61 research outputs found

    Notas técnicas.Tipos de asfaltos y su empleo en pavimentos

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    ABSTRACT: The idea of acoustic activation of surface diffusion is explored theoretically and in atomistic simulations. It is found that a substantial diffusion enhancement by surface acoustic waves is possible via (1) transient surface strain-induced modification of the diffusion barriers, (2) adiabatic variation in the surface temperature, and (3) dynamic coupling of the acoustic waves with vibrational states of adsorbed species. The approximate scaling laws describing the first two effects are established and verified in kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. The combined contribution of all three effects is studied in molecular dynamics simulations, and the conditions for the diffusion activation through the dynamic coupling are elucidated. The acoustic enhancement of surface diffusion provides an attractive alternative to thermal activation in thin film growth on heat-sensitive substrates. 1

    Plume and Nanoparticle Formation During Laser Ablation

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    The processes that lead to material ejection when a solid sample is irradiated near and above the pulsed laser ablation threshold are discussed. Emphasis is placed on the thermal and mechanical mechanisms that occur during pulsed laser irradiation of metals and semiconductors. Distinctions are drawn between ultrafast-pulsed irradiation, which occurs under stress confinement, and shortpulsed irradiation, in which stress is released during the laser pulse. Similarly, the distinctions between the spallation and phase explosion regimes are discussed. Spallation is only possible when the time of the laser heating is shorter than the time needed for mechanical equilibration of the heated volume, while phase explosion can occur for pulses shorter than tens of ns. Nanoparticle formation can occur directly in the plume as the result of the decomposition of ejected liquid layers or a porous foam created by the phase explosion, as well as through condensation of vaporized atoms (enhanced by the presence of an ambient gas)

    MOLECULAR DYNAMICS STUDY OF SHORT-PULSE LASER MELTING, RECRYSTALLIZATION, SPALLATION, AND ABLATION OF METAL TARGETS

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    ABSTRACT A hybrid computational model combining classical molecular dynamics method for simulation of fast nonequilibrium phase transformations with a continuum description of the laser excitation and subsequent relaxation of the conduction band electrons is developed. The model is applied for a systematic computational investigation of the mechanisms of short pulse laser interaction with bulk metal targets. The material response to laser irradiation is investigated in three regimes corresponding to the melting and resolidification of the surface region of the target, photomechanical spallation of a single or multiple layers/droplets, and ablation driven by the thermodynamic driving forces. The conditions leading to the transitions between the different regimes and the atomic-level characteristics of the involved processes are established

    Multiscale modeling of laser ablation: Applications to nanotechnology

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    Abstract Computational modeling has a potential of making an important contribution to the advancement of laser-driven methods in nanotechnology. In this presentation a multiscale model for simulation of laser ablation and cluster deposition of nanostructured materials is discussed. A hierarchy of computational methods used to simulate different processes involved in laser ablation and film growth by cluster deposition is schematically illustrated i

    Generation of nanoparticles by laser ablation: Combined MD-DSMC computational study

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    Molecular dynamics model of ultraviolet matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization including ionization processes.

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    A molecular dynamics model of UV-MALDI including ionization processes is presented. In addition to the previously described breathing sphere approach developed for simulation of laser ablation/desorption of molecular systems, it includes radiative and nonradiative decay, exciton hopping, two pooling processes, and electron capture. The results confirm the main conclusions of the continuum model of Knochenmuss, Anal. Chem. 2003, 75, 2199, but provide a much more detailed description of the interaction between ablation/desorption and ionization processes in the critical early time regime. Both desorption and ablation regimes generate free ions, and yields are in accordance with experiment. The first molecular ions are emitted at high velocities shortly before neutral desorption begins, because of surface charging caused by electron escape from the top of the sample. Later ions are entrained and thermalized in the plume of neutral molecules and clusters. Clusters are found to be stable on a nanosecond time scale, so the ions in them will be released only slowly, if at all. Exciton hopping rate and the mean radius for ion recombination are shown to be key parameters that can have a significant effect on net ion yield
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