Lasers: Dr. A.Petrishia TRP Engineering College
Lasers: Dr. A.Petrishia TRP Engineering College
Lasers: Dr. A.Petrishia TRP Engineering College
Dr. A.Petrishia
TRP Engineering College
History
1916, Einstein predicted the stimulated emission.
1954, Townes and co-workers developed a Microwave
Amplifier by Stimulated Emission of Radiation(maser) using
ammonia, NH3.
1958, Schawlow and Townes showed that the maser
principle could be extended into the visible region .
1960, Maiman built the first laser using ruby as the active
medium.
From then on, laser development was nothing short of
miraculous, giving optics new impetus and wide publicity
LASER Absorption and Emission of Radiation
+
Stimulated and spontaneous emission
Spontaneous emission
• Photons emitted in all directions and on a random time scale.
• The emitted photons are INCOHERENT
Stimulated emission
• Emitted and stimulating photons have the same :
• Frequency
• Direction
• Phase and polarization
• The emitted and incident photons are COHERENT
Rates of absorption and emission processes
N2 E
exp
N1 kT
4. Mode Structure
1. Beam Shape
laser operating in the TEM00 mode
the energy has a Gaussian distribution at a given distance r
from the axis, the irradiance I falls off exponentially
( 2 r / w) 2
I (r ) I 0 e
parameter w: the distance from the axis at which I has
dropped to 1/e2 of I0, the irradiance in the center
7.4 Applications
Rayleigh's criterion : 1.22
D
7.3 Types of Lasers
1. Solid-state Lasers
ruby laser
Ruby is synthetic aluminum oxide, Al2O3, with 0.03 to
0.05% of chromium oxide, Cr2O3, added to it. The
Cr3+ ions are the active ingredient; the aluminum and
oxygen atoms are inert.
The ruby crystal is made into a cylindrical rod, several
centimeters long and several millimeters in diameter,
with the ends polished flat to act as cavity mirrors.
Pumping is by light from a xenon flash tube.
7.3 Types of Lasers
E3: fairly wide and has a short Three-level energy diagram
lifetime; the excited Cr3+ ions typical of ruby
rapidly relax and drop to the next
lower state, E2. This transition is
nonradiative.
E2: metastable and has a lifetime
longer than that of E3, and the
Cr3+ ions remain that much
longer in E2 before they drop to
the ground state, E1.
The E2 E1 transition is radiative; it produces the spontaneous,
incoherent red fluorescence typical of ruby, with a peak near 694 nm.
As the pumping energy is increased above a critical threshold,
population inversion occurs in E2 with respect to E1 and the system
lases, with a sharp peak at 694.3 nm.
Lasing Action Diagram
Excited State
Spontaneous
Energy
Emission
Metastable State
Introduction
Stimulated
Energy
Emission of
Radiation
Ground State
Requirements for Laser Action
fast
Metastable state
efficient pumping
slow relaxation
slow Population
inversion
Fast relaxation
7.3 Types of Lasers
helium-neon laser
Typically, it consists of a tube about 30 cm long and 2 mm in
diameter, with two electrodes on the side and fused silica windows at
both ends. The tube contains a mixture of 5 parts helium and 1 part
neon, kept at a pressure of 133 Pa.
7.3 Types of Lasers
argon laser
It generates a strong
turquoise-blue line at 488 nm
and a green line at 514.5 nm,
in either pulsed or c. w.
operation.
helium-cadmium
It emits a brilliant blue at
441.6 nm.
7.3 Types of Lasers
carbon dioxide laser
high power: the first CO2 lasers had a continuous output of a
few milliwatts. Today we have powers of some 200 kW, more
than enough to cut through steel plates several centimeters thick
in a matter of seconds.
High efficient: the efficiency in converting electrical energy
into radiation is better (more than 10%) than that of any other
laser.(TEA CO2 laser)
Relatively simple in construction and operation are.
Tunable in a small range
Emission is at 10.6 m.
7.3 Types of Lasers
Excimer lasers
contain rare-gas halides such as XeCl, KrF, or others.
These molecules are unstable in the ground state but bound
in the excited state.
3. Semiconductor Lasers
LED: light-emitting diode
main application :
• waveguides
• integrated optics
4. Tunable Lasers
dye lasers: first tunable lasers
parametric oscillator:
more compact less expensive
easier to operate tuning range much wider
free-electron laser:
high powers of the order of megawatts
very efficient
tuned through a wide range of wavelengths.
Tunable lasers are most welcome to spectroscopists
WAVELENGTHS OF MOST COMMON LASERS
(iii) Under the above two conditions, the total electric field
of the multimode laser is:
N i i t
E t Re Ei e where
i 1
N 1 c
i 0 i c c
2 L
Fundamentals of Photonics 2018/2/2 46
0 is the frequency of the central mode, N is the number
of modes in the laser, c is the mode frequency separation.
i is the frequency of the i-th mode.
Calculating the summation yields:
c t
sin N Note this is the optical
Et E 0 2
cos 0 t
field of the total laser
c
t
sin Emission !
2
c t
Sin 2 0 c t 2
2
2 2L
RT The round-trip time of the cavity!
c c
E 2 0 N 2 E 02
N times of the average power. N: number of modes.
The more the modes the higher the peak power of the
Mode-locked pulses.
Fundamentals of Photonics 2018/2/2 49
iii)The individual pulse width:
c t 2
sin N 0 t p
2 N c
N
a 2 1
c
t p a: bandwidth of
a a the gain profile.
RT
Narrower as N increases. t p
N
E m t 0 sin m t m sin m t m sin m t m
2 2
Sidebands are generated by the modulation
m m- m m+
Without modulation After amplitude modulation
Fundamentals of Photonics 2018/2/2 53
In the case of a multimode laser
From both the time domain and the frequency domain analysis it
is easy to understand why the modulation frequency must be
exactly the cavity longitudinal mode separation frequency.
laser medium
saturable
absorber
Mechanism of the mode-locking:
i) Interaction between saturable absorber and laser gain:
Survival takes all!
ii)Balance between the pulse shortening and pulse broadening:
Final pulse width.
Fundamentals of Photonics 2018/2/2 55
Transform limited pulses
Gaussian pulses:
In our analysis we have assumed
that En=E0
1
2
exp i t
E t E0 exp
2 t
1
0
2ln 22
2 ln 2 0
Fundamentals of Photonics
2018/2/2
56
Intensity of the pulse:
2
2
I t exp Gaussian intensity profile!
0
2ln 22
1
2 ln 2
Transform limited pulses: