization state of the input light beam the optical bottle can be opened and closed in order to load and unload particles in a highly controllable manner.
Optics Letters | 2012
Cyril Hnatovsky; Vladlen Shvedov; Natalia Shostka; Andrei Rode; Wieslaw Krolikowski
We demonstrate experimentally that, in a tight focusing geometry, circularly polarized femtosecond laser vortex pulses ablate material differently depending on the handedness of light. This effect offers an additional degree of freedom to control the shape and size of laser-machined structures on a subwavelength scale.