Hongchao Zhang
Nanjing University of Science and Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Hongchao Zhang.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2013
Zewen Li; Hongchao Zhang; Zhonghua Shen; Xiaowu Ni
Thermal process of 1064 nm millisecond pulsed Nd:YAG laser irradiated silicon was time-resolved temperature measured by an infrared radiation pyrometer, temperature evolutions of the spot center for wide range of laser energy densities were presented. The waveforms of temperature evolution curves contained much information about phase change, melting, solidification and vaporization. An axisymmetric numerical model was established for millisecond laser heating silicon. The transient temperature fields were obtained by using the finite element method. The numerical results of temperature evolutions of the spot center are in good agreement with the experimental results. Furthermore, the axial temperature distributions of the numerical results give a better understanding of the waveforms in the experimental results. The melting threshold, vaporizing threshold, melting duration, and melting depth were better identified by analyzing two kinds of results.
Applied Optics | 2011
Bin Wang; Hongchao Zhang; Yuan Qin; Xi Wang; Xiaowu Ni; Zhonghua Shen; Jian Lu
To study the differences between the damaging of thin film components induced by long-pulse and short-pulse lasers, a model of single layer TiO(2) film components with platinum high-absorptance inclusions was established. The temperature rises of TiO(2) films with inclusions of different sizes and different depths induced by a 1 ms long-pulse and a 10 ns short-pulse lasers were analyzed based on temperature field theory. The results show that there is a radius range of inclusions that corresponds to high temperature rises. Short-pulse lasers are more sensitive to high-absorptance inclusions and long-pulse lasers are more easily damage the substrate. The first-damage decision method is drawn from calculations.
Optics Letters | 2016
Yunxiang Pan; Xueming Lv; Hongchao Zhang; Jun Chen; Bing Han; Zhonghua Shen; Jian Lu; Xiaowu Ni
A millisecond laser combined with a nanosecond laser was applied to machining transparent materials. The influences of delay between the two laser pulses on processing efficiencies and modified sizes were studied. In addition, a laser-supported combustion wave (LSCW) was captured during laser irradiation. An optimal delay corresponding to the highest processing efficiency was found for cone-shaped cavities. The modified size as well as the lifetime and intensity of the LSCW increased with the delay decreasing. Thermal cooperation effects of defects, overlapping effects of small modified sites, and thermal radiation from LSCW result in all the phenomena.
Laser Physics | 2012
Xin Wang; Yuan Qin; Z. W. Li; Hongchao Zhang; Zigang Shen; Xiaowu Ni
When the silicon material is irradiated by laser, it absorbs the laser energy leading to the temperature rise and the thermal stress. The damage effect includes melting, vaporation and thermal stress damage. Once the thermal stress exceeds the stress strength the crack will initiate. The silicon surface cracks induced by a millisecond laser are investigated. The experimental results show that three types of cracks are generated including cleavage crack, radial crack and circumferential crack. The cleavage crack is located within the laser spot. The radial crack and circumferential crack are located outside the laser spot. A two-dimensional spatial axisymmetric model of silicon irradiated by a 1064 nm millisecond laser is established. To assess what stresses generate and explain the generation mechanism of the different cracks, the thermal stress fields during laser irradiation and the cooling process are obtained using finite element method. The radial stress and hoop stress within the laser spot are tensile stress after the laser irradiation. The temperature in the center is the highest but the thermal stress in the center is not always highest during the laser irradiation. The cleavage cracks are induced by the tensile stress after the laser irradiation. The radial crack and the circumferential crack are generated during the laser irradiation.
Ultrasonics | 2016
Alexey M. Lomonosov; Shiling Yan; Bing Han; Hongchao Zhang; Zhonghua Shen
The interaction of laser-generated Lamb waves propagating in a plate with a sharp-angle conical hole was studied experimentally and numerically. Part of the energy of the incident wave is trapped within the conic area in two ways: the antisymmetric Lamb wave orbiting the center of the hole and the wave localized at the acute edge. Parameters and conditions for optimal conversion of the incident wave into the trapped modes were studied in this work. Experiments were performed using the laser stroboscopic shearography technique, which delivers the time evolution of the acoustic field in the whole area of interest. The effect of trapping can be used for efficient damping, similar to the one-dimensional acoustical black hole effect.
