The present invention relates to a system for shaping a laser beam and particularly to a system that converts a laser beam from a non-uniform profile to uniform flat-top distribution with a single aspherical lens.
Most laser devices typically produce Gaussian or similar beam profiles. However, it is desirable in many laser applications, such as holography, material processing, and lithography, to create a laser beam having a uniform spatial profile to insure uniform illumination of laser energy on the target.
A laser beam having a uniform spatial profile, typically referred to as a flat-top beam, can be obtained by refractive, diffractive, or absorptive elements. Among these methods, the refractive system presents many advantages, including high efficiency, simple structure, and less wavelength dependence, which are essential for high power lasers.
A widely-used refractive laser beam shaper consists of two separate aspherical lenses as shown in FIG. 1. Although this optical system is neither difficult to align or complex, a single lens system, if it exists and does the same job, will be much preferred, especially if it can be mass produced.
What is needed for converting laser beams from Gaussian, or any other spatial distribution, to a flat-top profile is a beam shaper that is simpler to install and simpler to produce and consolidates the beam reshaping function into one single lens.
The present invention is a single lens laser beam shaper for converting laser beams from a Gaussian profile, or any other spatial distribution, to a flat-top or uniform spatial profile. The laser beam shaper includes a lens having two aspheric surfaces. The beam shaper significantly simplifies the overall structure in comparison with conventional 2-element systems and therefore provides great ease in alignment and reduction of cost. The method described herein applies to beams with any spatial distribution and is not limited by the typical Gaussian distribution.
Description of the Present State of the Art:
Referring to
The conventional design shown in
In the conventional 2-element laser beam shaping system shown in
Description of the Current Invention:
In order to explain the theory behind the single lens beam shaper of the present invention, it is necessary to solve the appropriate mathematical equations. Mathematical details can be found in Dickey, et al. and in Jiang, et al., “Design and Testing of a Refractive Reshaping System”, Proc. SPIE 2000, 64, 2000. To have a uniform collimated output spatial profile and maintain the original wavefront, two conditions must be met: 1) the output must be a constant and 2) all rays must maintain the same optical path length (OPL).
With reference to
In Equation (1), r is the radius of the beam at lens L1, R is the radius of the beam at lens L2, and E0 is the output energy density which is a constant and will be decided by the system magnification factor M=R/r. Applying Snell's Law at both refractive surfaces and performing ray transform yields the following differential equation:
(z′)4[γ12(R−r)2+(γ12−1)(Z−z)2]−(z′)3[2(R−r)(Z−z)]
−(z′)2(1−γ12)[(R−r)2+(Z−z)2]−z′[2(R−r)(Z−z)]−(R−r)2=0 (2)
In Equation (2) shown above z′=dz/dr, γ1=n1/n0. The constant optical path requires that the OPL of any arbitrary ray be equal to the OPL of the central ray, which leads to:
Equation (3) can be solved to give:
Z=(n22−n02)−1{[(n1n2−n02)z+n2C]±
n0[(C+n1γ1n2z)2+(n22−n02)(R−r)2]1/2} (4)
A similar calculation on the second surface at point B(R, Z) results in:
Z′=z′γ2{γ1−[1+(z′)2(1−γ12)]1/2}
/{1+(z′)2−γ1γ2(z′)2−γ2[1+(z′)2(1−γ12)]1/2} (5)
In Equation (5) Z′=dZ/dr, γ2=n0/n2. The solutions to Equation (1) through Equation (5) will give the exact profiles for the two surfaces on the first L1 and the second L2 lens. Equation (2) can be further simplified to a quadratic equation which has the following roots:
z′={(R−r)(Z−z)±γ1(R−r)[(Z−z)2+(R−r)2]1/2}/[(γ12−1)(Z−z)2+γ12(R−r)2] (6)
In Equation (6), r and z are the corresponding radial and axial values of the first aspheric surface, R and Z are the corresponding radial and axial values for the second aspheric surface, and γ1=n0/n1.
Equation (6) is differential equation and can be solved numerically. The plus and minus signs in Equation (6) represent the different configurations. All previous reports have involved solutions for the positive roots of Equation 6, which involves solving the equation using the positive signs. Solving the equation for the positive roots forces the index of refraction between the two surfaces to be less than the index of refraction beyond those surfaces. Thus, when choosing the positive roots of the equation, there are two optical elements.
For the single element beam shaper of the present invention, Equation (6) is solved for the negative roots, or using the negative signs. This requires the index of refraction between the two surfaces to be greater than the index of refraction beyond the two surfaces. The dotted lines in
Assuming the first refractive surface is convex and the second one is concave to the incoming rays, then the positive root has to be taken in Equation (6) and also the plus sign for Equation (4) under the condition that n1>n0<n2 holds. This means that rays get defocused at the first surface and recollimated because of the focusing effect at the second refractive surface.
The negative root in Equation (6) indeed does not make sense in the configuration mentioned above where n1>n0<n2 has been assumed. But it does represent the correct solution in the case of n1<n0>n2. If n1=n2=1 and n0>1, then the net result will be exactly the same as rays coming from air, entering and refracted by a lens having refractive index n0 before exiting into air again. In this case the minus sign in Equation (4) has to be taken, corresponding to a convex surface, which is illustrated with dotted lines in FIG. 2.
Referring to
In principle, the input beam spatial profile can be arbitrarily chosen. More specifically, the initial input beam spatial profile is taken to be a Gaussian beam shape expressed by Ei(r)=exp(−2r2/r02), where r0 is the beam radius and where the intensity falls to e−2 of its maximum.
With reference to
The intensity distribution before and after the shaping system of
Ray tracing was done to judge the performance of the single-element beam shaping system and to examine the profile variation caused by actual deviations from the ideal input beam. Results are given in FIG. 6. Three Gaussian input profiles I1, I2, and I3 are shown and one I4 described by sec h2 (asr/rs), where rs is the beam radius at e−2 of maximum and as=1.657. The output profiles are represented by O1, O2, O3, and O4. The ideal input beam is I2.
When the two input profiles are close to each other, as denoted by I2 and I4 in
Although the lens thickness for a single-element beam shaping system may be considerably larger than the thickness of each separate lens in a 2-element beam shaping system in the case of ultrashort pulse lasers, it should not be critical for picosecond or longer laser pulses. In the case of a single-element beam shaping system for picosecond or longer pulses, the overall material length can be reduced to a minimum that could potentially be smaller than that of a 2-element system. Referring to
As the invention has been described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the same may be varied in many ways without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Any and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
The United States of America may have certain rights to this invention under Management and Operating contract No. DE-AC05-84ER40150 from the Department of Energy.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5796520 | Maruyama | Aug 1998 | A |
5969862 | Maruyama | Oct 1999 | A |