The present invention relates to a high power laser with chirped pulse amplification to produce extremely high power ultrashort pulses. In particular, the present invention relates to improvements in the pulse stretcher to improve the temporal profile of the ultrashort pulses.
Recent advances in chirped pulse amplification (CPA) have allowed the realisation of extremely high power and high intensity laser pulse generation. Such pulses can have a power density as high as ˜1022 W/cm2 through the use of titanium:sapphire (Ti:Sa) amplifiers. Pulse durations can be of the order of 30 fs.
Such ultra-high intensity lasers are a powerful and efficient drive source for accelerating electrons. They also find application in many other areas. However, their use in accelerating electrons is particularly suited to generating high energy electron beams (of the order of GeV), which can be used for generating ultrafast pulses of coherent X-rays. The ultra-high intensity laser pulses can also be used to accelerate protons to generate a high-brightness, collimated multi-MeV proton beam.
The temporal contrast of the laser pulses plays a crucial role in high field laser-matter interactions. Clean laser pulses are required to restrict any destructive pre-plasma dynamics, because excessive pre-pulse intensity can significantly modify, damage or even destroy solid targets due to pre-plasma formation prior to the arrival of the main pulse. Knowledge and control of the temporal contrast is therefore an essential part of using high-intensity lasers. Conventionally, the contrast of the ultra-high intensity pulses has been difficult to measure. Advances have been made in pulse contrast measurement through the development of third order auto-correlators for this purpose. Investigations of temporal contrast for several ultra-high intensity pulsed laser systems show a number of features in the contrast graph.
It is desirable to be able to control contrast features before and after the main pulse so as to be able to repeat the process reproducibly.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,081,543 describes a stretcher-compressor assembly having a single grating. The use of a single grating is described as providing a simplified laser system compared to stretchers having gratings pairs. A paper by Loiseaux et al. “Characterisation of perpendicular chirped phase volume grating pairs for laser pulse stretching”, Optics Letters, Vol. 21, No. 11, June 1996, describes a stretcher which uses chirped gratings.
The present invention is directed to improvements in pulse stretchers for high power lasers, such as chirped pulse amplification lasers. The pulse stretcher of the present inventions replaces conventional metal coated diffraction gratings with at least one transmission diffraction grating in the stretcher. Preferably, the transmission diffraction grating is used for the second grating if a pair of gratings is used in the stretcher. The result is significantly improved phase noise performance of the output pulse, and therefore a reduction in the noise floor close to the pulse so as to improve contrast pedestal.
In more detail, the present invention provides a pulse stretcher, comprising: a first diffraction grating arranged to receive and disperse a laser pulse; transfer optics arranged to collect the dispersed pulse and direct it to a transmission diffraction grating; the transmission diffraction grating arranged to collimate the collected pulse towards a reflector, the reflector arranged such that the pulse is reflected back through the pulse stretcher via the transmission diffraction grating. By reflected back we mean that the direction of propagation is substantially reversed, but the return path may be offset from the forward path or diverging slightly from the forward path. The path is reversed through the stretcher, namely through the diffraction grating, transmission diffraction grating and transfer optics. Transfer optics are used to transfer the pattern of divergent light output from a first pass through a diffraction grating to be input as a second pass through a diffraction grating. The first and second passes may be through separate gratings or the same grating, that is the transmission diffraction grating may be the first diffraction grating or a second diffraction grating. The transfer optics may comprise one or more components. The one or more components may be lenses, mirrors or a combination of the two. The pulse stretcher may be for a laser such as a chirped pulse amplification laser.
