Metallurgical Abstracts on Light Metals and Alloys vol.56

Influence of pulse duration on mechanical properties and dislocation density of dry laser peened aluminum alloy using ultrashort pulsed laser-driven shock wave

Masayuki Yoshida*, Itsuki Nishibata*, Tomoki Matsuda*, Yusuke Ito**, Naohiko Sugita**, Ayumi Shiro***, Takahisa Shobu****, Kazuto Arakawa*****, Akio Hirose* and Tomokazu Sano*
*Division of Materials and Manufacturing Science, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University
**Department of Mechanical Engineering, School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo
***Quantum Beam Science Research Directorate, National Institute for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology
****Materials Sciences Research Center, Japan Atomic Energy Agency
*****Next Generation TATARA Co-Creation Centre, Organization for Industrial Innovation, Shimane University

[Published in Journal of Appllied Physics Vol. 132 (2022), pp. 075101_1–9]

https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0083511
E-mail: sano[at]mapse.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp
Key Words: femtosecond laser, peening, aluminum, pulse duration

This study aims to investigate the influence of the pulse duration on the mechanical properties and dislocation density of an aluminum alloy treated using dry laser peening (DLP), which is a laser peening technique that uses ultrashort pulsed laser-driven shock wave to eliminate the need for a sacrificial overlay under atmospheric conditions. The results of the micro-Vickers hardness test, residual stress measurement, and dislocation density measurement demonstrate that over a pulse duration range of 180 fs to 10 ps, the maximum peening effects are achieved with a pulse duration of 1 ps. Moreover, the most significant DLP effects are obtained by choosing a pulse duration that achieves a laser intensity that simultaneously generates the strongest shock pressure, suppresses optical nonlinear effects, and realizes the least thermal effects, which weaken the shock effects. Shock temperature calculations based on thermodynamic equations also suggest that a laser intensity driving a shock pressure less than 80 GPa, as in the case of a pulse duration of 1 ps in this study, maintains the solid state of the material throughout the process, resulting in significant DLP effects.