Fibre and waveguide lasers

A. Tropper
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Interest in the potential advantages of guided wave dielectric gain media was only quickened with the advent of high quality single mode optical waveguides, especially rare earth doped silica fibres, in which the propagation losses are so low that the benefits of optical confinement are fully realised. The most immediate advantage of the guided-wave geometry is that of reducing the cavity mode volume, and hence the pump power needed to reach threshold. Provided the guiding structure is designed so as to support only a single propagating mode at the gain wavelength, then the laser output will be spatially coherent, in a mode that is not affected, for example, by cavity misalignment. The guided-wave laser can be designed as a compact, stable, monolithic device, exploiting all the techniques of integrated optics, such as gratings, couplers, and modulators. Since the active region of a guided-wave laser is typically only a few µm in diameter, fabrication can involve a range of deposition techniques very different from those used to grow bulk media. The resulting gain medium may have a composition or dopant concentration not available to a bulk phase. On the other hand the advantages of a guided-wave structure are cancelled if propagation losses compete too effectively with the achievable gain. A further difficulty attending these optically pumped devices is the need to couple pump light into the waveguide core. The pump sources themselves must therefore emit spatially coherent beams, and expensive micropositioning techniques are required. The literature on fibre and planar dielectric waveguide lasers is now so extensive that a review of this type cannot attempt to be comprehensive. My aim is rather to sketch the principles of guided-wave laser design and operation, and introduce a few selected devices of particular current interest. I shall pay particular attention to the role that guided-wave systems may play in the effort to develop compact and efficient sources emitting high power diffraction-limited beams. Diode-bar lasers emitting many tens of watts are now readily available, but it remains a challenge to convert the highly asymmetric and multimode output from such a device into a usable beam in a simple and efficient way. It is not at first sight obvious that a guided wave laser should be particularly suitable for high power operation. Waveguides are characteristically devices in which high core intensity accompanies low overall power, and scaling up the core area leads to multimode propagation and loss of spatial coherence. Recently, however, the technique of cladding pumping of fibre lasers has been found to be strikingly effective in overcoming these limitations. It can be argued that planar waveguide structures are inherently highly compatible with high-power diode-bar pump lasers. Experimental investigation of such devices indicates that extremely compact sources, potentially able to handle 10 W or more of output, can be fabricated in this way. Control of the spatial mode is a central and difficult problem, and various technical approaches will be reviewed. Equally stringent is the necessity to couple pump radiation into the guide, whether longitudinally for greater efficiency, or transversely for a less divergent output and the possibility of power scaling. We shall see that with careful positioning this can be achieved without the use of any optical components whatsoever. If, moreover, the cladding-pumping principle is employed, then the position tolerances are significantly relaxed. Alternatively it may be possible to pump through the face of the device, and we shall review some practical schemes of this type","PeriodicalId":431782,"journal":{"name":"Advances in Lasers and Applications","volume":"84 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Advances in Lasers and Applications","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1201/9781003209652-3","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The guided-wave laser is almost as old as the laser itself. The first demonstration of laser action in glass made use of a multimode waveguide; a core rod encased in a cladding of lower refractive index so that confinement of the light would counteract the effect of the poor optical quality of the available glass, (Snitzer, 1961). However, although waveguiding has long been an essential feature of semiconductor diode lasers, in dielectric laser media by far the greatest research effort has gone into the development of bulk rods and slabs of high optical quality. Interest in the potential advantages of guided wave dielectric gain media was only quickened with the advent of high quality single mode optical waveguides, especially rare earth doped silica fibres, in which the propagation losses are so low that the benefits of optical confinement are fully realised. The most immediate advantage of the guided-wave geometry is that of reducing the cavity mode volume, and hence the pump power needed to reach threshold. Provided the guiding structure is designed so as to support only a single propagating mode at the gain wavelength, then the laser output will be spatially coherent, in a mode that is not affected, for example, by cavity misalignment. The guided-wave laser can be designed as a compact, stable, monolithic device, exploiting all the techniques of integrated optics, such as gratings, couplers, and modulators. Since the active region of a guided-wave laser is typically only a few µm in diameter, fabrication can involve a range of deposition techniques very different from those used to grow bulk media. The resulting gain medium may have a composition or dopant concentration not available to a bulk phase. On the other hand the advantages of a guided-wave structure are cancelled if propagation losses compete too effectively with the achievable gain. A further difficulty attending these optically pumped devices is the need to couple pump light into the waveguide core. The pump sources themselves must therefore emit spatially coherent beams, and expensive micropositioning techniques are required. The literature on fibre and planar dielectric waveguide lasers is now so extensive that a review of this type cannot attempt to be comprehensive. My aim is rather to sketch the principles of guided-wave laser design and operation, and introduce a few selected devices of particular current interest. I shall pay particular attention to the role that guided-wave systems may play in the effort to develop compact and efficient sources emitting high power diffraction-limited beams. Diode-bar lasers emitting many tens of watts are now readily available, but it remains a challenge to convert the highly asymmetric and multimode output from such a device into a usable beam in a simple and efficient way. It is not at first sight obvious that a guided wave laser should be particularly suitable for high power operation. Waveguides are characteristically devices in which high core intensity accompanies low overall power, and scaling up the core area leads to multimode propagation and loss of spatial coherence. Recently, however, the technique of cladding pumping of fibre lasers has been found to be strikingly effective in overcoming these limitations. It can be argued that planar waveguide structures are inherently highly compatible with high-power diode-bar pump lasers. Experimental investigation of such devices indicates that extremely compact sources, potentially able to handle 10 W or more of output, can be fabricated in this way. Control of the spatial mode is a central and difficult problem, and various technical approaches will be reviewed. Equally stringent is the necessity to couple pump radiation into the guide, whether longitudinally for greater efficiency, or transversely for a less divergent output and the possibility of power scaling. We shall see that with careful positioning this can be achieved without the use of any optical components whatsoever. If, moreover, the cladding-pumping principle is employed, then the position tolerances are significantly relaxed. Alternatively it may be possible to pump through the face of the device, and we shall review some practical schemes of this type
光纤和波导激光器
导波激光器几乎和激光器本身一样古老。激光作用在玻璃中的第一次演示使用了多模波导;一种芯棒,包裹在较低折射率的包层中,以限制光,抵消现有玻璃光学质量差的影响,(Snitzer, 1961)。然而,尽管波导长期以来一直是半导体二极管激光器的基本特征,但在介电激光介质中,迄今为止最大的研究工作还是集中在高光学质量的大块棒和板的开发上。随着高质量单模光波导的出现,特别是稀土掺杂二氧化硅光纤的出现,人们对导波介质增益介质的潜在优势的兴趣加快了,在这种光纤中,传播损耗如此之低,以致于光约束的好处得到了充分实现。导波几何结构最直接的优点是减少了腔模体积,从而减少了达到阈值所需的泵浦功率。如果引导结构被设计成只支持增益波长的单一传播模式,那么激光输出将是空间相干的,在一个不受影响的模式下,例如,由腔失调。利用集成光学的所有技术,如光栅、耦合器和调制器,导波激光器可以被设计成一个紧凑、稳定的单片器件。由于导波激光器的有效区域直径通常只有几微米,因此制造过程涉及到一系列沉积技术,与用于生长大块介质的沉积技术非常不同。所得到的增益介质可以具有本体相无法获得的组合物或掺杂剂浓度。另一方面,如果传播损耗与可达到的增益过于激烈地竞争,导波结构的优点就会被抵消。这些光泵浦装置的另一个困难是需要将泵浦光耦合到波导核心中。因此,泵浦源本身必须发射空间相干光束,并且需要昂贵的微定位技术。关于光纤和平面介质波导激光器的文献现在是如此广泛,以至于对这类激光器的回顾不能试图做到全面。我的目的是概述导波激光设计和操作的原理,并介绍一些目前特别感兴趣的选定设备。我将特别注意导波系统在开发紧凑而有效的发射高功率衍射限制光束的光源方面可能发挥的作用。发射几十瓦的二极管激光器现在很容易获得,但是以一种简单有效的方式将这种设备的高度不对称和多模输出转换成可用的光束仍然是一个挑战。导波激光器是否特别适合于高功率工作,乍一看并不明显。波导的特点是高核心强度伴随着低总功率,而扩大核心面积会导致多模传播和空间相干性的损失。然而,最近发现光纤激光器的包层泵浦技术在克服这些限制方面非常有效。可以认为,平面波导结构本质上与高功率二极管柱泵浦激光器高度兼容。对这种器件的实验研究表明,用这种方法可以制造出极紧凑的光源,可能能够处理10w或更多的输出。空间模式的控制是一个中心和困难的问题,各种技术方法将进行审查。同样严格的是,必须将泵浦辐射耦合到导管内,无论是纵向上提高效率,还是横向上减少输出发散和功率缩放的可能性。我们将看到,通过仔细定位,这可以在不使用任何光学元件的情况下实现。此外,如果采用包层泵送原理,则位置公差显着放宽。另外,也可以通过装置的表面抽水,我们将回顾这种类型的一些实际方案
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