The laser pulse may be a seed laser pulse generated from, for example, a titanium:sapphire laser and acts as a starting pulse for stretching, amplification and compression to increase the power of the pulse. The laser pulse includes a range of wavelengths, which will usually be a continuum or spread of wavelengths. The diffraction grating diffracts the light different amounts according to its wavelength. Accordingly, the wavelengths leaving the diffraction grating are distributed or spread throughout a range of diverging angles from a point or region on the grating. The wavelengths are divergent and/or spatially dispersed from one another in the angular spread. The transfer optics change the direction of the wavelengths of the pulse diverging from the grating such that the different wavelengths are no longer diverging but directed towards each other, that is, they are converging. The different wavelength components do not converge on a point but reach the transmission diffraction grating before they are able to do so. The transfer optics therefore may be considered to perform a focussing function but do not bring the wavelengths to a focus. The transmission diffraction grating may diffract and align the wavelength components of the pulse. After passing through the transmission diffraction grating the path direction of each of the wavelength components of the pulse are aligned parallel, that is they are collimated. The advantage of a transmission diffraction grating is reduced phase noise compared to a conventional metal coated reflective diffraction grating.
The transmission diffraction grating may be arranged such that wavelengths of the pulse arrive at the transmission diffraction grating over successive times. In other words, there is a temporal spread in the arrival time at the transmission diffraction grating of the various spectral components of the pulse. Those wavelengths arriving earlier further having a shorter path to travel on to the reflector, thereby providing a chirped pulse. By positive chirp we mean that the higher frequency is delayed.
The transfer optics may be arranged to collect and direct the divergent wavelengths of the dispersed pulse so as to bring the wavelengths onto convergent paths. The transmission grating may be arranged on said convergent paths preventing convergence to focal point. It may be considered that a virtual image is formed behind the transmission diffraction grating.
The transmission diffraction grating may collimate the wavelengths in a direction normal to the reflector. The reflector may be a plane mirror or a roof mirror. A roof mirror comprises two plane mirrors arranged with their reflecting surfaces at right angles to each other. The reflector may be positioned at the opposite side of the transmission diffraction grating to the transfer optics.
The transfer optics, transmission diffraction grating and reflector may be arranged such that for a first wavelength of the laser pulse the path length from transfer optics through transmission diffraction grating to reflector is different to that for a second wavelength of the laser pulse. The path length of the first wavelength of the laser pulse from transfer optics through transmission diffraction grating to reflector may be greater than the path length of a second wavelength of the laser pulse from the transfer optics through transmission diffraction grating to reflector, wherein the first wavelength is less than the second wavelength, the pulse stretcher thereby imparting a positive chirp to the pulse. For CPA applications it is preferred to induce positive chirp on the stretched pulse.
The path length difference between the first wavelength and the second wavelength may be of the order of tens of centimetres. Frequencies corresponding to the first wavelength and the second wavelength may be the frequencies at the upper and lower FWHM points of the pulse. The frequencies may be frequencies of light from approximately 300 THz to approximately 450 THz, or equivalent to wavelengths in the 700-900 nm range.
In embodiments of the present invention the pulse stretcher may comprise one or two diffraction gratings.
For a two diffraction grating stretcher, the diffraction grating arranged to receive and spatially disperse wavelengths of a laser pulse such that the wavelengths are divergent from one another is a first diffraction grating, and the transmission diffraction grating is a second diffraction grating spaced apart from the first diffraction grating.
The path length from first diffraction grating to transfer optics may be greater than the path length from transfer optics to second diffraction grating. The distance from transfer optics to second diffraction grating may be less than the distance from transfer optics to first diffraction grating.
The first diffraction grating may also be a transmission diffraction grating.
The first diffraction grating preferably has substantially equal line density to the second diffraction grating. The line densities are substantially uniform across the whole of the active area or lined area of the grating.
The reflector may reverse the path of the pulse such that a pulse having traversed the stretcher firstly in a forward direction subsequently traverses the stretcher in a reverse direction, such that the pulse is incident on each grating in the stretcher twice.
In one embodiment of the present invention the transfer optics comprises a concavely curved mirror. In this embodiment, in combination with the reflector, the paths undergo reflection three times only.
The concavely curved mirror may be spherically curved.
The concavely curved mirror may have a radius of curvature R. The first diffraction grating may be positioned at a distance R from the curved mirror. The distance R may be greater than radius of curvature of the curved mirror. The second diffraction grating may be positioned at a distance less than R from the curved mirror. The second diffraction grating may be positioned parallel to the first diffraction grating.
The point and/or line of incidence on first diffraction grating and second diffraction grating are arranged on opposing sides of a plane comprising the centre of curvature of the curved mirror and the line at which diffracted light is incident on the curved mirror.
In another embodiment of the present invention the transfer optics comprises two converging lenses, for example in a transmission grating based Martinez stretcher configuration.
A first of the two converging lenses may be arranged such that its focal plane is at the first diffraction grating. The second of the two lenses may be arranged in a telescope arrangement with the first lens and may be at a distance less than the focal length of the second lens from the second diffraction grating. By telescope configuration we mean that the centres of the lenses are spaced apart by the sum of their focal lengths.
The centres of the first and second lenses may be spaced apart by the sum of their focal lengths.
In a further embodiment of the present invention the transfer optics comprises two converging lenses and a diverging lens, for example in a transmission grating based lens Öffner stretcher configuration.
A first of the two converging lenses may be arranged such that its focal plane is at the midpoint between the first diffraction grating and the first converging lens. The centres of the first and second lenses may be spaced apart by the sum of their focal lengths, and the diverging lens may be at the focal plane of the first and second lenses.
In a yet further embodiment of the present invention the stretcher comprises a diffraction grating and the transfer optics comprises a concave mirror and a convex mirror, for example in a transmission grating based reflective mirror Öffner stretcher configuration.
The single diffraction grating is a transmission diffraction grating arranged to receive and spatially disperse wavelengths of a laser pulse such that the wavelengths are divergent from one another, said transmission diffraction grating may also arranged to collimate the collected pulse towards a reflector.
The concave mirror may be a spherically curved mirror and may have a radius of curvature R. The convex mirror may be spherically curved. The concave mirror and convex mirror may have a common centre of curvature. The convex mirror may have a radius of curvature of R/2 and may be arranged at a distance of R/2 from the concave mirror. The diffraction grating may be arranged at distance less than R from the concave mirror.
The reflector reverses the path of the pulse such that in combination with the concave and convex mirrors, the pulse may traverse the grating twice in a forward direction and twice in a reverse direction, such that the pulse may be incident on the grating in the stretcher four times.
In embodiments of the present invention the stretcher may be arranged to stretch the duration of the pulse by a factor of at least 500, and preferably more than 1000 times. By duration of the pulse we mean, for example, the FWHM duration.
The stretcher may comprise an input device for directing the laser pulse at the diffraction grating at the Littrow angle. The Littrow angle is the angle of incidence at the grating at which said angle of incidence is equal to the angle of the transmitted diffracted light for the central wavelength.
The seed laser pulses may have durations in the order of picoseconds and energy in the order of millijoules. For example, the duration may be in the range from 1 to 100 picoseconds and energy in the range from 0.1 to 10 millijoules.
The pulse stretcher may be configured as part of a laser comprising an oscillator for generating seed laser pulses.
The present invention also provides a laser comprising the stretcher set out above. The laser may be a chirped pulse amplification laser, comprising: an oscillator for generating seed pulses; the pulse stretcher as set out above; at least one amplifier for increasing the energy of the stretched pulses; and a pulse compressor for temporally compressing the amplified pulses.
The compressor may comprise reflective diffraction gratings, and the transmission diffraction grating of the stretcher may have an orthogonal polarisation compared to the reflective diffraction gratings of the compressor.
The amplified pulses output from the compressor may have durations in the order of femtoseconds such as in the range 1 to 100 femtoseconds, and peak power in the order of hundreds of terawatts to petawatts.
The transmission diffraction grating may be uncoated so that spectral phase noise induced by said transmission diffraction grating is less than that of an equivalent reflective metal coated grating, i.e. one having the same line density, thereby improving the contrast pedestal of the output amplified pulse. The plane surface of the grating, that is the surface without grooves, may have an anti-reflection coating.
The present invention provides a method of stretching a pulse such as for a chirped pulse amplification laser, the method comprising: receiving and spatially dispersing wavelengths of a laser pulse such that the wavelengths are divergent from one another, such as using a first diffraction grating; collecting the divergent wavelengths and directing them towards a transmission diffraction grating which is either the first diffraction grating or a second diffraction grating; the transmission diffraction grating collimating the collected wavelengths towards a reflector, and back reflecting the collimated wavelengths to the transmission diffraction grating reversing the direction of the path of the pulse through the stretcher.
The diffraction gratings of the pulse stretcher are preferably arranged to cause the higher frequency components (shorter wavelength) to travel a longer path than the lower frequency components (longer wavelength). This means the higher frequency components are temporally delayed compared to the lower frequency components. The pulse compressor delays the lower frequency components so as to bring the high and low frequency components more into temporal alignment, that is, temporally coincident, so as to provide high peak intensity.
Embodiments of the present invention and aspects of the prior art will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Back mirror 106 is a plane mirror and reflects the constituent wavelengths and reverses their paths. The constituent wavelengths travel in reverse back through the stretcher along the same path as they did to arrive at the back mirror 106. In a preferred arrangement, the back mirror may be tilted up or down (about an axis in the plane of the stretcher) such that the return path is slightly offset by from the forward path. This offset moves the pulse up and down the lines of the grating but does not change the diffracted angle of the pulse. The back mirror 106 is arranged at an angle to the optical axis of lenses 107 and 108 such that the path lengths travelled by the constituent wavelength parts of the pulse are not the same. The low frequency, long wavelengths (represented by dotted line 111) arrive at the second diffraction grating at a position closer to the back mirror than the high frequency, short wavelength components. They also have a shorter distance to travel to the back mirror. As a result the low frequency, long wavelengths travel a shorter distance in the stretcher than the high frequency, short wavelengths. This results in the high frequency, short wavelength components being delayed compared to the low frequency, long wavelength components. In other words the pulse becomes positively chirped. On the return path through the stretcher the delay is doubled increasing the positive chirp.
After leaving the stretcher the pulse is reflected by mirror 12. Since the angular offset of the back mirror has moved the pulses up or down, the pulses are now reflected by mirror 11 towards mirrors 13, 14 and 15 which direct the beam towards amplifiers 20. Mirrors 13, 14 and 15 are not essential but are used for convenience to fold the optics. For example, by folding the optics the footprint of the laser may be reduced or arranged to fit in a desired space, such as on an optical table.
After passing through mirrors 13, 14 and 15 the pulses arrive at amplifier chain 20. Alternatively a single amplifier may be used. The amplifiers increase the energy of the pulse. Non-linear effects in the amplifiers are avoided because the pulse has been stretched reducing its peak power and temporally distributing the various frequency components of the pulse.
Mirrors 16, 17 and 18 are also provided for convenience to fold the path and reduce the footprint of the laser. The pulses are directed sequentially through mirrors 16, 17 and 18 towards the compressor. Mirror 17 may be a semi-silvered mirror, or more preferably on the return path the pulses bypass the mirror. At the compressor 30 the pulses first arrive at diffraction grating 32. The pulse is reflected and diffracted such that the low frequency components of the pulse exit the diffraction grating 32 further away from the normal than the high frequency components of the pulse, as shown by the dotted and dashed lines in
The effect of the stretcher 100 is to increase the duration of the pulse and thereby stretch out its energy density in order to avoid non-linear effects in the amplifier chain 20. After the stretched pulses have passed through the amplifier chain the pulses are directed to compressor 30 which compresses the pulses. The longer path traversed by the high frequency components of the pulse in the stretcher resulting in their delay compared to the low frequency components, is counteracted by the shorter path taken by the high frequency components in the compressor. Hence, the high frequency components catch up with low frequency components, effectively reversing the stretching of the pulses performed by stretcher 100. The various frequencies of the pulse become much more temporally coincident as they were after leaving the oscillator.
An alternative configuration for the stretcher to that shown in
The stretcher 200 of
The path length from spherical mirror 203 to second grating 204 to back mirror 206 differs for the high frequency and low frequency components. The second grating 204 is parallel to the first grating 202. The low frequency components have a shorter distance to travel from the spherical mirror 203 to the second diffraction grating 204. The back mirror 206 may not be parallel to second grating 204, such that the low frequency components have a shorter distance to travel than the high frequency components.
The effect on the contrast pedestal of the first reflective gold grating 202 in stretcher 200 was investigated in a non-stretching geometry. Following this the performance of a transmission diffraction grating was examined in a similar way also using a non-stretching geometry, such as shown in
The stretcher itself is based on the reflective grating stretcher of
The spatially distributed frequencies are reflected from the curved mirror such that they are on a convergent path. The point of convergence would be the same distance from the centre of curvature as the point at which the pulses are incident on first grating G1. The distributed frequencies do not converge but are incident on second transmission diffraction grating G2 before they reach convergence. The second diffraction grating G2 is also angled to the incident frequencies, but on exiting the transmission grating the various frequencies become collimated, that is they are travelling on parallel paths. The collimated frequencies are incident normal to the back mirror. The reflected frequencies therefore return along the same path as that they arrived at the back mirror.
As shown in
The return path sees the spatially distributed frequency components travel back from the back mirror via the second grating G2, curved mirror CM to first grating G1. The spatially distributed frequency components spatially reconverge back to a single pulse as they exit the first grating. The pulse is reconverged but with high frequency components delayed with respect to the low frequency components. This delay forms the stretch to the pulse. After leaving grating G1 the pulse returns via routing mirrors towards the half-wave plate and Faraday rotator FR. In a CPA laser system such as in
In
After leaving the isolator the stretched laser pulse is spatially expanded and collimated by a telescope of a pair of lenses to a larger beam size, and then sent into a gold gratings compressor. If the arrangement of
Contrary to conventional reflective gratings, the transmission gratings have TE polarisation orientation for optimum diffraction efficiency. This means the stretcher may be arranged in the in-plane configuration while the compressor is arranged in the out-of-plane geometry, such that the polarisation orientations of stretcher and compressor are orthogonal to each other. This configuration conveniently matches the polarisation orientations set by the polarizer at the entrance of isolator FR, without requiring additional polarization rotation components between the transmission grating stretcher and reflective grating compressor.
The stretched pulse is re-compressed down to the near transform limit by the compressor. A Dazzler or acousto-optic programmable dispersive filter (AOPDF) can also be used, especially in test configurations, to compensate for residual high order phase errors. For the contrast measurement the compressed laser pulse is then injected into a 3rd order auto-correlator, such as the Sequoia in
The whole arrangement in
The transmission grating based stretcher was implemented with the Astra-Gemini laser mentioned above. A transmission grating having a groove line density of 1480 lines/mm was used, as this is the same line density as for the reflective gold grating which it replaces.
The transmission gratings were positioned at the Littrow angle at the pulse central wavelength of 800 nm. The first transmission grating was placed at a distance from the curved mirror equal to the radius of curvature, but offset slightly from the radius centre. The second grating G2 is separated from the first grating G1 at an axial distance dax (
The compressor comprises conventional reflective gold gratings. The line density of the reflective gold gratings in the compressor is 1500 lines/mm that results in a small line density mismatch of 20 lines/mm from the stretcher gratings. Ideally the reflective gratings of the compressor and transmission gratings of the stretcher would have equal line densities, but the current lack of suitable easily available transmission gratings results in this small mismatch.
A detailed calculation was undertaken to evaluate the compressibility of the stretched pulse in the presence of grating line density mismatch. For instance, assuming that the non-dispersive incident angle for both stretcher and compressor is ˜5.5°, the transmission gratings in the stretcher were set-up at the Littrow angle of 36.494° and separated by a nominal distance of ˜202 mm. This gives a stretched pulse length of ˜160 ps in line with the above. If the incident angle into the compressor is adjusted to be 37.923°, compared with the normal Littrow angle of 37.069°, with a nominal grating separation of 198.7 mm, the calculated spectral phase error due to the grating line density mismatch alone was found to be small as shown in
In order to minimise aberration and hence the additional phase error introduced by the optics in the stretcher, the beam size into the stretcher was kept relatively small in the range of a fraction of millimetre. Since the focal length of the curved mirror in the stretcher is relatively short at 375 mm (for a spherical mirror this is half of the 750 mm radius of curvature) and the separation (˜250 mm) of the two gratings is approximately one third of the curved mirror radius, care has to be taken to maintain a good match between the input laser beam spatial profile and the cavity spatial mode. The input beam is carefully reshaped and reformatted to produce an optimum beam size on the first grating. The output beam is carefully maintained to be an almost ideal −1:1 conjugate image of the input beam on the first grating to minimise aberration and phase error induced when the stretcher was set-up. The gratings in both the stretcher and compressor were carefully aligned and optimised by monitoring the far field image. To be specific, the grating parallelism in the main dispersion direction and in the groove orientation direction were optimised by precisely overlapping 2 individual far field images of the laser pulse spectrum wings (blue and red) while the central spectral section was blocked. By implementing this so-called 2 colour method, the potentially residual angular dispersion caused by a small misalignment between the gratings was minimised and estimated to be smaller than 10 μrad/nm.
The compressed pulse was characterized and monitored by using a FROG (frequency resolved optical gating) instrument (also known in a simplified form as Grenouille). The pulse compression was optimised by scanning the incident angle into the compressor and a corresponding grating separation, in conjunction with a Dazzler to compensate residual high order phase due to material dispersion in the system, mainly the terbium gallium garnet crystal (TGG) in the Faraday isolator. The results for the compressed pulse are shown in the graph at the left of
The contrast of the compressed pulse was measured by a third order auto-correlator (Sequoia) measurement. The temporal profile of the stretched and compressed pulse is shown in
For comparison the transmission gratings in the stretcher were replaced by conventional reflective gratings having the usual gold coating. This allowed a directly comparable temporal profile to be measured with as close as possible the same stretching and compression factors. The reflective gold gratings used for the experiment had the same groove density as the transmission gratings. The two-colours method was again used to optimise the positions and alignment of the gratings. The stretched pulse was compressed by the same compressor to a near transform limit short pulse of 32 ps.
By comparing the temporal profiles using the reflective grating stretcher and transmission grating stretcher in
Analysis of the components of the stretcher has revealed that the gold coated gratings are contributors to the contrast pedestal. Limited improvement to the contrast pedestal can be seen by increasing the quality of the grating. The contrast pedestal appears to be at least in part due to spectral phase noise in the dispersed beam. This may be attributed to scattering on the grating surface and spectral phase noise induced by surface roughness and irregularities where the beam is dispersed. SEM (scanning electron microscope) images of reflective diffraction grating substrates show reasonably clean and smooth groove surface structure. For high line density gratings such as used here it appears that it is difficult to place a conformal gold coating onto the periodically structured substrates on a micro or nano-scale. Current coating techniques, for example sputtering, tend to introduce additional surface roughness, resulting in degradation to the surface quality compared to the substrate. In contrast the production of transmission diffraction gratings relies on well-developed photonic fabrication technologies. SEM images of transmission gratings show extremely clean, smooth and precisely defined groove structure, superior to that of gold coated grating structures. Furthermore, no coating is required to be placed on the transmission grating surface eliminating problems caused by the gold coating process. Hence, it is considered that the transmission grating based stretcher provides superior phase noise and contrast pedestal performance because of the better surface characteristics. Transmission diffraction gratings tend to be fused silica.
The stretcher grating which reconverges the paths of the spatially dispersed wavelengths is found to be the more significant contributor to phase noise error. Hence, the most significant reduction in phase noise error is achieved by using a transmission diffraction grating for this grating.
The gratings in the compressor introduce less phase noise error and so it is less important that the compressor uses transmission diffraction gratings. Indeed, conventional metal coated reflective diffraction gratings may be used.
We have described above and shown in
The stretchers of
The person skilled in the art will readily appreciate that various modifications and alterations may be made to the above described embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims. For example, different configurations of stretcher, such as different arrangements of lenses and mirrors may be used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1404801.1 | Mar 2014 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2015/050672 | 3/9/2015 | WO | 00 |