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Highly efficient neodymium:yttrium aluminum garnet laser end pumped by a semiconductor laser array
157
Citations
10
References
1985
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringLaser ScienceConversion EfficiencyLaser ApplicationsLaser PhysicsLaser MaterialSuper-intense LasersFiber LasersHigh-power LasersOptical AmplifierOptical PropertiesSemiconductor Laser ArrayYag LaserOptical PumpingPhotonicsLaser PumpingLaser DesignLaser ClassificationHighly Efficient NeodymiumApplied PhysicsHigh-energy LasersOptoelectronicsYttrium Aluminum Garnet
The laser uses a tightly focused semiconductor end‑pump to reach ~1 kW cm⁻², driving photon‑to‑photon conversion close to Nd:YAG’s 76 % quantum efficiency. The system delivers 80 mW cw output from 1 W electrical input, achieving an 8 % overall efficiency—the highest reported for Nd:YAG lasers, with projections of >1 W output and up to 10 % efficiency using simple beam‑combining schemes.
In recent experiments, 80-mW cw power in a single mode has been achieved from a neodymium: yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG) laser with only 1 W of electrical power input to a single semiconductor laser array pump. This corresponds to an overall efficiency of 8%, the highest reported cw efficiency for a Nd:YAG laser. A tightly focused semiconductor laser end pump configuration is used to achieve high pumping intensities (on the order of 1 kW/cm2), which in turn causes the photon to photon conversion efficiency to approach the quantum efficiency (76% for Nd:YAG at 1.06 μm pumped at 0.810 μm). This is achieved despite the dual-lobed nature of the pump. Through the use of simple beam-combining schemes (e.g., polarization coupling and multireflection point pumping), output powers over 1 W and overall electrical to optical efficiencies as high as 10% are expected.
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