throbber
116
`
`OPTICS LETTERS / Vol. 18, No. 2 / January 15, 1993
`
`Highly efficient 60-W TEMoo cw diode-end-pumped
`Nd:YAG laser
`
`S. C. Tidwell, J. F. Seamans, and M. S. Bowers
`
`STI Optronics, Inc., 2755 Northup Way, Bellevue, Washington 98004-1495
`
`Received August 7, 1992
`We have demonstrated a diode-end-pumped Nd:YAG laser that produces an output power of 60 W in a near-
`diffraction-limited beam (i.e., M2 < 1.3).
`In multimode operation, the laser produces an output power of
`92 W. The optical-to-optical efficiency (i.e., the ratio of laser power to diode power) is 26% for TEMoO operation
`and 44% for multimode operation.
`
`We have previously reported on a scalable end-
`pumped laser that used four 10-W cw laser diode
`bars to pump a laser that produced a multimode
`output power of 15 W.' This laser architecture
`has significant economic advantages resulting from
`highly efficient operation and the use of diode bars
`[which are the least-expensive source of diode power
`in terms of cost per watt (Ref. 2)]. In the present
`study we use this power-scaling approach to extend
`the multimode output power of cw diode-pumped
`lasers
`to 92 W. In addition, thermal distortion
`and stress-induced birefringence are corrected. The
`result
`is a near-diffraction-limited
`output of 60 W
`with an optical-to-optical efficiency of 26%. This
`is to our knowledge the first demonstration
`that
`the effects of higher-order thermal nonuniformities
`inherent
`to end-pumped lasers can be overcome
`without sacrificing efficiency.
`The output power of end-pumped lasers can be
`scaled by increasing the pump power delivered to a
`single end3' 4 and by combining multiple ends within
`a single cavity.5
`In cw lasers, it is important
`to
`minimize losses to provide high extraction efficiency.
`Thus, in a multiple-end laser each end should be
`pumped with the highest possible power in order
`to minimize the number of surfaces contributing to
`internal loss. The ultimate power-scaling limit for
`a single end is determined by the thermal fracture
`strength of the laser material.6 Thermal distortion
`and stress-induced birefringence can significantly de-
`grade performance at powers well below the thermal
`fracture limit.7' 8 Nd:YLF exhibits negligible thermal
`distortion and stress-induced birefringence, but many
`ends would be needed to produce high output powers
`owing to the low fracture strength.9
`In contrast, al-
`most 25 W can be extracted from a single Nd:YAG rod
`end.6 Nd:YAG is, therefore, the preferred material
`for an efficient, high-power cw end-pumped laser.
`Because Nd:YAG exhibits strong thermal distortion
`and birefringence it is essential to correct these ef-
`fects in order to achieve good beam quality, high
`polarization purity, high power, and high efficiency
`simultaneously.
`We use an angularly multiplexed pump geometry
`to deliver the diode power to the rod end. Four
`
`15-W laser diode bars (Spectra Diode Laboratories
`SDL-3450-S) are arrayed around both ends of each
`rod as shown in Fig. 1. The two sets of diodes on
`each rod are clocked 450 with respect to one another to
`produce a circular gain distribution. The divergence
`of each diode bar is reduced from ,40° to -10°
`in
`the plane perpendicular to the array by using a 2-
`mm-diameter quartz rod lens. The diode light is
`then focused into the rod end by using a 14.2-mm
`focal-length spherical lens. Unused sections of the
`spherical lenses are removed to eliminate mechani-
`cal interference and additional intracavity apertures.
`The pump light is incident upon the rod at an angle of
`30°. The edge-cooled Nd:YAG rods have a diameter
`of 6.35 mm, a length of 7.5 mm, and a doping level
`of 1.0 at.%.
`The pumping geometry allows for efficient use
`of the pump light. Both lenses have antireflection
`coatings for the pump light, and the rod ends are
`antireflection coated for both the pump and lasing
`wavelengths. A passive tuning scheme is used to set
`the center wavelengths of the diodes to within ± 1 nm
`of the optimum for absorption. The efficiency with
`which pump light is transferred from the diode and
`absorbed in the rod is over 80%. Thus approximately
`50 W of pump power is absorbed per rod end.
`The pump power is concentrated in the central
`portion of the rod, as shown in Fig. 2. The result
`is high gain and a distribution that can be extracted
`
`Fig. 1. Angularly multiplexed pump geometry used to
`focus the power of eight 15-W laser diode bars into each
`laser rod.
`
`0146-9592/93/020116-03$5.00/0
`
`© 1993 Optical Society of America
`
`Energetiq Ex. 2048, page 1 - IPR2015-01300, IPR2015-01303
`
`

`
`January 15, 1993 / Vol. 18, No. 2 / OPTICS LETTERS
`
`117
`
`located at the symmetry plane compensates for first-
`order thermal focusing. Neglecting aberrations, each
`rod has a thermal lens focal length of 25.7 cm and a
`TEMOO mode diameter of 2.4 mm (1/e2 ). The rods
`form the limiting apertures.
`The birefringence is corrected by placing a quartz
`polarization rotator between the two rods.'"
`If the
`thermally induced stresses and ray paths are identi-
`cal in the two rods then the depolarization and bifo-
`cusing can be cancelled by rotating the polarization of
`all rays by 90° between rods. We have demonstrated
`this technique by using two rods pumped with 20 W
`each. In this proof-of-principle test, the depolariza-
`tion in a collimated He-Ne laser passing through the
`two rods was reduced from 6% to less than 0.2% with
`the use of a quartz rotator.
`The thermally induced spherical aberration is cor-
`rected by an aspheric surface on the lens at the
`symmetry plane. The shape of the asphere is de-
`rived from calculations that use the measured ther-
`mal distortion of the rod to predict the properties
`of the aberrated mode. The thermal distortion is
`measured in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer while
`the rod is being extracted. Efficient extraction de-
`creases the distortion by approximately 25% com-
`pared with when the power is lost to fluorescence.
`This difference is a result of upconversion leading to
`a lower net quantum efficiency for the fluorescence.
`The thermal distortion is added to the phase of the
`desired Gaussian mode at the rod, and the aberrated
`wave front is propagated to the symmetry plane
`numerically. The proper asphere shape is simply
`that which reverses the phase at the symmetry plane,
`effectively making the asphere a phase conjugator.
`Radial profiles for the thermal distortion (mea-
`sured at the rods) and the correction (imposed by
`the asphere) are given in Fig. 4. The thermal dis-
`tortion is the sum of contributions from both rods.
`The transverse dimensions of the two profiles are
`different because the mode focuses down from the
`rod to the asphere. The net effect of the asphere and
`two thermally distorted rods on the mode phase front
`is equivalent to pure focus. The CaF2 asphere is
`diamond machined and postpolished to reduce scatter
`losses to less than 0.5%.
`A stable output power of 60 W with near-diffraction-
`limited beam quality is obtained with the flat-flat
`resonator and a total diode power of 235 W. The
`beam quality is calculated from measurements of the
`
`ASPHERE
`,SHR
`
`FLAT OUTPUT
`COUPLER
`
`Fig. 2. Fluorescence profile of a 6.35-mm-diameter end-
`pumped Nd:YAG rod. A total pump power of approxi-
`mately 100 W is absorbed in the rod, 70 W of which is
`encircled within the 2.4-mm mode diameter.
`
`efficiently by the fundamental mode.'0 The small-
`signal gain in the central area of each rod is approx-
`imately 0.5.
`Multimode extraction tests using a single rod were
`performed with a 14.3-cm-long resonator formed be-
`tween two 1.1-m concave mirrors with 3% output
`coupling. Output powers as high as 24 W are ex-
`tracted from a rod pumped on a single end, whereas
`a rod pumped from both ends can produce 49.5 W.
`Multimode tests using two rods are performed with
`a 44-cm cavity formed between a 1.1-m-high reflector
`and a 90% reflective 1-m output coupler. A multi-
`mode output power of 92 W is obtained with a total
`pump power of 235 W. The threshold
`for the two-
`rod oscillator is approximately 24 W, and the slope
`efficiency is 44% (based on the diode output power).
`No effort was made to correct thermal distortion
`or birefringence in the multimode tests. The beam
`quality of the multimode output ranged from 20 to
`30 times diffraction limited.
`A resonator that has a symmetry plane between the
`two rods, as illustrated in Fig. 3, was designed for
`high-beam-quality extraction tests. The symmetry
`ensures that the mode is the same size and that
`rays pass through similar areas in both rods. The
`resonator is formed by flat-end mirrors separated
`from the rods by 65 cm. The rods are separated from
`one another by 20 cm. A -16-cm
`focal-length
`lens
`
`Nd:YAG
`MOUNT.
`
`60-W
`PUMP-\
`MODULE
`
`FLAT
`-MIRROR
`
`|-
`
`65 cm
`
`Fig. 3. Symmetrical resonator used in TEMoo extraction experiments. Symmetry between the two laser rods allows
`straightforward correction of the thermal distortion and stress-induced birefringence.
`
`Energetiq Ex. 2048, page 2 - IPR2015-01300, IPR2015-01303
`
`

`
`118
`
`OPTICS LETTERS / Vol. 18, No. 2 / January 15, 1993
`
`the resonator length is adjusted so that the Fresnel
`number approaches unity under full pump power.
`When properly adjusted, the power is stable, and the
`mode discrimination is sufficient to assure good beam
`quality without sacrificing efficiency.
`In summary, we have demonstrated a diode-end-
`pumped cw Nd:YAG laser that produces an output
`power of 92 W in a multimode beam and 60 W in a
`near-diffraction-limited beam. The laser uses a total
`of sixteen 15-W laser diode bars pumping two short
`rods in an angularly multiplexed pump geometry. A
`diamond-machined asphere and a quartz polarization
`rotator are used in a symmetric resonator to correct
`thermal distortion and the stress-induced birefrin-
`gence for TEMoo extraction. The optical-to-optical
`efficiencies are 44% and 26% for multimode and
`TEMOO operation, respectively. The high efficiency of
`the end-pumped oscillator and the use of laser diode
`bars as pump sources provide significant economic
`advantage for this design.
`
`References
`1. S. C. Tidwell, J. F. Seamans, C. E. Hamilton, C. H.
`Muller, and D. D. Lowenthal, Opt. Lett. 16,584 (1991).
`2. For a cost comparison, the price of a 15-W laser diode
`bar is less than twice that of a 0.5-W fiber-coupled
`laser diode (Spectra Diode Laboratories, Inc., San
`Jose, Calif., 1992 Product Catalog).
`3. Y. Kaneda, M. Oka, H. Masuda, and S. Kubota, Opt.
`Lett. 17, 1003 (1992).
`4. T. Y. Fan, A. Sanchez, and W. E. DeFeo, Opt. Lett.
`14, 1057 (1989).
`5. M. S. Keirstead and T. M. Baer, in Digest of Confer-
`ence on Lasers and Electro-Optics (Optical Society of
`America, Washington, D.C., 1991), p. 490.
`6. S. C. Tidwell, J. F. Seamans, M. S. Bowers, and A. K.
`Cousins, IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 28, 997 (1992).
`7. S. C. Tidwell, M. S. Bowers, A. K. Cousins, and
`D. D. Lowenthal, in Digest of Conference on Lasers
`and Electro-Optics (Optical Society of America,
`Washington, D.C., 1991), p. 448.
`8. W. K. Koechner, Solid-State Laser Engineering
`(Springer-Verlag, New York, 1988), pp. 350-380.
`9. W. K. Koechner, Solid-State Laser Engineering
`(Springer-Verlag, New York, 1988), pp. 60-62.
`10. D. L. Sipes, Appl. Phys. Lett. 47, 74 (1985).
`11. W. C. Scott and M. de Wit, Appl. Phys. Lett. 18, 3
`(1971).
`12. V. Magni, Appl. Opt. 25, 107 (1986).
`
`20
`
`15
`
`10
`
`E a
`
`-
`0
`
`o
`0
`
`.
`
`12
`
`.
`
`.
`
`.
`
`.
`
`.
`
`.
`
`.
`
`.
`3
`
`RADIUS (mm)
`Fig. 4. Radial profiles of the thermal distortion resulting
`from two pumped rods and the correction imposed by
`the aspheric lens. The profiles have different transverse
`scales because the mode size decreases by approximately
`1.4 times between the rod and asphere. OPD, optical
`path difference.
`
`beam size taken at the output coupler and then in
`the far field. The flat output coupler defines a waist
`for the mode, which nominally has a radius of 174
`Am. Far-field measurements were taken 2 m from
`the output coupler (the beam Rayleigh range is 9
`cm). The beam quality, or M2 factor, is simply the
`ratio of the far-field beam size to that calculated for a
`diffraction-limited beam with the same waist. The
`beam quality of this laser is 1.3 times diffraction
`limited.
`The output power and beam quality of the laser
`are sensitive to adjustments in pump power because
`the resonator Fresnel number changes rapidly as
`a function of the rod focal length. The sensitivity
`can be greatly reduced by using convex end mir-
`rors rather than flats.'2 For example, the mode size
`would be nearly constant for pump power variations
`of ±5% if the flats were replaced with -30-cm mir-
`rors at the same locations. Flat-end mirrors are
`used here for experimental convenience. In our case,
`
`Energetiq Ex. 2048, page 3 - IPR2015-01300, IPR2015-01303

This document is available on Docket Alarm but you must sign up to view it.


Or .

Accessing this document will incur an additional charge of $.

After purchase, you can access this document again without charge.

Accept $ Charge
throbber

Still Working On It

This document is taking longer than usual to download. This can happen if we need to contact the court directly to obtain the document and their servers are running slowly.

Give it another minute or two to complete, and then try the refresh button.

throbber

A few More Minutes ... Still Working

It can take up to 5 minutes for us to download a document if the court servers are running slowly.

Thank you for your continued patience.

This document could not be displayed.

We could not find this document within its docket. Please go back to the docket page and check the link. If that does not work, go back to the docket and refresh it to pull the newest information.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

You need a Paid Account to view this document. Click here to change your account type.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

Set your membership status to view this document.

With a Docket Alarm membership, you'll get a whole lot more, including:

  • Up-to-date information for this case.
  • Email alerts whenever there is an update.
  • Full text search for other cases.
  • Get email alerts whenever a new case matches your search.

Become a Member

One Moment Please

The filing “” is large (MB) and is being downloaded.

Please refresh this page in a few minutes to see if the filing has been downloaded. The filing will also be emailed to you when the download completes.

Your document is on its way!

If you do not receive the document in five minutes, contact support at support@docketalarm.com.

Sealed Document

We are unable to display this document, it may be under a court ordered seal.

If you have proper credentials to access the file, you may proceed directly to the court's system using your government issued username and password.


Access Government Site

We are redirecting you
to a mobile optimized page.





Document Unreadable or Corrupt

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket

We are unable to display this document.

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket