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Dive into the research topics where Vitaly Gruzdev is active.

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Featured researches published by Vitaly Gruzdev.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Mechanisms of high-regularity periodic structuring of silicon surface by sub-MHz repetition rate ultrashort laser pulses

Iaroslav Gnilitskyi; Vitaly Gruzdev; Nadezhda M. Bulgakova; Tomas Mocek; Leonardo Orazi

Silicon is one of the most abundant materials which is used in many areas of modern research and technology. A variety of those applications require surface nanopatterning with minimum structure defects. However, the high-quality nanostructuring of large areas of silicon surface at industrially acceptable speed is still a challenge. Here, we report a rapid formation of highly regular laser-induced periodic surface structures (HR-LIPSS) in the regime of strong ablation by infrared femtosecond laser pulses at sub-MHz repetition rate. Parameters of the laser-surface interactions and obtained experimental results suggest an important role of electrostatically assisted bond softening in initiating the HR-LIPSS formation.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Magneto-absorption effects in magnetic-field assisted laser ablation of silicon by UV nanosecond pulses

Hamid Farrokhi; Vitaly Gruzdev; Hong Yu Zheng; R. S. Rawat; Wei Zhou

A constant magnetic field can significantly improve the quality and speed of ablation by nanosecond laser pulses. These improvements are usually attributed to the confinement of laser-produced plasma by the magnetic field and specific propagation effects in the magnetized plasma. Here we report a strong influence of constant axial magnetic field on the ablation of silicon by 20-ns laser pulses at wavelength 355 nm, which results in an increase of ablation depth by a factor of 1.3 to 69 depending on laser parameters and magnitude of the magnetic field. The traditional plasma effects do not explain this result, and magneto-absorption of silicon is proposed as one of the major mechanisms of the significant enhancement of ablation.


Optical Engineering | 2012

Dynamics of laser-induced damage of spherical nanoparticles by high-intensity ultrashort laser pulses

Vladimir L. Komolov; Vitaly Gruzdev; S. G. Przhibel'skii; D. S. Smirnov

Abstract. Damage of a metal spherical nanoparticle by femtosecond laser pulses is analyzed by splitting the overall process into two steps. The fast step includes electron photoemission from a nanoparticle. It takes place during direct action of a laser pulse and its rate is evaluated as a function of laser and particle parameters by two approaches. Obtained results suggest the formation of significant positive charge of the nanoparticles due to the photoemission. The next step includes ion emission that removes the excessive positive charge and modifies particle structure. It is delayed with respect to the photo-emission and is analyzed by a simple analytical model and modified molecular dynamics. Obtained energy distribution suggests generation of fast ions capable of penetrating into surrounding material and generating defects next to the nanoparticle. The modeling is extended to the case of a nanoparticle on a solid surface to understand the basic mechanism of surface laser damage initiated by nano-contamination. Simulations predict embedding the emitted ions into substrate within a spot with size significantly exceeding the original particle size. We discuss the relation of those effects to the problem of bulk and surface laser-induced damage of optical materials by single and multiple ultrashort laser pulses.


Optical Engineering | 2014

Fundamental mechanisms of laser damage of dielectric crystals by ultrashort pulse: ionization dynamics for the Keldysh model

Vitaly Gruzdev

Abstract. Laser-induced ionization is a major process that initiates and drives the initial stages of laser-induced damage (LID) of high-quality transparent solids. The ionization and its contribution to LID are characterized in terms of the time-dependent ionization rate and conduction-band electron density. Considering femtosecond pulses of various durations (from 35 to 706 fs) and variable peak irradiances (from 0.01 to 60  TW/cm2), we use a single-rate equation to simulate time variations of conduction-band electron density and rates of the photoionization and impact ionization. The photoionization rate is evaluated with the Keldysh equation. At low irradiance, the electron density and total ionization rate demonstrate power scaling characteristic of multiphoton ionization. With the increase of irradiance, there is observed a saturation of the photoionization rate due to photoionization suppression by the Keldysh-type singularity during the increase in the number of simultaneously absorbed photons by 1. A striking result is that the saturation is followed by a stepwise transition from the ionization regime which is completely dominated by the photoionization to a regime totally dominated by the impact ionization. The transition results in the increase of the electron density by a few orders of magnitude induced by a variation of peak laser irradiance by about 15% to 20%. The physical effects that are involved are discussed.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2010

Photo-ionization and modification of nanoparticles on transparent substrates by ultrashort laser pulses

Vitaly Gruzdev; Vladimir L. Komolov; Hao Li; Qingsong Yu; S. G. Przhibel'skii; D. S. Smirnov

The objective of this combined experimental and theoretical research is to study the dynamics and mechanisms of nanoparticle interaction with ultrashort laser pulses and related modifications of substrate surface. For the experimental effort, metal (gold), dielectric (SiO2) and dielectric with metal coating (about 30 nm thick) spherical nanoparticles deposited on glass substrate are utilized. Size of the particles varies from 20 to 200 nm. Density of the particles varies from low (mean inter-particle distance 100 nm) to high (mean inter-particle distance less than 1 nm). The nanoparticle assemblies and the corresponding empty substrate surfaces are irradiated with single 130-fs laser pulses at wavelength 775 nm and different levels of laser fluence. Large diameter of laser spot (0.5-2 mm) provides gradient variations of laser intensity over the spot and allows observing different laser-nanoparticle interactions. The interactions vary from total removal of the nanoparticles in the center of laser spot to gentle modification of their size and shape and totally non-destructive interaction. The removed particles frequently form specific sub-micrometer-size pits on the substrate surface at their locations. The experimental effort is supported by simulations of the nanoparticle interactions with high-intensity ultrashort laser pulse. The simulation employs specific modification of the molecular dynamics approach applied to model the processes of non-thermal particle ablation following laser-induced electron emission. This technique delivers various characteristics of the ablation plume from a single nanoparticle including energy and speed distribution of emitted ions, variations of particle size and overall dynamics of its ablation. The considered geometry includes single isolated particle as well a single particle on a flat substrate that corresponds to the experimental conditions. The simulations confirm existence of the different regimes of laser-nanoparticle interactions depending on laser intensity and wavelength. In particular, implantation of ions departing from the nanoparticles towards the substrate is predicted.


Laser Damage Symposium XLI: Annual Symposium on Optical Materials for High Power Lasers | 2009

Ultrafast laser-induced modifications of energy bands of non-metal crystals

Vitaly Gruzdev

Ultrafast laser-induced variations of electron energy bands of transparent solids significantly influence ionization and conduction-band electron absorption driving the initial stage of laser-induced damage (LID). The mechanisms of the variations are attributed to changing electron functions from bonding to anti-bonding configuration via laser-induced ionization; laser-driven electron oscillations in quasi-momentum space; and direct distortion of the inter-atomic potential by electric field of laser radiation. The ionization results in the band-structure modification via accumulation of broken chemical bonds between atoms and provides significant contribution to the overall modification only when enough excited electrons are accumulated in the conduction band. The oscillations are associated with modification of electron energy by pondermotive potential of the oscillations. The direct action of radiations electric field leads to specific high-frequency Franz-Keldysh effect (FKE) spreading the allowed electron states into the bands of forbidden energy. Those processes determine the effective band gap that is a laser-driven energy gap between the modified electron energy bands. Among those mechanisms, the latter two provide reversible band-structure modification that takes place from the beginning of the ionization and are, therefore, of special interest due to their strong influence on the initial stage of the ionization. The pondermotive potential results either in monotonous increase or oscillatory variations of the effective band gap that has been taken into account in some ionization models. The classical FKE provides decrease of the band gap. We analyzing the competition between those two opposite trends of the effective-band-gap variations and discuss applications of those effects for considerations of the laser-induced damage and its threshold in transparent solids.


ursi general assembly and scientific symposium | 2017

Ultrafast mechanism of energy-band modification of wide-band-gap crystals by pondermotive potential of Gaussian ultrashort laser pulse

Vitaly Gruzdev; Olga Sergaeva

Modification of energ4y bands of wide-band-gap crystals by ultrashort (10<sup>−14</sup>-10<sup>−15</sup> seconds) laser pulse is theoretically studied. Formation of transient indirect-gap structure from original direct-gap one is predicted and characterized for a Gaussian pulse envelope.


ursi general assembly and scientific symposium | 2017

Simulations of ultrafast laser-induced excitation and heating of electron sub-system of semiconductors with the Vinogradov equation and multi-band Keldysh formula

Vitaly Gruzdev; Drake R. Austin; Olga Sergaeva; Enam Chowdhury

High-intensity laser interactions with band-gap solids are frequently simulated with the Keldysh photoionization-rate formula and the Drude model to describe light absorption and related heating of conduction-band electrons. That approach suffers from several internal contradictions. We fix some of them by combining the Vinogradov equation for energy absorption with multi-band version of the Keldysh equation for the rate of photoionization.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Controlled modification of biomolecules by ultrashort laser pulses in polar liquids

Vitaly Gruzdev; Dmitry Korkin; Brian P. Mooney; Jesper Foged Havelund; Ian Max Møller; Jay J. Thelen

Targeted chemical modification of peptides and proteins by laser pulses in a biologically relevant environment, i.e. aqueous solvent at room temperature, allows for accurate control of biological processes. However, the traditional laser methods of control of chemical reactions are applicable only to a small class of photosensitive biomolecules because of strong and ultrafast perturbations from biomolecule-solvent interactions. Here, we report excitation of harmonics of vibration modes of solvent molecules by femtosecond laser pulses to produce controlled chemical modifications of non-photosensitive peptides and proteins in polar liquids under room conditions. The principal modifications included lysine formylation and methionine sulfoxidation both of which occur with nearly 100% yield under atmospheric conditions. That modification occurred only if the laser irradiance exceeded certain threshold level. The threshold, type, and extent of the modifications were completely controlled by solvent composition, laser wavelength, and peak irradiance of ultrashort laser pulses. This approach is expected to assist in establishing rigorous control over a broad class of biological processes in cells and tissues at the molecular level.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2015

Laser-induced ionization and damage of high-performance optics by ultrashort pulses

Vitaly Gruzdev

Damage of high-performance optics by ultrashort laser pulses is attributed to the laser-induced ionization and electron excitation. New theoretical models and current state of knowledge in the field are overviewed and critically analyzed based on the recent developments and results.

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Iaroslav Gnilitskyi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Leonardo Orazi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Dmitry Korkin

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

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