We present our latest progresses on the development of integrated photonic devices as well as microfluidic chips of unprecedented characteristics and performances using femtosecond laser micromachining. We demonstrate ultra-high Q microresonators in lithium niobate on insulator (LNOI), on-chip micro-laser and waveguide amplifier, and high-throughput micro-chemical reactor. The achievements are the result of persistent effort on improving the precision and efficiency in ultrafast laser processing.
Femtosecond laser-induced chemical etching (FLICE) has proved itself a powerful approach when attempting to fabricate three-dimensional (3D) microstructures in glass, whereas maintaining a high spatial resolution in fabricating samples of great heights/thicknesses is challenging due to the diffraction nature of light waves. Here, we demonstrate the fabrication of macro-scale 3D glass objects of large heights up to ~3.8 cm with a well-balanced lateral and longitudinal resolution of ~20 μm using the FLICE. Moreover, a freeform hand printed with embedded blood vessel system has been produced. The remarkable accomplishments are achieved by revealing an unexplored regime in the interaction of ultrafast laser pulses with fused silica, which gives rise to depth-insensitive focusing of the laser pulses and polarization-independent selective etching inside fused silica. We examine the difference in the plasma dynamics between interactions of picosecond and femtosecond laser pulses with fused silica glass.
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