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Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy Moves Ahead

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Stephen Hamilton, Andor Technology, and George Asimellis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

Although the first laser plasma was generated in the early years of laser development, it was not until the late 1990s that laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy escaped the borders of scientific curiosity. One can simply describe it as a technique for identifying the elemental composition of various samples, regardless of state: It can be used to interrogate solids, liquids and gases. Its principle is simple (Figure 1). First, a high-power laser pulse is focused onto a sample. Nearly instantaneous absorption then locally ablates a thin layer of material, which subsequently gains energy...Read full article

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    Published: February 2004
    Glossary
    laser plasma
    A plasma produced by the interaction of an intense laser pulse with a material surface. Production of ionized particle with high intensity radiation. The narrow path of the intense field produces a plasma channel. The LIPC (laser-induced plasma channel) laser has been adapted towards electroshock weapons as well as induced lightning.
    atomic emission linesBasic SciencedefenseFeaturesindustriallaser plasmalaser-induced breakdown spectroscopylaser-induced plasmaSensors & Detectorsspectral analysisspectroscopy

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