Title :
Directly diode-pumped millijoule subpicosecond Yb:glass regenerative amplifier
Author :
Hsiao-Hua Liu ; Biswal, S. ; Paye, J. ; Nees, J. ; Mourou, G.
Author_Institution :
Centre for Ultrafast Opt. Sci., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Ytterbium-doped laser materials have recently received a great deal of interest. The low pump saturation intensity of Yb:glass at 975 nm (/spl sim/4 kW/cm/sup 2/) can benefit from diode pumping and the fluorescence bandwidth is broad enough to support subpicosecond pulses. By using a regenerative amplifier, the challenge of efficiently extracting energy from a low emission cross-section material can be met. Such advantages make it possible for Yb:glass lasers to be compact and cost-efficient, and thus, great candidates for applications such as surgery and micro-machining. We have demonstrated, for the first time, millijoule, subpicosecond pulses from a directly diode-pumped laser system. The gain medium was a 400-/spl mu/m thick, Kigre QX phosphate glass doped with 15% wt. Yb/sub 2/O/sub 3/, shaped in a keystone slab geometry. The initial cavity was composed of 2 spherical mirrors and 2 plane mirrors: a regular X cavity. Cylindric optics were then used to improve the mode matching between the pump and the lasing beams and to generate a TEM/sub 00/-like output beam. By replacing spherical optics with cylindrical optics, we improved the tangential M/sup 2/ value of the output beam of the bare cavity from 114 to 1.7, while maintaining the sagittal M/sup 2/ value at 1.3. The free running output power of the regenerative amplifier shows more obvious thermal effects than does that of the bare cavity at higher average pump powers because the combination of thermal birefringence and polarization sensitive optics, such as thin film polarizers, results in higher cavity losses.
Keywords :
laser beams; laser cavity resonators; laser mirrors; laser modes; optical glass; optical pulse generation; optical pumping; solid lasers; ytterbium; 975 nm; Kigre QX phosphate glass; TEM/sub 00/-like output beam; Yb-doped laser materials; Yb/sub 2/O/sub 3/; Yb:glass; Yb:glass lasers; Yb:glass regenerative amplifier; average pump power; cavity; cavity losses; cylindric optics; cylindrical optics; diode pumping; directly diode-pumped laser system; directly diode-pumped millijoule subpicosecond regenerative amplifier; fluorescence bandwidth; free running output power; gain medium; keystone slab geometry; lasing beams; low emission cross-section material; micro-machining; millijoule subpicosecond pulses; millijoule subpicosecond regenerative amplifier; mode matching; output beam; plane mirrors; polarization sensitive optics; pump beams; regenerative amplifier; regular X cavity; sagittal M/sup 2/ value; saturation intensity; spherical mirrors; spherical optics; subpicosecond pulses; surgery; tangential M/sup 2/ value; thermal birefringence; thermal effects; thin film polarizers; Biomedical optical imaging; Diodes; Optical films; Optical materials; Optical pumping; Optical saturation; Optical sensors; Pulse amplifiers; Pump lasers; Stimulated emission;
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics, 1999. CLEO '99. Summaries of Papers Presented at the Conference on
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN :
1-55752-595-1
DOI :
10.1109/CLEO.1999.834458