Metal additive manufacturing (AM) is a disruptive production technology, widely adopted in innovative industries that revolutionizes design and manufacturing. The interest in quality control of AM systems has grown substantially over the last decade, driven by AM's appeal for intricate, high-value, and low-volume production components. Geometry-dependent process conditions in AM yield unique challenges, especially regarding quality assurance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe experimentally and theoretically investigate the pulsed emission dynamics of a three section tapered semiconductor quantum dot laser. The laser output is characterized in terms of peak power, pulse width, timing jitter and amplitude stability and a range of outstanding pulse performance is found. A cascade of dynamic operating regimes is identified and comprehensively investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe experimentally study the generation and amplification of stable picosecond-short optical pulses by a master oscillator power-amplifier configuration consisting of a monolithic quantum-dot-based gain-guided tapered laser and amplifier emitting at 1.26 µm without pulse compression, external cavity, gain- or Q-switched operation. We report a peak power of 42 W and a figure-of-merit for second-order nonlinear imaging of 38.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe exploit the coupled emission-states of a single-chip semiconductor InAs/GaAs quantum-dot laser emitting simultaneously on ground-state (λ(GS) = 1245 nm) and excited-state (λ(ES) = 1175 nm) to demonstrate coupled-two-state self-mixing velocimetry for a moving diffuse reflector. A 13 Hz-narrow Doppler beat frequency signal at 317 Hz is obtained for a reflector velocity of 3 mm/s, which exemplifies a 66-fold improvement in width as compared to single-wavelength self-mixing velocimetry. Simulation results reveal the physical origin of this signal, the coupling of excited-state and ground-state photons via the carriers, which is unique for quantum-dot lasers and reproduce the experimental results with excellent agreement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this paper the influence of different feedback (FB) and synchronization schemes on the timing phase noise (TPN) power spectral density (PSD) of a quantum-dot based passively mode-locked laser (MLL) is studied numerically and by experiments. The range of investigated schemes cover hybrid mode-locking, an opto-electrical feedback configuration, an all-optical feedback configuration and optical pulse train injection configuration by means of a master MLL. The mechanism responsible for TPN PSD reduction in the case of FB is identified for the first time for monolithic passively MLL and relies on the effective interaction of the timing of the intra-cavity pulse and the time-delayed FB pulse or FB modulation together with an statistical averaging of the independent timing deviations of both.
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