Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. I. Kudryashov is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. I. Kudryashov.


Nano Letters | 2015

Tuning of Magnetic Optical Response in a Dielectric Nanoparticle by Ultrafast Photoexcitation of Dense Electron-Hole Plasma.

S. V. Makarov; S. I. Kudryashov; Ivan Mukhin; A M Mozharov; Valentin A. Milichko; Alexander E. Krasnok; Pavel A. Belov

We propose a novel approach for efficient tuning of optical properties of a high refractive index subwavelength nanoparticle with a magnetic Mie-type resonance by means of femtosecond laser irradiation. This concept is based on ultrafast photoinjection of dense (>10(20) cm(-3)) electron-hole plasma within such nanoparticle, drastically changing its transient dielectric permittivity. This allows manipulation by both electric and magnetic nanoparticle responses, resulting in dramatic changes of its scattering diagram and scattering cross section. We experimentally demonstrate 20% tuning of reflectance of a single silicon nanoparticle by femtosecond laser pulses with wavelength in the vicinity of the magnetic dipole resonance. Such a single-particle nanodevice enables designing of fast and ultracompact optical switchers and modulators.


Jetp Letters | 2009

Femtosecond laser writing of subwave one-dimensional quasiperiodic nanostructures on a titanium surface

E. V. Golosov; V. I. Emel’yanov; A. A. Ionin; Yu. R. Kolobov; S. I. Kudryashov; A. E. Ligachev; Yu. N. Novoselov; L. V. Seleznev; D. V. Sinitsyn

One-dimensional quasiperiodic structures whose period is much smaller than the wavelength of exciting radiation have been obtained on a titanium surface under the multipulse action of linearly polarized femtosecond laser radiation with various surface energy densities. As the radiation energy density increases, the one-dimensional surface nanorelief oriented perpendicularly to the radiation polarization evolves from quasiperiodic ablation nanogrooves to regular lattices with subwave periods (100–400 nm). In contrast to the preceding works for various metals, the period of lattices for titanium decreases with increasing energy density. The formation of the indicated surface nanostructures is explained by the interference of the electric fields of incident laser radiation and a surface electromagnetic wave excited by this radiation, because the length of the surface electromagnetic wave for titanium with significant interband absorption decreases with an increase in the electron excitation of the material.


Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Physics | 2011

Ultrafast changes in the optical properties of a titanium surface and femtosecond laser writing of one-dimensional quasi-periodic nanogratings of its relief

E. V. Golosov; Andrei A. Ionin; Yu. R. Kolobov; S. I. Kudryashov; A. E. Ligachev; Yu. N. Novoselov; L. V. Seleznev; D. V. Sinitsyn

One-dimensional quasi-periodic nanogratings with spacings in the range from 160 to 600 nm are written on a dry or wet titanium surface exposed to linearly polarized femtosecond IR and UV laser pulses with different surface energy densities. The topological properties of the obtained surface nanostructures are studied by scanning electron microscopy. Despite the observation of many harmonics of the one-dimensional surface relief in its Fourier spectra, a weak decreasing dependence of the first-harmonic wavenumber (nanograting spacing) on the laser fluence is found. Studies of the instantaneous optical characteristics of the material during laser irradiation by measuring the reflection of laser pump pulses and their simulation based on the Drude model taking into account the dominant interband absorption allowed us to estimate the length of the excited surface electromagnetic (plasmon-polariton) wave for different excitation conditions. This wavelength is quantitatively consistent with the corresponding nanograting spacings of the first harmonic of the relief of the dry and wet titanium surfaces. It is shown that the dependence of the first-harmonic nanograting spacing on the laser fluence is determined by a change in the instantaneous optical characteristics of the material and the saturation of the interband absorption along with the increasing role of intraband transitions. Three new methods are proposed for writing separate subwave surface nanogratings or their sets by femtosecond laser pulses using the near-threshold nanostructuring, the forced adjustment of the optical characteristics of the material or selecting the spectral range of laser radiation, and also by selecting an adjacent dielectric.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Triggering and guiding electric discharge by a train of ultraviolet picosecond pulses combined with a long ultraviolet pulse

A. A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; A. O. Levchenko; L. V. Seleznev; A. V. Shutov; D. V. Sinitsyn; I. V. Smetanin; N. N. Ustinovsky; V. D. Zvorykin

Non-self-sustained electric discharge and electric breakdown were triggered and guided by a train of picosecond UV pulses overlapped with a long free-running UV pulse of a hybrid Ti:Sapphire-KrF laser facility. Photocurrent sustained by this train is two orders of magnitude higher, and electric breakdown distance is twice longer than those for the discharge triggered by the long UV pulse only.


Optics Express | 2015

Experimental study of fs-laser induced sub-100-nm periodic surface structures on titanium.

Chandra S.R. Nathala; Ali Ajami; A. A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; S. V. Makarov; Thomas Ganz; Andreas Assion; Wolfgang Husinsky

In this work the formation of laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) on a titanium surface upon irradiation by linearly polarized femtosecond (fs) laser pulses with a repetition rate of 1 kHz in air environment was studied experimentally. In particular, the dependence of high-spatial-frequency-LIPSS (HSFL) characteristics on various laser parameters: fluence, pulse number, wavelength (800 nm and 400 nm), pulse duration (10 fs - 550 fs), and polarization was studied in detail. In comparison with low-spatial-frequency-LIPSS (LSFL), the HSFL emerge at a much lower fluence with orientation perpendicular to the ridges of the LSFL. It was observed that these two types of LIPSS demonstrate different fluence, shot number and wavelength dependencies, which suggest their origin is different. Therefore, the HSFL formation mechanism cannot be described by the widely accepted interference model developed for describing LSFL formation.


