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Dive into the research topics where Y.Y. Tsui is active.

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Featured researches published by Y.Y. Tsui.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Fast electron generation in cones with ultraintense laser pulses

L. Van Woerkom; K. U. Akli; T. Bartal; F. N. Beg; S. Chawla; C. D. Chen; Enam Chowdhury; R. R. Freeman; D. Hey; M.H. Key; J. King; Anthony Link; T. Ma; Andrew J. Mackinnon; A. G. MacPhee; Dustin Offermann; V. Ovchinnikov; P. K. Patel; Douglass Schumacher; R. Stephens; Y.Y. Tsui

Experimental results from copper cones irradiated with ultra-intense laser light are presented. Spatial images and total yields of Cu K{sub {alpha}} fluorescence were measured as a function of the laser focusing properties. The fluorescence emission extends into the cone approximately 300 {micro}m from the cone tip and cannot be explained by ray tracing including cone wall absorption. In addition the total fluorescence yield from cones is an order of magnitude higher than for equivalent mass foil targets. Indications are that the physics of the laser cone interaction is dominated by preplasma created from the long duration, low energy pre-pulse from the laser.


Optics Express | 2008

Elemental analysis using micro Laser-induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (µLIBS) in a microfluidic platform

Yogesh Godwal; Govind V. Kaigala; Viet N. Hoang; Siu-Lung Lui; Christopher J. Backhouse; Y.Y. Tsui; R. Fedosejevs

We present here a non-labeled, elemental analysis detection technique that is suitable for microfluidic chips, and demonstrate its applicability with the sensitive detection of sodium (Na). Spectroscopy performed on small volumes of liquids can be used to provide a true representation of the composition of the isolated fluid. Performing this using low power instrumentation integrated with a microfluidic platform makes it potentially feasible to develop a portable system. For this we present a simple approach to isolating minute amounts of fluid from bulk fluid within a microfluidic chip. The chip itself contains a patterned thin film resistive element that super-heats the sample in tens of microseconds, creating a micro-bubble that extrudes a micro-droplet from the microchip. For simplicity a non-valved microchip is used here as it is highly compatible to a continuous flow-based fluidic system suitable for continuous sampling of the fluid composition. We believe such a nonlabeled detection technique within a microfluidic system has wide applicability in elemental analysis. This is the first demonstration of laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) as a detection technology in conjunction with microfluidics, and represents first steps towards realizing a portable lower power LIBS-based detection system.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Laser wakefield generated X-ray probe for femtosecond time-resolved measurements of ionization states of warm dense aluminum

M. Z. Mo; Z. Chen; S. Fourmaux; A. Saraf; Kazuto Otani; Jean-Claude Kieffer; Y.Y. Tsui; A. Ng; R. Fedosejevs

We have developed a laser wakefield generated X-ray probe to directly measure the temporal evolution of the ionization states in warm dense aluminum by means of absorption spectroscopy. As a promising alternative to the free electron excited X-ray sources, Betatron X-ray radiation, with femtosecond pulse duration, provides a new technique to diagnose femtosecond to picosecond transitions in the atomic structure. The X-ray probe system consists of an adjustable Kirkpatrick-Baez (KB) microscope for focusing the Betatron emission to a small probe spot on the sample being measured, and a flat Potassium Acid Phthalate Bragg crystal spectrometer to measure the transmitted X-ray spectrum in the region of the aluminum K-edge absorption lines. An X-ray focal spot size of around 50 μm was achieved after reflection from the platinum-coated 10-cm-long KB microscope mirrors. Shot to shot positioning stability of the Betatron radiation was measured resulting in an rms shot to shot variation in spatial pointing on the sample of 16 μm. The entire probe setup had a spectral resolution of ~1.5 eV, a detection bandwidth of ~24 eV, and an overall photon throughput efficiency of the order of 10(-5). Approximately 10 photons were detected by the X-ray CCD per laser shot within the spectrally resolved detection band. Thus, it is expected that hundreds of shots will be required per absorption spectrum to clearly observe the K-shell absorption features expected from the ionization states of the warm dense aluminum.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Diagnostics for fast ignition science (invited)

A. G. MacPhee; K. U. Akli; F. N. Beg; C. D. Chen; H. Chen; R. J. Clarke; D. Hey; R. R. Freeman; Andreas Kemp; M. H. Key; J. King; S. Le Pape; Anthony Link; T. Ma; H. Nakamura; Dustin Offermann; V. Ovchinnikov; P. K. Patel; Thomas W. Phillips; R. Stephens; R. P. J. Town; Y.Y. Tsui; Mingsheng Wei; L. Van Woerkom; Andrew J. Mackinnon

The ignition concept for electron fast ignition inertial confinement fusion requires sufficient energy be transferred from an approximately 20 ps laser pulse to the compressed fuel via approximately MeV electrons. We have assembled a suite of diagnostics to characterize such transfer, simultaneously fielding absolutely calibrated extreme ultraviolet multilayer imagers at 68 and 256 eV; spherically bent crystal imagers at 4.5 and 8 keV; multi-keV crystal spectrometers; MeV x-ray bremmstrahlung, electron and proton spectrometers (along the same line of sight), and a picosecond optical probe interferometer. These diagnostics allow careful measurement of energy transport and deposition during and following the laser-plasma interactions at extremely high intensities in both planar and conical targets. Together with accurate on-shot laser focal spot and prepulse characterization, these measurements are yielding new insights into energy coupling and are providing critical data for validating numerical particle-in-cell (PIC) and hybrid PIC simulation codes in an area crucial for fast ignition and other applications. Novel aspects of these diagnostics and how they are combined to extract quantitative data on ultrahigh intensity laser-plasma interactions are discussed.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2010

Hot electron generation and transport using Kα emission

K. U. Akli; R.B. Stephens; M.H. Key; T. Bartal; F. N. Beg; S. Chawla; C D Chen; R. Fedosejevs; R. R. Freeman; H. Friesen; E. Giraldez; J. S. Green; D S Hey; D.P. Higginson; J Hund; L. C. Jarrott; G.E. Kemp; J. King; A Kryger; K. L. Lancaster; S. LePape; Anthony Link; T. Ma; A. J. Mackinnon; A. G. MacPhee; H.S. McLean; C Murphy; P. A. Norreys; V. Ovchinnikov; P. K. Patel

We have conducted experiments on both the Vulcan and Titan laser facilities to study hot electron generation and transport in the context of fast ignition. Cu wires attached to Al cones were used to investigate the effect on coupling efficiency of plasma surround and the pre-formed plasma inside the cone. We found that with thin cones 15% of laser energy is coupled to the 40μm diameter wire emulating a 40μm fast ignition spot. Thick cone walls, simulating plasma in fast ignition, reduce coupling by x4. An increase of pre-pulse level inside the cone by a factor of 50 reduces coupling by a factor of 3.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2007

Quantitative emission from femtosecond microplasmas for laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy

Mike Taschuk; Sean E. Kirkwood; Y.Y. Tsui; R. Fedosejevs

An ongoing study of the scaling of Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) to microjoule pulse energies is being conducted to quantify the LIBS process. The use of microplasmas for LIBS requires good understanding of the emission scaling in order to maximize the sensitivity of the LIBS technique at low energies. The quantitative scaling of emission of Al, Cu and Si microplasmas from 100 μJ down to 100 nJ is presented. The scaling of line emission from major and minor constituents in Al 5052 alloy is investigated and evaluated for analytical LIBS. Ablated crater volume scaling and emission efficiency for Si microplasmas are investigated.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

A single-shot spatial chirp method for measuring initial AC conductivity evolution of femtosecond laser pulse excited warm dense matter

Zhijiang Chen; P. Hering; S. B. Brown; Chandra Curry; Y.Y. Tsui; S. H. Glenzer

To study the rapid evolution of AC conductivity from ultrafast laser excited warm dense matter (WDM), a spatial chirp single-shot method is developed utilizing a crossing angle pump-probe configuration. The pump beam is shaped individually in two spatial dimensions so that it can provide both sufficient laser intensity to excite the material to warm dense matter state and a uniform time window of up to 1 ps with sub-100 fs FWHM temporal resolution. Temporal evolution of AC conductivity in laser excited warm dense gold was also measured.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Threshold for permanent refractive index change in crystalline silicon by femtosecond laser irradiation

Daniel Bachman; Zhijiang Chen; R. Fedosejevs; Y.Y. Tsui; Vien Van

An optical damage threshold for crystalline silicon from single femtosecond laser pulses was determined by detecting a permanent change in the refractive index of the material. This index change could be detected with unprecedented sensitivity by measuring the resonant wavelength shift of silicon integrated optics microring resonators irradiated with femtosecond laser pulses at 400 nm and 800 nm wavelengths. The threshold for permanent index change at 400 nm wavelength was determined to be 0.053 ± 0.007 J/cm2, which agrees with previously reported threshold values for femtosecond laser modification of crystalline silicon. However, the threshold for index change at 800 nm wavelength was found to be 0.044 ± 0.005 J/cm2, which is five times lower than the previously reported threshold values for visual change on the silicon surface. The discrepancy is attributed to possible modification of the crystallinity of silicon below the melting temperature that has not been detected before.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

On specular reflectivity measurements in high and low-contrast relativistic laser-plasma interactions

G.E. Kemp; A. Link; Y. Ping; H.S. McLean; P. K. Patel; R. R. Freeman; D. W. Schumacher; Henry Tiedje; Y.Y. Tsui; R. Ramis; R. Fedosejevs

Using both experiment and 2D3V particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations, we describe the use of specular reflectivity measurements to study relativistic (Iλ2 > 1018 W/cm2⋅μm2) laser-plasma interactions for both high and low-contrast 527 nm laser pulses on initially solid density aluminum targets. In the context of hot-electron generation, studies typically rely on diagnostics which, more-often-than-not, represent indirect processes driven by fast electrons transiting through solid density materials. Specular reflectivity measurements, however, can provide a direct measure of the interaction that is highly sensitive to how the EM fields and plasma profiles, critical input parameters for modeling of hot-electron generation, evolve near the interaction region. While the fields of interest occur near the relativistic critical electron density, experimental reflectivity measurements are obtained centimeters away from the interaction region, well after diffraction has fully manifested itself. Using a combination of P...


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2014

Femtosecond laser tuning of Si microring resonators by surface amorphization through a thick SiO 2 cladding

Daniel Bachman; Zhijiang Chen; R. Fedosejevs; Y.Y. Tsui; Vien Van

Single femtosecond laser pulses are used to modify the surface of c-Si waveguides clad by SiO2 for permanent tuning of microring resonators. Positive, controllable resonance shifts that vary with fluence are demonstrated, inducing little loss.

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F. N. Beg

University of California

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P. K. Patel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. Hey

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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A. G. MacPhee

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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A. J. Mackinnon

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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M.H. Key

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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