Optics Express | 2015
Yunxiang Pan; Hongchao Zhang; Jun Chen; Bing Han; Zhonghua Shen; Jian Lu; Xiaowu Ni
A new form of double pulse composed of a nanosecond laser and a millisecond laser is proposed for laser machining transparent materials. To evaluate its advantages and disadvantages, experimental investigations are carried out and the corresponding results are compared with those of single millisecond laser. The mechanism is discussed from two aspects: material defects and effects of modifications induced by nanosecond laser on thermal stress field during millisecond laser irradiation. It is shown that the modifications of the sample generated by nanosecond laser improves the processing efficiency of subsequent millisecond laser, while limits the eventual size of modified region.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2013
Jun Chen; Bei-bei Li; Hongchao Zhang; Hao Qiang; Zhonghua Shen; Xiaowu Ni
High-speed photography method is employed to study underwater laser propulsion using targets with and without cavity as well as the effect of the cavity depth. The shapes and motions of bubbles generated from the target tail by Nd: YAG laser are recorded by high-speed camera. Then, the influence of different bubble shapes on the laser propulsion is analyzed. Besides, the velocity and momentum coupling coefficient of the targets are investigated. The results show that the bubble is hemispherical in the case of target without cavity, while it is toroidal in the case of target with cavity. Experiments verify that compared with hemispherical bubble, the toroidal bubble is more conducive to laser propulsion in water, which means the target with cavity obtains more momentum than the target without cavity. In addition, the momentum coupling coefficient increases with laser energy first, and then it levels out and decreases a bit for the target with cavity. There is little effect of the cavity depth on propulsion.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2009
Hongchao Zhang; Jian Lu; Xiaowu Ni
Colliding air plasmas produced using 1064 nm Nd:YAG laser were analyzed using optical interferometry. For generating multiple air plasmas, the spherical aberrations of the focusing lens were used. The three-dimensional (3D) distributions of the electron density and the gas density behind shock wave front were investigated. The two-dimensional fast Fourier transform technique was used to extract the phase shift of the interferograms and a numerical inverse Abel transformation was applied to reconstruct the 3D distribution of the refractive index. Based on the Gladston-Dale relation, high resolution images of the 3D distributions of the electron density and the gas density were achieved. From the results, a stagnation layer was formed due to the collision of shock waves and the succeeding plasmas. The enhancements of electron density and gas density were observed in the collision zone. It shows that the collision region depends on the pulse energy. With smaller pulse energy, the thickness of the stagnation layer increased, while the enhancement of the gas density behind the shock wave front in the collision zone reduced.
Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2017
Jialin Liu; Hongchao Zhang; Jian Lu; Xiaowu Ni; Zhonghua Shen
Abstract. Diffuse speckle contrast analysis (DSCA) is a noninvasive optical technique capable of monitoring deep tissue blood flow. However, a detailed study of the speckle contrast model for DSCA has yet to be presented. We deduced the theoretical relationship between speckle contrast and exposure time and further simplified it to a linear approximation model. The feasibility of this linear model was validated by the liquid phantoms which demonstrated that the slope of this linear approximation was able to rapidly determine the Brownian diffusion coefficient of the turbid media at multiple distances using multiexposure speckle imaging. Furthermore, we have theoretically quantified the influence of optical property on the measurements of the Brownian diffusion coefficient which was a consequence of the fact that the slope of this linear approximation was demonstrated to be equal to the inverse of correlation time of the speckle.
Third International Symposium on Laser Interaction with Matter | 2015
Tingzhong Zhang; Chenyin Ni; Jie Zhou; Hongchao Zhang; Zhonghua Shen; Xiaowu Ni; Jian Lu
Laser processing as laser drilling, laser welding and laser cutting, etc. is rather important in modern manufacture, and the interaction of laser and matter is a complex phenomenon which should be detailed studied in order to increase the manufacture efficiency and quality. In this paper, a two-dimensional transient numerical model was developed to study the temperature field and molten pool size during pulsed laser keyhole drilling. The volume-of-fluid method was employed to track free surfaces, and melting and evaporation enthalpy, recoil pressure, surface tension, and energy loss due to evaporating materials were considered in this model. Besides, the enthalpy-porosity technique was also applied to account for the latent heat during melting and solidification. Temperature fields and melt pool size were numerically simulated via finite element method. Moreover, the effectiveness of the developed computational procedure had been confirmed by experiments.