The present invention relates to a method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity, which provides generation of a laser beam inside said resonant laser cavity, comprising one or more birefringent optical media. In the development of solid state laser systems it proves often useful to select the polarization of the laser light generated inside the oscillator, i.e. in the laser cavity. The polarization state of the laser light, in fact, is particularly important in some applications of laser-matter interaction, such as non linear processes for generating higher harmonics or for parametric generation; in most cases, where the use of a polarized laser beam is required, it is convenient to select the polarization inside the oscillator rather than outside it. If the oscillator emits a non polarized beam, the external selection of the polarization entails a halving of the power available, whereas the inner selection will cause much minor losses: in this event, in fact, the active element in the cavity can use all of its own gain to the advantage of the polarization whose oscillation is allowed.
Moreover, many optoelectronic devices interacting with a laser beam (inside or outside the laser cavity) have a different behaviour according to the state and degree of the polarization of the incident laser light.
For instance, the electro-optical Q-switching modulator pertains to this category: since the polarization of the light crossing the modulator is altered by switching the modulator voltage, the Q-switching effect (i.e. modulation of the cavity losses) is reached causing the cavity to oscillate without losses on a well precise polarization, and do not oscillate on the orthogonal polarization (i.e. having high losses) due to a selection device. Modulation methods of the cavity losses through a polarization-selective element in the resonator may be employed for the so-called “mode-locking” operating mode to generate laser pulses lasting less than a nanosecond.
At least three different occurrences can be noticed where the designer has recourse to a polarization selector element in order to obtain a (linearly) polarized radiation from the oscillator, depending on the active material being used:
Conventionally, selection of the oscillating polarization occurs by means of optical elements causing a highly precise linear polarization (selection of an elliptic polarization is possible but generally not very useful). The common operating concept of these elements is based on the introduction of different losses for the light oscillating in the resonator on one or the other linear polarization.
Most common known polarizer devices utilize Fresnel transmission and reflection properties for surfaces inclined at the Brewster angle; as well known, when an unpolarized laser beam impinges on an optically dense plate (refractive index n) at an angle of incidence (measured with respect to the normal to the plate plane) equal to Brewster angle (which depends on the refractive index) the polarized beam component in the plane parallel to the Brewster angle is transmitted without losses, whereas the perpendicular component has power losses due to reflection depending on the refractive index n. By mean of on an appropriate material choice, it is possible to have the undesired polarization undergo enough losses to avoid reaching the laser threshold condition, whereas the main polarization oscillates freely. A typical manufacture of the device is to machine one or both faces of the active material so as to have the appropriate Brewster angle with respect to the direction of the mode propagation in the cavity.
More sophisticated devices are known, which utilize the properties of appropriate dielectric layers deposited on an optical surface in order to enhance the different transmission properties of the polarized light from an inclined surface: dielectric film polarizers (Brewster angle and 45° angle) belong to this category.
Other known polarizers operate according to the birefringence principle through the angular separation of the main polarization components. Such devices are e.g. Glan-Taylor, Glan-Thompson, Nicol, Wollaston and Rochon prisms, which consist of two calcite or calcite and quartz elements either stuck together or air-spaced.
These elements cannot be easily utilized in laser systems with a high average power due to rather high intrinsic losses and absorption. Also dichroic (polaroid) polarizers are not suggested for the same reason.
At the present state of the art it is clear how the sole selection methods of a preferential polarization state, practically performable in a laser with a high average power, require the use of specific dielectric elements or uncoated surfaces at the appropriate Brewster angle inside the resonator. The former are surely the most efficient ones due to their very high transmission contrast between the two orthogonal polarizations; however, (in general) their losses are not irrelevant for the oscillating polarization (typical 2-5%, a value often comparable with the transmission of the output coupler, so that a consistent amount of the extractible power is wasted); generally, they are expensive and relatively space requiring in a modern laser resonator. Conversely, a simple plate or surface at the Brewster angle has usually not enough contrast for selecting the polarization in a high gain oscillator; moreover, should said plate be integrated as the output face of the active medium, this would entail high manufacturing costs.
It is the object of the present invention to solve the above drawbacks and provide a method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity, having an improved and more efficient performance with respect to the existing solutions.
In this frame, it is the main object of the present invention to provide a method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity, which is suitable for use in apparatuses with a high average power, ensuring high performances and, in particular, a high transmission contrast.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity, which involves negligible absorption or, in general, irrelevant laser light losses when in use in a cavity with a high average power.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity, which has low manufacturing costs and easy operation.
In order to achieve such aims, it is the object of the present invention to provide a method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity and/or an apparatus incorporating the features of the annexed claims, which form an integral part of the description herein.
Further objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description and annexed drawings, which are supplied by way of non limiting example, wherein:
The inventive idea of the present invention consists substantially of a method for selecting the polarization of the oscillating laser beam inside a discrete-elements solid state laser cavity, which uses the birefringent property of an optical element inside the laser resonator and operates by means of an angular selectivity phenomenon in the alignment of the resonator itself.
It is known that some crystalline materials commonly used inside laser systems are featured by a strong birefringence, among which the following categories are recalled:
For the purposes of the method according to the present invention, by birefringent material it should be intended any medium with optical anisotropy or a finite difference between the values of the refractive indexes measured along various directions inside the medium, said anisotropy being natural or induced by any external actions; interest is put in the materials having transparency at one or more of the laser wavelengths of the laser cavity where polarized oscillation is desired. The value of the refractive index pertaining to the light of a determined wavelength and polarized according to a precise direction inside the anisotropic material can be defined for each one of these materials, using e.g. Sellmeier's approximate equations of the material.
In order to clarify the operation of the method according to the present invention, the double refraction phenomenon is represented in dashed line in
While progressing in the anisotropic medium 9, the laser beam 1 meets a face 22, where by face an optically polished surface is intended, which is crossed or hit by the output laser beam 1 from the anisotropic birefringent medium 9 towards a second medium 4, in this case represented by air, for easiness of example. Should the face 22 interfacing between the anisotropic medium 9 and the second medium 4 be chosen perpendicular to the propagation direction in the anisotropic medium 9, both the polarization components 2 and 3 would leave the medium 9 collinear, with the same direction and phase-shifted.
However, if the face 22 as depicted in
Also, the angular separation is at its maximum when one of the main directions, no (ordinary) or ne (extraordinary), lays in the plane in which the angle between the normal to the interface and the propagation direction is defined, and in the event of a plane interface, the other one lays in the plane of the interface.
In
Both the position and orientation of the first mirror 8 constrain the resonance direction of the cavity 20 in a first direction 11 exactly perpendicular to the plane of said mirror 8. The anisotropic medium 9 has optical anisotropy in the plane perpendicular to such a direction 11, while a second face 32 of the anisotropic material 9, forming the interface with the air 4 is inclined by an angle θi with respect to such a direction 11. It is quite clear that the ideal resonant cavity 20 so delimited has two different configurations corresponding to two resonance conditions upon changing the orientation of the (mirror in the air 10: a first condition in which the position of the mirror in the air 10 is apt to reflect the ordinary polarization component 6 along an optical path towards the face 32, so that inside the anisotropic material 9 said component 6 will be aligned along the direction 11; a second condition in which the position of the mirror 10 is apt to operate such a reflection for the extraordinary polarization component 7.
Therefore, it is obvious that choosing one of the two resonance orientations for the mirror 10, will automatically exclude oscillation in the remaining direction, therefore the cavity 20 allows oscillation of one main polarization direction alone at a time; accordingly, a device appropriately manufactured according to this method ensures a maximum possible contrast in selecting the polarization.
The choice of one or the other polarization merely depends on the re-alignment of one mirror, i.e. mirror 10. It is also clear that such a choice can be executed maintaining the mirror 10 fixed and re-aligning the mirror 8, along with the birefringent material 9.
The necessary condition of the method according to the present invention is to have an interfacing surface inside the cavity 20, namely the second face 32, between an optical anisotropic material 9 and another optical medium, such as the air in the example, crossed by the laser beam 1 generated in the cavity, said interfacing surface being deliberately non perpendicular to the propagation direction 11 of said laser beam 1.
This condition is also sufficient in case no element inside the resonant cavity 20 is in a position to cancel the angular and/or spatial separation produced by the above interface 32.
Most birefringent materials suitable for a practical implementation of the method according to the present invention are already normally utilized inside laser cavities and have irrelevant absorptions and losses for the radiation oscillating in the resonator.
The method depicted in
A detailed description of a real implementation of the method according to the present invention follows here below with reference to the diagram of
The cavity 20, where the ordinary axis “o” coincides with the crystallographic axis “c” of the crystal forming the anisotropic medium 9 and the extraordinary axis “e” coincides with the crystallographic axis “a” of the medium 9, consists of a Nd:YVO4 a-cut laser crystal, manufactured according to the scheme of an active birefringent mirror, as further described. This laser crystal has a 4×4 mm2 square section along the crystallographic directions “a” and “c”, and a 7 mm length along the other longitudinal axis, “a”. The first face 31 of the crystal, plane and perpendicular to the longitudinal axis “a”, has a high reflecting dielectric coating which make it highly reflecting (reflectivity R>99.5%) at the laser wavelength (in this case, 1064 nm) and non reflecting (R<5%) to the pumping wavelength (in this case, 808 nm), thus forming the mirror 8. The second face 32 is a plane face inclined with respect to the first face 31, laying the “a”-axis transversally in the plane of the face 32 itself to form an angle of about 1 degree between the “c”-axis and the projection of the latter on the face 32 itself. This second face 32 has a high transmission dielectric coating that makes it non reflecting (transmission T>99.8%) at the wavelength of the laser beam 1. At about 6 cm distance from the second face 32 is placed the mirror 10, a plane output coupler mirror, with 20% transmission at 1064 nm; the mirror 10 is located on a mechanical mount, not shown, with micrometric angular adjustment around two main axes oriented as “a” and “c” in the laser crystal. The laser crystal is longitudinally-pumped with a fibre-coupled semiconductor laser, supplying over 20 W optical power at 808 nm.
The method according to the present invention can be utilized for obtaining various device embodiments for use inside a laser resonator, some of which are described in the following.
In another embodiment illustrated in
In the case where the laser material itself is birefringent for the transverse polarization components of the laser radiation propagating in the cavity, the active material may have non parallel faces, such as in the form of a wedge, as suggested above; to this effect, the active material operates an angular separation of the polarizations, whereas an outer optics, such as the mirror 10, for a non limiting example, performs the resonance selection of one of the polarizations.
A possible embodiment according to this example as illustrated in
In the embodiment illustrated in
In other embodiments, in a laser cavity containing a non linear crystal for altering the cavity frequency, the non linear crystal may be cut with non parallel faces, such as in the form of a wedge, analogously to
According to another embodiment, in a laser cavity containing an optical modulator (typically for Q-switching or mode-locking) made of an appropriate birefringent material (such as but non limited to LiNbO3), the modulator element or elements may appropriately have non parallel faces (such as in the form of a wedge), as described in the previous embodiments, analogously to
The selection of the beam polarization inside a laser cavity is useful, first of all, because it allows the choice of one or more optical properties of the output beam tied to its polarization state; however, selection of the polarization state of the laser beam is also utilized for inducing desired modulation effects of the cavity losses. If a laser resonator, in fact, contains an element for selecting the polarization state of the beam, that resonator is characterized by irrelevant or anyway very small losses for a laser beam in that determined polarization state only; any optical effect allowing a change of the polarization state of the beam propagating in the cavity (such as rotation of a linear polarization) cannot but increase the typical loss level of the above cavity.
An appropriate introduction of modulable losses for the laser cavity obtained through:
Normally, but not necessarily, a good Mode-Locking operation can be obtained introducing relatively low periodic losses (a few %) with a time interval in accordance with the ‘round trip’ period of the laser cavity.
If the polarization selection method, on the contrary, is such to allow oscillation of a determined polarization state (as the subject method) and at the same time prevent oscillation of any laser beam in an orthogonal polarization state, then the loss level that can be introduced through the switching of the polarization to the orthogonal state in the cavity may cause the suppression of the laser oscillation; in these cases, a controlled effect of polarization switching of the laser beam propagating in the cavity would allow going from a low loss situation (maximum output power) to a maximum loss situation (nil output power); this condition is essential for the operation of laser cavities in Q-Switching regime.
A non limiting example of a Q-Switching operating laser cavity is described in the following, in which the losses required (modulable) are obtained using the polarization selection of the method according to the present invention.
In the cavity depicted in
From the above description the features of the present invention as well as the relevant advantages thereof are clear.
Advantageously, the method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity according to the present invention allows choosing one or the other polarization component simply depending on the re-alignment of the resonator. In particular, it can be noticed how according to the method of the present invention, separation of the polarizations and selection of the oscillating polarization are two independent processes, obtainable, at the limit, with just one birefringent optical element and, above all, when compared to the conventional methods the selection depends exclusively on the optical alignment of the resonator. Also, the proposed method is based on creating different resonance conditions of the same oscillator, each one of them-selectable through the optical alignment of the latter.
Moreover, advantageously, most birefringent materials suitable for practical implementation of the method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity according to the present invention are already normally used inside laser cavities and have irrelevant absorption and losses for the oscillating radiation in the resonator.
The method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity according to the present invention can be easily extended from ideal models to a real laser cavity, by evaluating an appropriate sensitivity parameter for the misalignment of the cavity itself; when sizing a real device according to the present method, this parameter is used for controlling the oscillation of one or both the polarization components, in a higher or minor quantity according to the laser properties of the material associated to the two separate components.
It is obvious that many changes are possible for the man skilled in the art to the method for selecting the polarization of the laser beam inside a laser cavity described above by way of example, without departing from the novelty spirit of the innovative idea, and it is also clear that in practical actuation of the invention the components may often differ in form and size from the ones described and be replaced with technical equivalent elements.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/04239 | 9/26/2003 | WO | 5/20/2005 |