Jetp Letters | 2011

Nanoscale cavitation instability of the surface melt along the grooves of one-dimensional nanorelief gratings on an aluminum surface

Andrei A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; A. E. Ligachev; S. V. Makarov; L. V. Seleznev; D. V. Sinitsyn

Femtosecond laser nanostructuring at low fluences produces a one-dimensional quasiperiodic grating of grooves on an aluminum surface with a period (≈0.5 μm) that is determined by the length of a surface electromagnetic wave. The structure of the grooves of the surface nanograting is formed by regular nanopeaks following with a period of about 200 nm. Some nanopeaks manifest craters at their tops. It is suggested that nanopeaks are formed due to the frozen nanoscale spallative ablation of a nanolayer of an aluminum melt in quasiperiodic regions corresponding to interference maxima of the laser radiation with the surface electromagnetic wave. The periodicity of the appearance of nanopeaks along grooves is due to the previously predicted mechanism of cavitation deformation of the melt surface in the process of macroscopic spallation ablation. However, in this case, cavitation is coherent (similar to a near-critical spinodal decay) rather than spontaneous.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Femtosecond Laser Treatment for the Design of Electro-insulating Superhydrophobic Coatings with Enhanced Wear Resistance on Glass

L. B. Boinovich; Alexandre G. Domantovskiy; Alexandre M. Emelyanenko; Andrei S. Pashinin; A. A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; Pavel N Saltuganov

Femtosecond laser treatment of a glass surface was used to fabricate a multimodal roughness having regular surface ripples with a period of a few micrometers decorated by aggregates of nearly spherical nanoparticles. UV-ozone treatment followed by chemisorption of the appropriate functional fluorosilanes onto the textured surface makes it possible to fabricate a superhydrophobic coating with a specific surface resistance on the order of petaohms on a glass surface. The main advantage of the fabricated coating under severe operating conditions with abrasion loads is the significant durability of its electro-insulating properties. The longevity of the high surface resistivity, even on long-term contact with a water vapor-saturated atmosphere, is directly related to the peculiarities of the surface texture and ripple structure.


Jetp Letters | 2009

Multiple filamentation of intense femtosecond laser pulses in air

A. A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; S. V. Makarov; L. V. Seleznev; D. V. Sinitsyn

The propagation of focused femtosecond laser pulses with supercritical peak powers in air has been investigated by the methods of optical visualization, profilometry, and calorimetry. Laser pulses with supercritical powers create a bundle of submillimeter filaments with a diameter of about 5 µm ahead of the lens focus; the maximum number of filaments in the beam cross section and their length increase linearly and sublinearly, respectively, with the radiation peak power. The optical visualization and calorimetry indicate that the plasma channels of filaments are optical contrast (a plasma density of 1018–1019 cm−3), ensuring the refraction of laser radiation incident on them.


Laser Physics Letters | 2014

Enhancement of ultrafast electron photoemission from metallic nanoantennas excited by a femtosecond laser pulse

Mikhail A Gubko; Wolfang Husinsky; A. A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; S. V. Makarov; Chandrasekher R Nathala; A. A. Rudenko; L. V. Seleznev; Dmitry V. Sinitsyn; Ilya V. Treshin

We have demonstrated for the first time that an array of nanoantennas (central nanotips inside sub-micrometer pits) on an aluminum surface, fabricated using a specific double-pulse femtosecond laser irradiation scheme, results in a 28-fold enhancement of the non-linear (three-photon) electron photoemission yield, driven by a third intense IR femtosecond laser pulse. The supporting numerical electrodynamic modeling indicates that the electron emission is increased not owing to a larger effective aluminum surface, but due to instant local electromagnetic field enhancement near the nanoantenna, contributed by both the tip’s ‘lightning rod’ effect and the focusing effect of the pit as a microreflector and annular edge as a plasmonic lens.


Laser Physics Letters | 2013

Sub-100?nanometer transverse gratings written by femtosecond laser pulses on a titanium surface

A. A. Ionin; S. I. Kudryashov; S. V. Makarov; L. V. Seleznev; Dmitry V. Sinitsyn; A. E. Ligachev; E. V. Golosov; Yury R Kolobov

One-dimensional transverse (perpendicular to the laser polarization) gratings with periods Λ ≈ 50–60 nm were observed on a titanium surface within 150 nm wide, micrometer-long regular surface modification longitudinal stripes fabricated by multiple 744 nm Ti:sapphire femtosecond laser shots, occurring at a repetition rate of 10 Hz. In the center of the surface laser spot these stripes are oriented strictly perpendicular to the laser polarization, in accordance with the plasmon-polaritonic model, and appear as ablative longitudinal trenches centered along the main stripe axes, which are precursors of longitudinal common ripples with a 500 nm period. At the low-fluence periphery of the laser spot, the stripes appear not as ablative longitudinal trenches, but as linear arrays of sub-ablative transverse nanoripples with periods down to 50 nm. The appearance of such superfine transverse nanoripples is related to incomplete spallation of the laser–molten surface layer, periodically modulated at the nanoscale through coherent sub-surface cavitation.

Collaboration


Dive into the S. I. Kudryashov's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. A. Ionin

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. V. Makarov

Lebedev Physical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. A. Rudenko

Lebedev Physical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L. V. Seleznev

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. A. Zayarny

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. V. Sinitsyn

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

I. N. Saraeva

Lebedev Physical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. A. Danilov

Lebedev Physical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. A. Kuchmizhak

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. E. Ligachev

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge