The invention relates to a laser comprising a resonator, which is limited by an end mirror and an output mirror and in which a fibre comprising an active core is arranged.
It is well-known from the literature to configure laser resonators such that a diffraction-limited light emission occurs. In all these arrangements, a suitable design of the resonator ensures that radiation having high beam quality is sufficiently amplified in the resonator. In contrast thereto, radiation having poor beam quality is suppressed by internal losses or by out-of-phase superposition. It is also known to use unstable resonators, e.g. from S. Townsend, J. Reilly, Unobscured unstable resonator design for large bore lasers, Proc. SPIE Vol. 0147, p. 184-188, 1989. Such fibre lasers have the disadvantage, however, that the beam quality of the pump radiation directly affects the beam quality of the emitted laser radiation. Since laser activity is primarily stimulated in the fibre core, the radiation intensity that can be coupled in is limited at the same time by the brilliance of the source of radiation for a given numerical aperture of the fibre. As a rule, the diameter of the fibre core then determines the diameter of the emitted beam. Double-core fibres offer a certain remedy here; however, they are complex and expensive in manufacture. Also, efficient coupling between the inner and outer core requires a great fibre length, which leads not only to increased constructional dimensions, but also to increased losses in the laser resonator due to inevitable scattering and absorption.
Due to this correspondence between the beam quality of the pumping source and the beam quality of the radiation emitted by the fibre laser, the use of a fibre laser has hitherto been linked inevitably with relatively complex pumping sources or has been limited by the power of the pumping source, respectively.
Therefore, it is an object of the invention to provide a fibre laser which is capable of generating laser radiation of high beam quality even when using pump radiation of poor beam quality.
According to the invention, the object is achieved by a laser comprising a resonator which is limited by an end mirror and an output mirror and in which a fibre is arranged that comprises an active core and can be stimulated by pump radiation to have multi-mode laser activity such that a plurality of transverse modes occur in the resonator, wherein mode mixing occurs in the fibre and the output mirror has reflection properties for laser and pump radiation which reflection properties vary locally such that the output mirror reflects pump radiation as well as laser radiation that does not exit from the active core of the fibre, and thus couples out low transverse modes predominantly.
Thus, according to the invention, a multi-mode field is deliberately stimulated in a fibre laser. The output mirror has the function of a mode stop which prefers a transmission of the basic mode, but largely suppresses coupling-out of radiation of higher transverse modes. Such higher modes preferably remain within the fibre, because due to mode mixing which always occurs in a fibre and can be optimized by means of fibre design and further measures, a renewed coupling-in of power from the higher mode into the basic mode occurs.
The concept according to the invention allows the use of a large coupling-in surface area for pump radiation without degrading the beam quality of the emitted laser radiation thereby. For example, monocore fibres having a very large core diameter can be used without the quality of the emitted radiation changing automatically as the cross section of the active core increases.
In addition to the basic mode, higher transverse modes are also formed, wherein the output mirror of the invention causes a corresponding mode selection for the laser beam. The efficient mode mixing in multi-mode fibres ensures that all propagable modes within the active medium are amplified and, thus, the inversion generated by a multi-mode pumping source can be efficiently used. Nevertheless, the coupling-out of radiation of higher or adjustable beam quality, respectively, is limited, and the radiation of lower beam quality remains within the resonator.
Moreover, the brilliance of the pumping source now no longer represents a noticeable limit for the power of the laser system. With a high numerical aperture of the fibre, a high pump radiation intensity can be coupled in without there being particularly high demands on the brilliance of the pumping source. The invention thus avoids the bottleneck caused, in the lasers according to the prior art, by the close link between the maximum input pump density (as a product of intensity and cross sectional area) and the diameter of the emitted laser beam. The diameter of the active core can now be selected to be much larger than the diameter of the emitted beam, so that the beam quality of the pump radiation can accordingly be inferior to that of the emitted laser radiation. In other words, this means that the beam quality of the emitted radiation in the laser according to the invention is improved over that of the pump radiation. This feature, which is actually known only for expensive double-core fibres, is now achieved in a much simpler way and without the aforementioned disadvantages of the double-core principle.
Further, the concept of defining the beam diameter by means of the output mirror also allows the use of fibres comprising active cores which are not circular in cross section. Thus, for example, a D-shaped cross section may be employed for the active core, which is particularly good for coupling different transverse modes with each other.
In a simple embodiment of the concept according to the invention, the output mirror comprises, and is preceded by, a mode stop having suitable properties. In many cases, however, the laser efficiency decreases if said mode stop does not reflect the pump radiation. It is therefore advantageous for this simple embodiment to provide the output mirror as a mode stop reflecting the pump radiation.
In a further embodiment of this simple design, the output mirror comprises an inner zone and an outer zone surrounding said inner zone, wherein said outer zone reflects laser radiation and pump radiation and said inner zone has a lower degree of reflectivity for laser radiation than the outer zone. The locally varying reflecting property of the output mirror is then realized in the form of two differently reflecting zones. The form of the inner zone has an effect on the beam cross section and will, thus, usually be selected depending on the particular application. Such an output mirror comprising an inner zone and an outer zone is relatively easy to manufacture, and may be manufactured, in particular, by coating one end of the fibre. Such direct coating is advantageous in view of the fact that no further separate adjusting steps are then required.
