The invention relates to acousto-optic modulators and related Q-switched lasers.
Q-Switching is a frequently used method of providing high intensity pulses from lasers and is conventionally achieved by the use of either electro-optic (EO) or acousto-optic (AO) devices placed inside the laser cavity. Regarding AO Q-switches, sound waves emanating from a biased transducer pair bonded to a crystal travel in a direction which is primarily perpendicular to the laser or other light beam incident on the crystal. This arrangement diffracts the beam passing through a crystal, using travelling acoustic waves. It is well known that the angle of the light beam relative to the sonic wavefront must be at or near the Bragg angle, which is generally a small angle such as less than a few degrees, specifically within the so-called acceptance angle which is centered on the Bragg angle, to obtain such diffraction. The acceptance angle is generally defined as the range of incidence angles for which the diffraction efficiency is greater than 50%.
Whether AO or EO-based, Q-switch laser devices are switched OFF (low optical transmission, high loss state) for a period in which the population inversion of the gain medium is pumped to a high value and then rapidly turned ON (high transmission, low loss state). During the OFF phase, the laser is operating below the laser threshold as the cavity loss is too great. During the ON phase, the cavity loss is suddenly reduced to a low value allowing laser operation. A large output optical pulse then results as the stored energy in the laser gain medium is released.
Improvements in laser technology in recent years have meant that the 80-85% loss modulation provided by current Q-Switch devices is sometimes insufficient to hold off modern lasers, thus being insufficient to completely prevent them from oscillating. One solution well known within the laser and acousto-optics industry to achieve higher loss modulation in laser cavities utilizes two or more spaced apart Q-Switches optically coupled in series. The second Q-Switch is used to further reduce the zero-order (undiffracted) intensity residual transmitted by the first Q-Switch.
The use of multiple spaced apart AO Q-Switches does not always provide the increase in loss modulation that might be expected. This is because the modulator Debye-Sears ratio and acceptance/separation angles have an effect on the overall efficiency of the system, and this is not always realised. When the Debye-Sears ratio (Q) is large and the Q-Switches operate in the Bragg regime, there are two possible device orientations.
As shown in
Relative orientation of the respective Q-switches comprising device 100 or 200 is thus crucial since any rediffraction of the first order rays back into the zeroth order by the second Q-Switch will significantly reduce the loss modulation. Rediffraction is not the only drawback associated with using two separate Q-switches. The relative phase of the acoustic modulation must also be considered if timing jitter is to be avoided. The increase in cavity length associated with fitting two Q-switches results in an increase in pulsewidth. Moreover, two spaced apart Q switches will place four optical faces into the laser cavity leading to increased insertion loss and multiple reflections. Two Q switches also require extra plumbing for the water cooling system and RF drivers. Finally, each Q-switch must be carefully aligned at the Bragg angle while simultaneously avoiding rediffraction losses, which is often not possible.
What is needed is a robust Q-Switch design which provides short pulse widths and a loss modulation greater than the 80-85% loss modulation provided by current Q-Switch devices so that the loss produced is sufficient to hold off modern high cavity gain lasers, thus being sufficient to prevent oscillation.
An acousto-optic modulator comprises a monolithic acousto-optic medium, a plurality of spaced apart acoustic transducers comprising a first and at least a second transducer both bonded and positioned on the monolithic acousto-optic medium to form first and second acoustical columns. The first and second transducers are aligned so that an incident optical beam encounters the acoustical beam produced by each of the transducers sequentially on its passage through the modulator. The transducers are oriented so that a diffracted ray from the first acoustical column enters the second acoustical column at an angle outside the acceptance angle of the second acoustic column.
Some definitions of terms used herein are now presented:
The acceptance angle (θa), which is a device specific parameter, is defined as the angular distance between first order zeros of a sin c2 function centered on the Bragg angle (θB).
The Bragg angle (θB) is based on Bragg's law of x-ray crystallography, nλ=2d sin θB, where n is an integer, λ is the wavelength of a beam of x-rays incident on a crystal with lattice planes separated by distance d, and θB is the Bragg angle.
The “Raman-Nath diffraction regime” is defined as follows:
The Raman-Nath diffraction regime occurs when
where λ is the optical wavelength, l is the interaction length, f is the acoustic frequency, n is the refractive index and v is the acoustic velocity. The Raman-Nath regime is characterized by the incident light beam being diffracted into many orders.
The Bragg regime occurs when Q>>1. In the Bragg regime, light is diffracted into a single order.
Modulators according to the invention can provide at least a 90% single pass peak loss modulation. In one embodiment, the transducers are oriented so that an incident angle of an emerging optical beam from the first acoustical column relative to the second acoustical column is such that the condition θa≦4θB is satisfied, wherein θa is the acceptance angle and θB is the Bragg angle. In this embodiment, an incident angle of the emerging optical beam relative to the second optical column can pass through one of the zeros in the sin c2 function that defines the acceptance angle.
In another embodiment, the modulator further comprises a third transducer disposed between the first and second transducer bonded to the AO medium to form a third acoustical column. The first and second acoustical columns are aligned to operate in the Bragg regime, while the third column is aligned to operate in the Raman-Nath regime. In yet another embodiment, the modulator further comprises a third and a fourth transducer bonded to the AO medium to form a third and fourth acoustical column, wherein all the acoustical columns operate substantially in the Bragg regime.
The acousto-optic medium can comprise amorphous materials, such as amorphous silica. In another embodiment, the acousto-optic medium comprises a single crystal, such as tellurium dioxide, quartz or silicon.
A Q-switched laser comprises a resonator cavity comprising a high reflecting back mirror, a partially reflecting output coupler, an amplifying laser material between the back mirror and the output coupler, and an acousto-optic modulator disposed on either side of the amplifying material between the back mirror and output coupler. The modulator comprises a monolithic acousto-optic medium, a plurality of spaced apart acoustic transducers comprising a first and at least a second transducer both bonded and positioned on the monolithic acousto-optic medium to form first and second acoustical columns. The first and second transducers are aligned so that an incident optical beam encounters the acoustic beam produced by each of the transducers sequentially on its passage through the modulator, wherein the transducers are oriented so that a diffracted ray from the first acoustical column enters the second acoustical column at an angle outside the acceptance angle of the second acoustical column. The modulator can provide at least a 90% single pass peak loss modulation.
A fuller understanding of the present invention and the features and benefits thereof will be accomplished upon review of the following detailed description together with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The need for enhanced loss modulation and the disadvantages that arise from using conventional multi-stage spaced apart serially coupled Q-Switches noted below have led the present inventors to design and build a new type of acousto-optic (AO) modulator device, referred to herein as an integrated “Very High Efficiency” (VHE) Q-Switch, as a VHE-Q-Switch, or as an AO modulator according to the invention. An AO modulator according to the invention comprises a monolithic acousto-optic medium, and a plurality of spaced apart acoustic transducers comprising a first and at least a second transducer both bonded to the monolithic acousto-optic medium to form first and second acoustical columns. An incident optical beam encounters the acoustic beam produced by each of the transducers sequentially on its passage through the modulator, wherein the transducers are aligned so that a diffracted ray from the first acoustical column enters the second acoustical column at an angle within the acceptance angle of the second acoustical column. As a result, the diffraction induced loss obtained is significantly greater than the diffraction induced loss obtainable with a single transducer, such as ≧90% single pass peak loss modulation. The monolithic AO medium can be amorphous fused silica, or certain single crystal materials, such as silicon, tellurium dioxide or quartz.
The rediffraction problem that plagues conventional multiple spaced apart Q-switch designs which results in reductions in loss modulation, such as Q-Switches 100 and 200 described in the background, has been solved by careful alignment of the acoustics within a single monolithic structure. At certain incidence angles, a laser or other optical beam will not be diffracted by the acoustic beam. These angles are built into the VHE Q-Switch to ensure that no significant light is diffracted back into the zeroth order.
In the following section, a particular embodiment of the invention is described, that of an integrated two-transducer AO modulator configured as a laser Q-Switch, as illustrated in
As noted above, if the Debye-Sears ratio of an acousto-optic modulator is low, (generally taken to mean Q<5)), an AO device will operate in the so-called Raman-Nath diffraction regime. The diffracted orders emergent from the first device can be undesirably re-diffracted toward the zero order by the second device provided the acceptance angle of the second Q-Switch is large enough. In this case the zero-order intensity is not reduced by as large a factor as might have been expected.
In order to maximise the loss modulation efficiency of the two transducer (double-section) Q-Switch system it is necessary to effectively remove the possibility of rays being re-diffracted into zero-order (the incident beam) by the second Q-Switch. The first order rays could be blocked from entering the second Q-Switch using a simple beam stop. However, the small deflection angle makes this arrangement difficult to implement without hindering the normal operation of the laser. Devices according to the present invention instead ensure the diffracted ray from the first device enters the second Q-Switch (acoustical column) at an angle outside the acceptance angle of the second Q-Switch, so the percentage of the beam being re-diffracted is low.
As described below, VHE Q-Switches according to the invention require a very a specific set of criterion to ensure diffracted light from one acoustic column is essentially non re-diffractable by the subsequent column in order to provide the desired ≧90% single pass peak loss modulation. A thorough knowledge of the physics involved in the acousto-optic interaction was used by the present Inventors to define the required design and critical alignment parameters. Regarding alignment, the present Inventors have found that the critical alignment of the acoustic fields is best accomplished by integration of the multi-stage modulator using a single AO crystal medium. Precise processing (e.g. polishing for an amorphous medium) of the transducer faces of the respective AO cells is generally required to obtain the correct angles necessary.
Producing loss efficient VHE Q-Switches according to the invention has been found to be challenging due to the precision polishing and unique design parameters needed for efficient operation. For example, any measurable deviation from the precise relationship between transducer length and frequency will result in a significant reduction in loss efficiency. For example, re-diffraction of light back into the zero order will result in a loss modulation less than that provided by a single traditional Q-Switch.
One advantage of devices according to the present invention is the ability to easily implement a single RF driver. In this embodiment, by electrically coupling an electrode of one switch to an electrode of another switch, a single RF driver signal can be used thus eliminating timing jitter and phase mismatch between the respective Q-Switches. By electrically linking the electrodes together, the transducers will be inherently synchronized, as they will be supplied from a common RF driver. In contrast, if separate RF drivers are used, then it will be more difficult to synchronize them (i.e. make sure they are operating at exactly the same frequency and phase), and this can result in undesirable jitter.
An exemplary system according to the present invention comprising two identical Q-Switches formed on a common AO medium, such as Q-Switch 300 shown in
K is the acoustic wave number, k is the optic wave number, m is the order of diffraction and θi is the angle of incidence. The internal acceptance angle is defined herein as the range of incidence angles for which the diffraction efficiency is greater than 50%, i.e. the Full Width Half Maximum (FWHM) of Id as a function of θi. The argument of the sin c function in equation (1) may be written as:
Clearly, the Debye-Sears ratio (Q) has an effect on the acceptance angle in that a large Q value will produce a small acceptance angle and vice versa. Using small angle approximations, which are usually valid for AO devices, equation (3) can be solved for the angle of incidence:
Hence the acceptance angle, which is centered on the Bragg angle, is given by:
The acceptance angle, when defined as the FWHM of the sin c function of equation (1) is given when δ=0.44296.
The Bragg angle can also be written in terms of the Debye-Sears ratio.
The Bragg (deflection) angle is independent of the interaction length (L), but the acceptance angle is dependent on the interaction length (L). The optical wavelength and acoustic velocity are parameters that are fixed by the application of the device. The only parameter generally available to maximise the deflection angle is the RF drive frequency (fRF). Since the acceptance angle is proportional to fRF−1 increasing the drive frequency will also have the effect of narrowing the acceptance angle. Hence, by increasing the drive frequency, the amount of light re-diffracted by the second Q-Switch can be minimised and the efficiency of a two stage non-parallel Q-Switch system can be increased. Accordingly, frequency selection is generally a compromise between aperture and ability to prevent re-diffraction, high enough to significantly prevent re-diffraction, low enough to retain useful acceptance angle. Exemplary devices described below have been found to operate well at 68 MHz, for example.
For optimal efficiency, the diffracted order from the first Q-Switch should enter the second Q-Switch at an angle such that none (e.g. <1%) of the light can be re-diffracted. Light entering the device at an angle that corresponds to Id=0 in equation (1) will achieve this and this occurs when δ=±m where m is an integer. Geometric considerations for the relationship between the Bragg angle and the acceptance angle show that for small re-diffraction of the first order beam the condition 4θB>θacc must be met. This condition can be made an equality if one considers the angles of incidence where Id is zero. Using equations (5) and (6) the following relationship is arrived at:
The left hand side of equation 7(b) are RF frequency (fRF) and transducer length (L), which are both free design parameters during the design process. The right hand side contains the sound velocity (v), the refractive index (n) and the optical wavelength (λ), which are application dependent parameters. Based on the above, it should be clear that devices according to the invention can be arranged so that essentially none of the 1st order rays are re-diffracted by the second Q-Switch, or subsequent Q-Switches.
A prototype integrated 2-stage VHE Q-Switch according to the present invention is calculated to have a Debye-Sears ratio of 12.6 for each acoustic beam, an external Bragg angle of 6.07 mrad and an external acceptance angle of 5.63 mrad. This easily conforms to the requirement that θacceptance<4θB to be sure that the diffracted beam from the 1st acoustic wave column does not get re-diffracted by the second acoustic weave column to any significant degree. The amount of re-diffracted light can be estimated by substituting the angle 4θB for θi in equation (3) and calculating where the Bragg angle falls within the sin c function of the phase mismatch factor. For a prototype 2-stage VHE Q-Switch, such as Q-Switch 300 shown in
Although similar in size to an “industry standard” Q-Switch, a two acoustic column Q-Switch according to the invention operating at 68 MHz, was found to produce a measured loss modulation of nearly 97% compared with 80-85% for a single Q-Switch. This enhanced loss modulation is achieved in part by using more RF drive power, which is quadrupled (peak loss modulation is expected at 69.3 W RF power) relative to a standard single element Q-Switch (peak loss modulation at 17.3 W RF power).
Multi-Acoustic Column Zero-Order AO Device Configurations
Hybrid Bragg/Raman-Nath Three Column Design
To extend the two acoustic column Q-Switch according to the invention described above relative to
A problem arises when the acoustic wave fronts of two identical acoustic columns are aligned parallel to each other as noted above relative to
As shown in
The condition for no re-diffraction for the two Bragg regime columns is:
where δ′ is a positive integer.
Considering a light ray travelling from the middle to the right hand column of
where m is an integer labelling the Raman-Nath diffracted order. From the angles of incidence discussed above and equations (5, 6 & 7), the following relations are found:
Comparing equations (9 & 11) it is seen that:
It is desirable to design the device such that none of the m (Raman-Nath) diffracted orders are re-diffracted by the Bragg column, so let δB=m which gives f′=δ′f. Comparing equations (11 & 12) it is found that:
|m−δ′|=δα (14)
δ′must generally be fixed due to the frequency requirements found from equation (13). This means that δα will be zero when m=δ′ and efficient re-diffraction of the δ′ order will occur.
It has been found that it is impossible to completely eliminate the re-diffraction of all m-order rays. In practice, one can only choose the single order that will be re-diffracted so that the intensity of that order is low. Practical limitations on the achievable frequencies place an upper limit of δ′=3 so that the m=+3 order Raman-Nath diffracted beam will be re-diffracted toward the zero order by the next Bragg acoustic column.
If δ′=2, then the m=2 order will contain ˜24% of the incident light and will be re-diffracted efficiently by the next acoustic column. Assuming the diffraction efficiency of each acoustic column is 80%, it is found that the overall loss modulation of the design is 95.36%. Increasing δ′ to 3, only increases the loss modulation to 96.32%.
Bragg Four Acoustic Column VHE-Q-Switch Design
The condition for incident beams not diffracting in an acoustic column is given by equation (15) where the acceptance angle is given by equation (5) with δ a non-zero integer.
From geometric considerations it can be found that the angle of incidence in terms of Bragg angles for each acoustic column is:
equation (15) can be written in terms of the Bragg angle for each acoustic column and with equations (5, 7 & 16) the condition expressed in equation (17) can be arrived at:
where δij relates to a light ray emerging from the i-th acoustic column and being re-diffracted in the j-th acoustic column, fi is the i-th acoustic frequency, Li is the i-th transducer length and vi; is the i-th acoustic velocity. The acoustic velocity can be kept separate in this way to allow for the use of compressional (longitudinal) and shear transducers in any configuration.
Inspecting equation (17) the following relations are found:
f1 may be arbitrarily chosen to suit a given application. For strict no re-diffraction, the following relations are found:
Unfortunately, there are no solutions to equation (17) at least as far as δij=8 for which equation (20) holds true. Beyond this, transducer lengths and RF frequencies are not generally within reasonable current manufacturing limits. However, equation (17) can be solved by calculating a set of parameters from equations (18 & 19) using integer values of δij and deduce the remaining unknown (possibly non-integer) δij's by substituting the lengths and frequencies back into equation (15). It can then be found that all values of δij are integers. From
The diffraction efficiency for re-diffracted beams depends on the incidence angle relative to the Bragg angle and is given by the relationship:
Eij=E0j sin c2(πδij) (22)
The loss modulation can then be calculated by summing over all Iij's parallel to the zero order. Using this method there are many parameter values that will give an estimated diffraction efficiency of ˜99%. For example:
Regarding fabrication of VHE Q-Switches according to the invention, transducers are preferably aligned by polishing the transducer face of the AO cell (such as amorphous fused silica or quartz) to the correct angles. When the transducers are bonded to the AO cell, they will produce an acoustic column perpendicular to this face. Regarding transducer spacing, transducer spacing can vary since the only general requirement is that the acoustic columns should not overlap, otherwise, transducer spacing is generally irrelevant. Thus, only the relative angle which is fixed by the Bragg angle is generally important.
Although generally described using an amorphous AO materials, such as amorphous silica, Q-switches according to the present invention can utilize single crystal materials. Single crystal materials can include tellurium dioxide, quartz or silicon.
As noted above, Q-switches according to the invention generally provide better than 90% single pass loss modulation, and in some cases >95%, as compared with around 85% from the best conventional Q-Switch designs currently available. Such performance can be achieved inside the industry-standard package which allows simple integration into existing cavity configurations. Q-switches according to the invention greatly simplify the alignment procedure. As noted above, Q-switches according to the invention can use a single RF driver so timing jitter from a phase mismatch between two Q-switches is eliminated.
Q-switches according to the present invention are invention especially suited to lasers in which the laser cavity gain is particularly high and lasing can not easily be held off by a single conventional Q-switch. For example, Q-switches according to the present invention are expected to be particularly useful for high-gain, high-power, lasers, such as linearly polarised Nd:YAG and Nd:YVO4 lasers.
For example,
It should be understood that the Examples described below are provided for illustrative purposes only and do not in any way define the scope of the invention.
Experimental Results on a Prototype 2-Column Q-Switch Device
Initial experiments were carried out in order to demonstrate operation of a 2-acoustic column VHE Q-switch according to the present invention. A 1064 nm Nd:YAG laser was placed approximately two meters away in the plane of a photo-detector. The detector was re-aligned until received optical power was maximised. The two-stage VHE Q-′ Switch according to the present invention was installed, and driven at 68 MHz with 60 W power. Adjustments were made to device positioning and the incident beam angle, to establish the peak first order diffraction efficiency.
Applied RF drive power was varied between 0 and 60 W, with measurements of the proportional zero order intensity taken at increments of 5 W. Plots of loss modulation against RF power were described above for two VHE Q-Switch devices designated 65238-001 & 65238-002. A commercially available Single Q-Switch device (65238-003) was then introduced according to the procedure described above, and brought to ordinary Bragg diffraction at 20 W. Results for the conventional VHE/Single Q-Switch were obtained over the same power range, and a comparison made to two-stage type Q-Switch according to the present invention.
The laser was then rotated through 90° to alter the propagating beam polarisation type. A diffusing sphere was introduced in front of the detector, and the experiment conducted in darkness to compensate for the increased influence of background lighting. The test was then repeated to determine the power dependent loss modulation of the extraordinary ray by each device.
For RF powers greater than ˜20 W, driver instability proved a significant source of error. Fluctuations of up to +/−0.5 W were observed at peak power 60 W. Especially affected were loss modulation measurements for the conventional single Q-Switch, where response to a change in power was more pronounced. Further limits were also imposed by photo-detector precision, and variations in ambient lighting. The latter was estimated to contribute an error of up to +/−0.5%, which dominated in VHE Q-Switch measurements at close to peak RF power.
The observed change in device performance following rotation of the beam polarisation to the extraordinary wave agrees closely with theory. A scaling factor was introduced into the loss modulation RF power response; reaching comparable diffraction efficiencies to the ordinary state requires significantly more power. Hence the VHE Q-Switch according to the invention modulates the extraordinary beam relatively linearly over the first 60 W (the highest power supplied by the RF driver).
Theoretical models were constructed, and results illustrated graphically in
Where α is a scaling factor, derived from the device parameters, which is not dependent on power. The factor α represents heuristically the effect of finite Q-value of the Bragg type diffraction—some power is lost into unmeasured orders. A best-fit α-value of 0.79 was assumed, which provided a good correlation with both the ordinary and extraordinary power response curves.
The theoretical Bragg angle for fused silica diffracting at 68 MHz is calculated to be 6.27 mrad. Fitting a moving average to the change in η with respect to incident beam angle (
Devices according to the invention also display unusually high ratios between the magnitudes of the primary and secondary diffraction peaks. The maximum loss modulation in the secondary peak is ˜84%, which is comparable to that yielded by the primary on the single transducer. It is therefore likely that at angles greater than θB acousto-optic matching occurs only with one of the two acoustic beams, and hence response similar to that of a conventional single Q-Switch will be observed.
Summary of Experimental Results Conducted on a 2-Stage VHE Q-Switch
Performance of VHE Q-Switches according to the invention have been examined at 68 MHz with respect to applied RF power 0 to 60 W (
Of these parameters, device loss modulation efficiency was shown to be dependent on both the orientation and height position of the propagating beam within the cell. Values for the Bragg angle were obtained as 6.5+/−1.0 mrad and 5.75+/−0.37 mrad by mechanical and optical angular measurements respectively, giving an average θB=6.13+/−0.53 mrad. These results are in good agreement with the calculated theoretical Bragg angle, θB=6.27 mrad. All angles were measured relative to the position of the Q-Switch when aligned for peak loss modulation, visually apparent to be at normal incidence as theoretically predicted. Reflecting a 640 nm beam directly from the optic cell facing would allow experimental confirmation of this assumption.
Peak loss modulation of the VHE Q-Switch was measured as 96.0+/−0.5% at 60 W with optimum alignment and beam positions greater than 1 mm from the transducer.
Under the same conditions, a conventional control Single Q-Switch demonstrated a peak loss modulation of 81.0+/−1.0% at ˜25 W. A loss modulation of 81.0+/−1.0% from the primary transducer implies 19% incident power on the second acoustic wave. With a further 81% loss from the secondary acoustic wave, the resultant loss modulation for the full VHE Q-Switch should therefore be 96.4+/−1.7%. This is in excellent agreement with the experimentally measured data.
It is to be understood that while the invention has been described in conjunction with the preferred specific embodiments thereof, that the foregoing description as well as the examples which follow are intended to illustrate and not limit the scope of the invention. In particular, in the description of the invention as a Q-switch, by necessity, the Q-switch is placed inside the laser cavity. However, as noted above switches according to the invention may also be used as an external modulator. In this external arrangement, the laser is run continuously; the modulator and resulting modulation is accomplished outside of the laser cavity.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0601886.5 | Jan 2006 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2007/002732 | 1/31/2007 | WO | 00 | 2/26/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/100433 | 9/7/2007 | WO | A |
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20020191264 | Vernackt et al. | Dec 2002 | A1 |
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20090147344 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |