Phys. Rev. B 49, 796 - 801 (1994)Structural phase of femtosecond-laser-melted graphite |
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T. Dallas and M. Holtz
Department of Physics, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas 79409
H. Ahn and M. C. Downer
Department of Physics, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
Received 16 September 1993
We have used Raman scattering to investigate the effects of intense laser pulses on the structure of resolidified graphite. Graphite was irradiated with 0.325–3.25-J/cm2, 620-nm, 90-fs single-laser pulses causing it to melt and rapidly resolidify. Raman studies of the resolidified carbon in the crater show that the rapid annealing process (by pulses with energy fluences ≥0.82 J/cm2) causes a breakdown in the ordered layers of hexagonal carbon rings and disorder in the intraplanar spacing upon resolidification into a nanocrystalline material. The thickness of the nanocrystalline-graphite near-surface layer increases with increasing fluence. Residual planar structure of the resulting material is observed for the various pulse-energy values by comparing the narrow graphitic 1581-cm-1 and the broad 1360-cm-1 and 1600-cm-1 vibrational bands. The interplanar structure of our nanocrystalline graphite is also studied quantitatively via the low-frequency shear mode at 42 cm-1. The Raman spectrum of our glassy carbon is found to be well described by planar ordering approximately 2 to 3 layers in extent using a simple correlation function approach. Our results indicate a layered morphology is present in our nanocrystalline graphite, confirming a strong sp2 bonding character.
©1994 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v49/p796
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.49.796
PACS: 78.30.-j, 63.50.+x, 81.30.-t, 61.43.-j
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