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Dive into the research topics where Luca Furfaro is active.

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Featured researches published by Luca Furfaro.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

High aspect ratio nanochannel machining using single shot femtosecond Bessel beams

M. K. Bhuyan; F. Courvoisier; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; Maxime Jacquot; Roland Salut; Luca Furfaro; John M. Dudley

We report high aspect ratio nanochannel fabrication in glass using single-shot femtosecond Bessel beams of sub-3 μJ pulse energies at 800 nm. We obtain near-parallel nanochannels with diameters in the range 200–800 nm, and aspect ratios that can exceed 100. An array of 230 nm diameter channels with 1.6 μm pitch illustrates the reproducibility of this approach and the potential for writing periodic structures. We also report proof-of-principle machining of a through-channel of 400 nm diameter in a 43 μm thick membrane. These results represent a significant advance of femtosecond laser ablation technology into the nanometric regime.


Optics Express | 2010

High aspect ratio taper-free microchannel fabrication using femtosecond Bessel beams

M. K. Bhuyan; F. Courvoisier; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; Maxime Jacquot; Luca Furfaro; Michael J. Withford; John M. Dudley

We present a systematic study of femtosecond laser microchannel machining in glass using nondiffracting Bessel beams. In particular, our results identify a source and focusing parameter working window where high aspect ratio taper-free microchannels can be reproducibly produced without sample translation. With appropriate source parameters, we machine channels of 2 microm diameter and with aspect ratios up to 40. We propose the filamentation stability of the Bessel beam propagation as the critical factor underlying the controlled and reproducible results that have been obtained.


Optics Express | 2011

Arbitrary accelerating micron-scale caustic beams in two and three dimensions

Luc Froehly; F. Courvoisier; Amaury Mathis; Maxime Jacquot; Luca Furfaro; Remo Giust; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; John M. Dudley

We generate arbitrary convex accelerating beams by direct application of an appropriate spatial phase profile on an incident Gaussian beam. The spatial phase calculation exploits the geometrical properties of optical caustics and the Legendre transform. Using this technique, accelerating sheet caustic beams with parabolic profiles (i.e. Airy beams), as well as quartic and logarithmic profiles are experimentally synthesized from an incident Gaussian beam, and we show compatibility with material processing applications using an imaging system to reduce the main intensity lobe at the caustic to sub-10 micron transverse dimension. By applying additional and rotational spatial phase, we generate caustic-bounded sheet and volume beams, which both show evidence of the recently predicted effect of abrupt autofocussing. In addition, an engineered accelerating profile with femtosecond pulses is applied to generate a curved zone of refractive index modification in glass. These latter results provide proof of principle demonstration of how this technique may yield new degrees of freedom in both nonlinear optics and femtosecond micromachining.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Micromachining along a curve: Femtosecond laser micromachining of curved profiles in diamond and silicon using accelerating beams

Amaury Mathis; F. Courvoisier; Luc Froehly; Luca Furfaro; Maxime Jacquot; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; John M. Dudley

We report femtosecond laser micromachining of micron-size curved structures using tailored accelerating beams. We report surface curvatures as small as 70 μm in both diamond and silicon, which demonstrates the wide applicability of the technique to materials that are optically transparent or opaque at the pump laser wavelength. We also report the machining of curved trenches in silicon. Our results are consistent with an ablation-threshold model based on calculated local beam intensity, and we also observe asymmetric debris deposition which is interpreted in terms of the optical properties of the incident accelerating beam.


Optics Letters | 2012

Sending femtosecond pulses in circles: highly nonparaxial accelerating beams

F. Courvoisier; Amaury Mathis; Luc Froehly; Remo Giust; Luca Furfaro; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; Maxime Jacquot; John M. Dudley

We use caustic beam shaping on 100 fs pulses to experimentally generate nonparaxial accelerating beams along a 60° circular arc, moving laterally by 14 µm over a 28 µm propagation length. This is the highest degree of transverse acceleration reported to our knowledge. Using diffraction integral theory and numerical beam propagation simulations, we show that circular acceleration trajectories represent a unique class of nonparaxial diffraction-free beam profile which also preserves the femtosecond temporal structure in the vicinity of the caustic.


Optics Letters | 2009

Surface nanoprocessing with nondiffracting femtosecond Bessel beams

F. Courvoisier; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; Maxime Jacquot; M. K. Bhuyan; Luca Furfaro; John M. Dudley

We demonstrate the application of nondiffracting Bessel beams for reproducible nanometric-scale feature patterning in glass. A femtosecond pulse zero-order Bessel beam with a central spot radius of 360 nm was used to write 500 nm radius nanocraters over a longitudinal positioning range exceeding 20 microm, with a variation in radius of less than 10%. The use of Bessel beams significantly reduces constraints on critical sample positioning in the nanoscale writing regime, enabling the use of femtosecond pulses for fast inscription of nanometer-scale features over large sample areas.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

Multi-imaging and Bayesian estimation for photon counting with EMCCDs

Eric Lantz; Jean Luc Blanchet; Luca Furfaro; Fabrice Devaux

A multi-imaging strategy is proposed and experimentally tested to improve the accuracy of photon counting with an electron multiplying CCD (EMCCD), by taking into account the random nature of its on-chip gain and the possibility of multiple photodetection events on one pixel. This strategy is based on Bayesian estimation on each image, with a priori information given by the sum of the images. The method works even for images with large dynamic range, with more improvement in the low light level areas. In these areas, two thirds of the variance added by the EMCCD in a conventional imaging mode are removed, making the physical photon noise predominant in the detected image.


Optics Letters | 2015

Kerr optical frequency comb generation in strontium fluoride whispering-gallery mode resonators with billion quality factor.

Rémi Henriet; Guoping Lin; Aurélien Coillet; Maxime Jacquot; Luca Furfaro; Laurent Larger; Yanne K. Chembo

We report the fabrication for the first time of a strontium fluoride (SrF(2)) whispering-gallery mode resonator with quality factor in excess of 1 billion. The millimeter-size disk-resonator is polished until the surface roughness decreases down to a root-mean square value of 1.2 nm, as measured with a vertical scanning profilometer. We also demonstrate that this ultrahigh Q resonator allows for the generation of a normal-dispersion Kerr optical frequency comb at 1550 nm.


IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2004

Mode-switching in semiconductor lasers

Luca Furfaro; Francesco Pedaci; M. Giudici; X. Hachair; J.R. Tredicce; Salvador Balle

In this paper, we experimentally analyze the modal dynamics of quantum-well semiconductor lasers. Modal switching is the dominant feature for semiconductor lasers that exhibit two or several active longitudinal modes in their time-averaged optical spectrum. In quantum-well lasers, these dynamics involve a periodic switching among several longitudinal modes, which follows a well-determined sequence from the bluest to the reddest mode in the optical spectrum. This feature is radically different from the well-known noise-driven mode-hopping occurring in bulk lasers which involves only two main modes. We analyze the differences in modal dynamics for these two kinds of laser by comparing the modal switching statistics and by studying the effects of noise and modulation in the pumping current.


Scientific Reports | 2016

High aspect ratio micro-explosions in the bulk of sapphire generated by femtosecond Bessel beams.

L. Rapp; R. Meyer; Remo Giust; Luca Furfaro; Maxime Jacquot; Pierre-Ambroise Lacourt; John M. Dudley; F. Courvoisier

Femtosecond pulses provide an extreme degree of confinement of light matter-interactions in high-bandgap materials because of the nonlinear nature of ionization. It was recognized very early on that a highly focused single pulse of only nanojoule energy could generate spherical voids in fused silica and sapphire crystal as the nanometric scale plasma generated has energy sufficient to compress the material around it and to generate new material phases. But the volumes of the nanometric void and of the compressed material are extremely small. Here we use single femtosecond pulses shaped into high-angle Bessel beams at microjoule energy, allowing for the creation of very high 100:1 aspect ratio voids in sapphire crystal, which is one of the hardest materials, twice as dense as glass. The void volume is 2 orders of magnitude higher than those created with Gaussian beams. Femtosecond and picosecond illumination regimes yield qualitatively different damage morphologies. These results open novel perspectives for laser processing and new materials synthesis by laser-induced compression.

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Dive into the Luca Furfaro's collaboration.

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F. Courvoisier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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John M. Dudley

University of Franche-Comté

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Remo Giust

University of Franche-Comté

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Luc Froehly

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Maxime Jacquot

University of Franche-Comté

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Maxime Jacquot

University of Franche-Comté

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Amaury Mathis

University of Franche-Comté

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X. Hachair

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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J.R. Tredicce

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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