1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a laser gain medium and more particularly to a laser gain assembly using diamond to achieve improved cooling, reduced thermally induced lensing, and improved thermo-mechanical robustness.
2. Description of Related Art
The output power available from diode-pumped, solid-state lasers is ultimately limited by the thermal and mechanical properties of the gain medium. However, often the method used to mount and cool the gain medium places further restrictions on the performance of the system. Even before the material fails mechanically, thermo-optical effects can lead to a degradation of the output beam quality and a loss in output power, which results from the formation of a thermally induced lens in the gain medium. This lens is a combination of the effects caused by the temperature dependence of the refractive index, often referred to as a “bulk thermal lens,” and from the deformation of the surface due to the thermal expansion of the material, often referred to as a “bulge.”
One way to mitigate the effects of the bulk thermal lens is to use a so-called one-dimensional (1-D) cooling geometry. In this configuration, the heat is extracted from the gain medium in such a way that the thermal gradients are longitudinal with respect to the laser beam. This was first taught by Almasi and Martin in U.S. Pat. No. 3,631,362, and has been used with some success by others since then. For example, Matthews and Marshall in OSA TOPS Vol. 50, page 138, 2001 applied the technique to Nd:YVO4 laser rods to achieve reduced thermal lensing.
The disadvantage of this scheme is that the temperature in the laser medium is often higher than if it were cooled transversely. High temperatures can lead to many undesirable effects such as stress buildup and even fracture of the gain material, or of the bonds to other materials; in addition to a reduction in efficiency of the laser due to other effects, such as a decrease of the upper-state lifetime of the laser transition.
In U.S. Pat. No. 3,525,053, Chemoch taught that by using a gain medium with a high aspect ratio, i.e. with a diameter much greater than its thickness, it was possible to achieve 1-D cooling and a colder operating temperature. In a preferred embodiment, as taught by Abate, et al., Applied Optics, Vol. 20, page 351, 1981, a thin slab of gain material was directly cooled on the back with a flowing liquid. The back surface had a thin-film dielectric coating that was highly reflective at the laser wavelength and highly transmissive at the pump wavelength. The high aspect ratio meant that the heat generated in any part of the disk was efficiently transferred to the coolant, both because of the large surface area, and because of the close proximity of all parts of the disk volume to the coolant. This embodiment is often referred to as an “active mirror.”
A disadvantage of this embodiment is the complexity of the thin-film coating that has to be applied to the disk. There are two problems: first, the coating needs to be highly reflective at one wavelength and highly transmissive at the other. Secondly, the coating on the back of the disk is in direct contact with the liquid coolant, which imposes additional restrictions on its design and durability.
The following references teach that a solid cooling element can be used to avoid having liquid coolant in contact with the thin-film coating: Brown, et al., Applied Optics, Vol. 36, page 8611, 1997; Brauch, et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 5,553,088; and Liao, et al., Optics Letters, Vol. 24, page 1343, 1999. In these embodiments, the laser gain medium was bonded to a solid cooling element, which was then attached to a cooling apparatus that removed heat from the system. The bond between the gain medium and the cooling element, in a preferred embodiment, was made up from one, or a number of, thin dielectric or metallic layers. If a soft metal is used, materials that do not have a good surface quality can still be used.
However, there are several disadvantages with these embodiments. The interface layers are required to have good thermal conductivity. They also need to have good adhesion to one another, and to the disk and the solid cooling element. In addition, the inevitable differences in thermal expansion of the materials used in the disk, the interface layers, and the solid cooling element can cause stresses to built up in the structure and even cause the bond to fail altogether, or the material to fracture. There is also an increase in the detrimental lensing effects due to the more severe bulging of the material. Although the original active mirror designs allowed for stress-free radial expansion, as taught by Abate, et al., these embodiments remove this advantage. This is particularly problematic for materials such as Nd:YVO4 that have an anisotropic thermal expansion, and which are not suited to the method taught by Sutter and Kafka in US Patent Application “Expansion Matched Thin Disk Laser and Method for Cooling” Attorney Docket Number 18120-012, incorporated herein by reference. Yet a further disadvantage of these embodiments is that the surface where most of the heating occurred was farthest away from the cooling element.
There is a need for high power solid-state lasers that have a weak thermally induced lens. There is a further need for high power solid-state lasers that have a small temperature rise in the laser gain medium. There is yet a further need for high power solid-state lasers that have simplified dielectric coatings with good thermal conductivity. There is yet a further need for high power solid-state lasers that have reduced thermally induced stress.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide high power solid-state lasers, and their methods of use, that have a weak thermally induced lens.
Another object of the present invention is to provide high power solid-state lasers, and their methods of use, that have a small temperature rise in the laser gain medium. Yet another object of the present invention is to provide high power solid-state lasers, and their methods of use, that have simplified dielectric coatings with good thermal conductivity.
A further object of the present invention is to provide high power solid-state lasers, and their methods of use, that have reduced thermally induced stress.
These and other objects of the present invention are achieved in, an optical system with a pump source. A gain medium is optically coupled to the pump source. A solid cooling element is in physical contact with, but not bonded to, a cooling surface of the gain medium. A mounting apparatus holds the solid cooling element to the gain medium.
In another embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for removing heat from a gain medium of an optical system. A solid cooling element is held in physical contact with, but not bonded to, a cooling surface of the gain medium. The gain medium is then cooled.
As illustrated in
In various embodiments of the present invention, the gain medium 104 is not bonded to the solid cooling elements 100 and 108. Methods of bonding can include direct bonding methods such as optical contacting or diffusion bonding. Optical contacting is a process by which two surfaces are adhered together through molecular attraction without the use of an adhesive. Diffusion bonding is a process similar to welding, by which two surfaces are bonded together though diffusion of the surfaces into one another. Methods of bonding can include other methods that use layers of additional materials, such as adhesives or solders. Soldering requires the structure to be heated above the melting point of the said additional material, and then cooled so that the said additional material forms a solid bond. One example of a material that can be used as a solder is indium. Often, soldering requires the use of several different layers of materials to achieve a robust and durable bond. Indium can also be used as a bonding material when pressure is applied because it liquefies under pressure; this is referred to as pressure bonding. In all these cases, the bonding process adds additional layers that can have poor thermal conductivity and can also introduce stresses into the structure. In various embodiments of the present invention, the gain medium 104 is not bonded to the solid cooling elements 100 and 108 by any of these methods.
Again referring to
Gain medium 104 can be a thin disk gain medium with one-dimensional heat flow. A thin disk gain medium typically has one dimension, the thickness, much smaller than the other two cross-sectional dimensions. For example, a thin disk might have a diameter of a few millimeters and a thickness of only a fraction of a millimeter. If the disk is thin enough, the heat-flow will be substantially 1-dimensional. Gain medium 104 can be made of a variety of materials including but not limited to, Nd:YVO4, Yb:YAG, Yb:KGW, Yb:KYW, apatite-structure crystals, a stoichiometric gain material, a stoichiometric Yb3+ gain material, a semiconductor, and the like. The stoichiometric Yb3+ gain material can be KYbW or YbAG.
Referring again to
As shown in FIGS. 2(a) and 2(b), one embodiment of the present invention is an optical system 200 comprising the gain assembly 202, which is substantially the same as gain assembly 112 of
A variety of different pump sources 204 can be utilized including but not limited to fiber coupled diode bars, and diode stacks. A variety of coupling apparatus 206 can be utilized, including but not limited to lenses, non-imaging concentrators such as lens ducts or hollow funnels and the like. Thin film coatings can be applied to various surfaces of the gain assembly 112. In general, suitable thin-film coatings can include, but are not limited to, multi-layer dielectric coatings, AR-coatings, HR-coatings, dichroic coatings, dielectric coatings, metallic coatings, combination of at least one of a set of coatings selected from: AR-coatings, HR-coatings, dichroic coatings, dielectric coatings, metallic coatings, and the like. AR coatings can reduce the optical loss when adjacent materials have substantially different refractive indices. HR coatings can be used to provide a double pass through the gain assembly.
As shown in the embodiment of
In the embodiment illustrated in
As shown in the embodiment of
Referring again to FIGS. 1, 2(a) and 2(b), obviously, it is desirable to remove heat from gain medium 104 of the optical system 200 as efficiently as possible. The thermal conductivity of any material that comes between gain medium 104 and the cooling medium should, therefore, have as high a thermal conductivity as possible. Also, the cooling medium should be positioned as close to the location where the heat is deposited as possible.
FIGS. 4(a) and 4(b) illustrate these advantages.
Referring again to
Referring again to FIGS. 1, 2(a) and 2(b), in one embodiment of the present invention, a method of removing heat from gain medium 104 of optical system 200 holds solid cooling elements 100 and 108 in physical contact with, but not bonded to, cooling surfaces 102 and 106 of gain medium 104. Gain medium 104 is then cooled, so that there is a reduced bulge. Gain medium 104 is also cooled so that the temperature in gain medium 104 is lower than if it were cooled by a different method. Gain medium 104 is also cooled so that there is a reduced thermal lens in gain media 104. Gain medium 104 is also cooled without causing a fracture of the gain material, and the like.
The foregoing description of a preferred embodiment of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obviously, many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in this art. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents.