Issue 34, 2008

Water expansion dynamics after pulsed IR laser heating

Abstract

A nanosecond pulsed IR (1.9 μm) laser rapidly heated water, in an open vessel, to temperatures well below the boiling point. The subsequent dynamics of volume expansion were monitored using time-resolved interferometry in order to measure the increase in the water level in the heated area. The water expanded at less than the speed of sound, taking just less than 100 ns to increase its height by ∼500 nm at surface temperature jumps of 20 K. The initial expansion was followed by an apparent contraction and then a re-expansion. The first expansion phase occurred more slowly than the timescale for bulk H-bond re-structuring of the water, as determined from vibrational bands in the Raman spectra, and represents the limit to the rate at which the overpressure caused by sudden heating can be released. The second phase of the expansion was caused by hydrodynamic effects and is accompanied by morphological changes resulting in light scattering as well as droplet spallation.

Graphical abstract: Water expansion dynamics after pulsed IR laser heating

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Apr 2008
Accepted
13 May 2008
First published
08 Jul 2008

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2008,10, 5256-5263

Water expansion dynamics after pulsed IR laser heating

J. Hobley, Y. Kuge, S. Gorelik, M. Kasuya, K. Hatanaka, S. Kajimoto and H. Fukumura, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2008, 10, 5256 DOI: 10.1039/B805838E

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