For most applications, a laser beam having a circular beam diameter is desired. The inner zone will then usually have a circular design. For this purpose, the inner zone is advantageously circular, having a smaller diameter than the diameter of the active core. The beam quality is increased from the coupled-in pump radiation to the coupled-out laser radiation by the ratio by which the inner zone is smaller than the cross sectional area of the active core. In this case, a suitable design of the inner zone relative to the cross sectional area of the active core allows selection of almost any desired ratio.
In view of easy manufacture it is preferred not to provide the output mirror directly on the end of a fibre, but to realize it as a discrete element, wherein beam-expanding optics may optionally be provided, too, between the end of the fibre and the output mirror. In order to achieve the amplified output of low transverse modes, i.e. in order to obtain laser radiation that is as monomodal as possible, the cross section of the inner zone is, in this case, always smaller than the expanded cross section of the active core. For a circular inner zone and a circular active core it is then advantageous, for example, to provide the inner zone with a smaller diameter than the expanded diameter of the active core.
A further possibility to shape the generated laser radiation in terms of beam profile, intensity distribution and propagation characteristics with a view to the requirements of particular applications is to arrange the inner zone such that it is not coaxial to the radiation exiting the active core. This allows selective admixing of higher transverse modes, which has a direct effect on intensity distribution and, thus, on the beam profile.
In the concept according to the invention, the radiation which has not been coupled out is reflected back again and remains in the resonator. Said radiation is, in particular, radiation of higher transverse modes which are stimulated due to the geomety of the resonator and, in particular, in the case of a high numerical aperture of the active core of the fibre in the resonator. The mixture of different transverse modes achieves a very uniform intensity distribution over the cross section of the inner zone of the output mirror. The energy of radiation from modes (which have not been coupled out) is reflected back again into the resonator and is ultimately introduced into the coupled-out low transverse modes by mode mixing which inherently occurs in the fibre. In order to promote said mode mixing, a layout of the fibre in loops or bends is advantageous.
A further possibility to amplify the internal mode mixing of the fibre in the laser according to the invention consists in using a fibre whose active core has a D-shaped cross section. In such fibres, the mode-mixing properties are particularly pronounced. Therefore, they are especially suitable for the laser according to the invention.
The properties of the output mirror define the beam cross section of the coupled-out laser beam. In a resonator allowing stimulation of laser activity at a plurality of wavelengths, the spectral reflection properties of the output mirror also have an effect on the spectral composition of the emitted laser beam. Thus, a suitable selection of the reflection properties or of the transmission properties, respectively, of the output mirror allows both the diameter and the wavelength of the output laser beam to be influenced. This makes it possible to easily obtain an adjustable or switchable laser, respectively, by providing an exchangeable output mirror.
The invention will be explained in more detail below, by way of example and with reference to the Figures, wherein:
The fibre laser 1 shown in
A laser beam 8 exits from the output mirror 4 during pumped operation. The wavelength and the cross section of said beam are determined by the laser activity in the fibre 2 as well as by properties of the output mirror 4 which shall be described hereinafter.
The resonator of
Since laser radiation which consists of a mixture of transverse modes is generated in the fibre 2, i.e. in its fibre core 12, as already explained, not only pump radiation, but also the aforementioned mode mixture, is directed on the output mirror 4 from the fibre side of the mirror. The zone 9, which transmits laser radiation only in a partial region of the fibre core 12, thus causes a mode selection such that the radiation with regard to the basic mode predemoninantly exits at the output mirror 4. Radiation of higher transverse modes is reflected back into the fibre 2 where, due to the mode-mixing properties of the fibre 2, said radiation ultimately couples in again into the low transverse modes transmitted by the output mirror 4, after several round-trips, if required.
In this case, the radiation of higher transverse modes diverges more strongly than that of the basic mode (not shown in
The laser radiation of all transverse modes stimulated in the fibre 2 is directed onto the output mirror 4, with the aforementioned beam expansion being amplified by the varying divergence of the different modes. Therefore, in some cases, the surface area of the inner zone 9 is greater than the cross sectional area of the fibre core 12, without eliminating the desired preference of the low or basic mode by the inner zone 9 during transmission. The desired mode-filtering property of the output mirror 4 is ensured in that the surface area of the inner zone is much smaller than the expanded radiation of the low modes to be selected, in particular the basic mode, said expanded radiation coming from the fibre core 12.
In a graph 14,
The design of the inner zone 9 in relation to the fibre core 12 allows the beam profile or the propagation characteristics, respectively, to be designed as desired. There is no restriction to symmetric intensity distributions here, as shown in
This effect of the inner zone 9 is schematically illustrated in
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 102 16 627.7 | Apr 2002 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP03/03794 | 4/11/2003 | WO | 6/24/2005 |