Multimode fibers are attractive for high-power lasers if transverse modes are efficiently controlled. Here, a dielectric thin-film mirror (R~20%) is micro-fabricated on the central area of the end face of a 1 km multimode 100/140 µm graded-index fiber and tested as the output mirror of a Raman laser with highly multimode (M~34) 940 nm diode pumping. In the cavity with highly reflective input FBG, Raman lasing of the Stokes wave at 976 nm starts at the threshold pump power of ~80 W. Mode-selective properties of mirrors with various diameters were tested experimentally and compared with calculations in COMSOL, with the optimum diameter found to be around 12 µm. The measured Raman laser output beam at 976 nm has a quality factor of M~2 near the threshold, which confirms a rather good selection of the fundamental transverse mode. The power scaling capabilities, together with a more detailed characterization of the output beam's spatial profile, spectrum, and their stability, are performed. An approximately 35 W output power with an approximately 60% slope efficiency and a narrow spectrum has been demonstrated at the expense of a slight worsening of beam quality to M~3 without any sign of mirror degradation at the achieved intensity of >30 MW/cm. Further power scaling of such lasers as well as the application of the proposed technique in high-power fiber lasers are discussed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi15080940 | DOI Listing |
We report lasing action in a femtosecond-laser-inscribed waveguide in thulium-doped barium-gallium-germanium oxide (BGG) glass. A laser cavity was assembled with this waveguide that provided a single-mode output of 62 mW when pumped at 1.6 µm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLight Sci Appl
November 2024
State Key Laboratory of High Field Laser Physics, Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, 201800, China.
Thermometric techniques with high accuracy, fast response and ease of implementation are desirable for the study of dynamic combustion environments, transient reacting flows, and non-equilibrium plasmas. Herein, single-shot single-beam coherent Raman scattering (SS-CRS) thermometry is developed, for the first time to our knowledge, by using air lasing as a probe. We show that the air-lasing-assisted CRS signal has a high signal-to-noise ratio enabling single-shot measurements at a 1 kHz repetition rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultiple gain routes complicate the amplification behaviors of N2+ lasing. A direct comparison of the amplification processes of various lasing lines of N2+ is still lacking to date, mainly because the efficient generation of different lasing lines requires different experimental conditions. In this work, to overcome the limitation, we use an intense polarization-modulated femtosecond laser pulse to simultaneously produce high-intensity N2+ lasing signals at 391 nm and 428 nm, permitting us readily performing their time-domain characterizations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicromachines (Basel)
July 2024
Institute of Automation and Electrometry SB RAS, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia.
Multimode fibers are attractive for high-power lasers if transverse modes are efficiently controlled. Here, a dielectric thin-film mirror (R~20%) is micro-fabricated on the central area of the end face of a 1 km multimode 100/140 µm graded-index fiber and tested as the output mirror of a Raman laser with highly multimode (M~34) 940 nm diode pumping. In the cavity with highly reflective input FBG, Raman lasing of the Stokes wave at 976 nm starts at the threshold pump power of ~80 W.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report, to the best of our knowledge, the first demonstration of an O + E-band tunable watt-level bismuth-doped phosphosilicate fiber laser and its frequency doubling to tunable red laser. Benefiting from the two types of bismuth active centers associated with silicon and phosphorus introduced in one fiber, an ultrabroad gain is available in the designed low-water-peak bismuth-doped phosphosilicate fiber (Bi-PSF) pumped by a self-made 1239 nm Raman fiber laser. The high-efficiency tunable lasing is achieved with a maximum output power of 1.
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