Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.108, No.20, 6216-6221, 2004
Analysis of blackbody-like radiation from laser-heated gas-phase tungsten nanoparticles
Thermal (blackbody-like) radiation that originated from laser-heated tungsten nanoparticles was measured using optical emission spectroscopy. The nanoparticles were generated via ArF excimer laser-assisted photolytic decomposition of WF6/H-2/Ar gas mixtures, and the laser heating was applied parallel to the deposition. The temperature of the nanoparticles was determined, and its dependence on time, with respect to the 15-ns laser pulse (full width at half-maximum, fwhm) and laser fluence (phi), has been presented. At phi > 90 mJ/cm(2), the particles reached the melting point (shortly after the laser pulse). Dominant cooling mechanisms, such as evaporation (above similar to3000 K) and a combination of heat transfer by the ambient gas and radiative cooling (below similar to3000 K), were observed for the nanoparticles, which were similar to10 nm in diameter. The degree of inelasticity for the (predominantly) argon-gas collisions and the total emissivity of the particles (in the 2500-3000 K temperature region) could also be derived. The measured cooling rate and temperature data indicate that, depending on experimental parameters, evaporation and surface reactions can have a definite effect on the growth of particles.