The invention relates to a solid-state laser system constituted by a solid-state laser which is optically pumped by a vertical extended cavity surface emitting laser (VECSEL), said VECSEL including an extended cavity mirror and said solid-state laser comprising a solid-state laser medium arranged in a laser cavity which consists of two cavity mirrors, a first of said cavity mirrors being designed as an outcoupling mirror of said solid-state laser and a second of said cavity mirrors being formed to allow optical pumping of said solid-state laser medium through said second cavity mirror.
Diode pumped solid-state lasers (DPSSL) are widely used nowadays. The radiation of an edge emitting laser diode is used to pump a solid-state laser crystal in a separate resonator cavity. The efficiency of such diode pumped solid-state lasers is generally limited by the emission characteristics of the edge emitting diodes, which requires complicated optics to collimate the emission in the fast and slow axis and to match the mode of the solid-state laser.
In order to overcome the drawbacks of the complicated collimation optics, it is known to use a VECSEL to pump the solid-state laser. US 2006/0153261 Al discloses such a solid-state laser system for generating solid-state laser radiation at 620 nm. The Eu3+-doped solid-state laser medium is pumped through one of the cavity mirrors forming the laser cavity of the solid-state laser. A lens is used between the VECSEL and the solid-state laser so as to focus the pump beam through the resonator cavity mirror into the solid-state laser medium. Since, in contrast to edge emitting laser diodes, a VECSEL provides a rotationally symmetric beam profile, the mode matching between the VECSEL and the solid-state laser is facilitated and therefore allows a better conversion efficiency from the pump radiation to the emission of the solid-state laser.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a solid-state laser system with a VECSEL pumped solid-state laser, in which the conversion efficiency is further improved.
The object is achieved with the solid-state laser system as defined in claim 1. Advantageous embodiments of the proposed solid-state laser system are defined in the dependent claims or are described in the subsequent portions of the description.
The proposed solid-state laser system is constituted by a solid-state laser which is optically pumped by a vertical extended cavity surface emitting laser (VECSEL). The solid-state laser comprises a solid-state laser medium arranged in a laser cavity which consists of two resonator cavity mirrors. A first of said cavity mirrors is designed as an outcoupling mirror of the solid-state laser, i.e. this mirror allows transmission of the laser radiation generated by the solid-state laser medium with a transmissivity of some %. The second of said cavity mirrors is formed to allow optical pumping of the solid-state laser medium through this second cavity mirror. This second cavity mirror is therefore designed to be highly reflective to the laser radiation of the solid-state laser, but allows transmission of the laser wavelength of the pump radiation generated by the VECSEL to a high degree. The solid-state laser system according to the present invention is characterized in that the extended mirror of the VECSEL is constituted by one of the resonator cavity mirrors of the solid-state laser.
This means that one of the components of the VECSEL is shared with one of the components of the solid-state laser, leading to a higher integration of the solid-state laser system. Due to this higher integration with the shared components, an improved mode matching is achieved, which results in a significant increase of conversion efficiency.
In the proposed solid-state laser system, the extended cavity mirror may consist of the first cavity mirror or of the second cavity mirror of the solid-state laser. If the extended cavity mirror consists of the second cavity mirror of the solid-state laser, which is the mirror partly transmissive to the pump radiation, the extended cavity of the VECSEL and the resonator cavity of the solid-state laser are arranged back to back, sharing one mirror component.
The compactness of the construction can be further improved if the second cavity mirror of the solid-state laser cavity, which is also the extended cavity mirror of the VECSEL, is directly attached to an end face of the solid-state laser medium of the solid-state laser. This laser medium is commonly constituted by a doped laser crystal or a doped glass body with polished end faces. As a preferred alternative, the second cavity mirror and the extended cavity mirror are constituted by an appropriate dielectric coating, in particular a multilayer coating, on the above end face of the solid-state laser medium. This precludes the use of any further substrate which has to be attached to this end face.
Furthermore, the first cavity mirror of the solid-state laser cavity may be formed by an appropriate coating on the opposite end face of the solid-state laser medium. This results in a solid-state laser which is composed of the solid-state laser medium with appropriate coatings on its two end faces, which coatings form the two resonator cavity mirrors of the solid-state laser. The end face carrying the first cavity mirror is preferably convexly shaped to form a convex first cavity mirror.
In a further embodiment, the solid-state laser is arranged inside the extended cavity of the VECSEL. In this embodiment, the extended mirror of the VECSEL also constitutes the first cavity mirror of the solid-state laser. The second cavity mirror of the solid-state laser is arranged inside the extended cavity of the VECSEL and is designed to be highly transmissive to the pump radiation of the VECSEL.
The design of the first and second resonator cavity mirrors of the solid-state laser appropriate to constitute the extended cavity mirror of the VECSEL at the same time is possible due to the different wavelengths of the VECSEL and the solid-state laser. Appropriate reflectivities and transmissivities for the different wavelengths can be achieved by an appropriate multilayer coating design as known in the art.
The proposed solid-state laser system is not limited to certain combinations of VECSEL laser materials or pump and emission wavelengths. Only for purposes of illustration, some examples are mentioned in the following description, which, however, do not limit the scope of the proposed invention. A well-known example of a solid-state laser is a Nd:YAG laser pumped at 808 nm and emitting at 1064 nm or 946 nm. Other examples are Yb:YAG, Yb:LaSc3(BO3)4, or Yb:RE2O3 (RE=Y, Gd, Lu, Sc) for the solid-state laser material pumped at 970-980 nm and emitting, for example, at 1030 nm. Other examples are Er- and Er/Yb-doped materials such as, for example, Er:RE2O3 (RE=Y, Gd, Lu, Sc), Er:LaSc3(BO3)4, Er:YAG, Er:YLF or Er/Yb:ZBLAN pumped at 970-980 nm and emitting at various wavelengths in the IR, e.g. at the telecom band around 1550 nm or at the maximum of water absorption at 2700 nm. Other materials are doped with trivalent Ce-, Pr-, Nd-, Pm-, Sm-, Eu-, Gd-, Tb-, Dy-, Ho-, Er-, Tm-, Yb- or doped with transition metal ions, which enlarge the range of accessible laser wavelengths for a VECSEL-pumped solid-state laser (VPSSL) to further wavelengths in the IR (1300 nm, 2000 nm, . . . ).
The VPSSL may also be of use for generating visible wavelengths. To give an example, a VECSEL emitting around 445 nm can be used to pump a Pr-doped material that is characterized by phonon energies below 600 cm−1 and generates laser radiation at cyan (˜491 nm), green (˜520 nm), orange (˜610 nm) or red (˜640 nm) wavelengths. Some examples of suitable host materials are LiLuF4, LiYF4, KYF4, KY3F10, BaY2F10, or ZBLAN. VPSSLs of this type are suitable laser sources for display applications.
In summary, pumped solid-state lasers as in the case of the proposed solid-state laser system will extend the range of wavelengths that are nowadays reachable with VECSEL technology to new wavelength ranges. For example, lasers emitting in the typical wavelength ranges used for fiber-optical communication, such as 1.3 or 1.5 μm, are possible. Also lasers emitting at the maximum of water absorption at 2.7 μm are possible on the basis of the proposed solid-state laser system. Such a system will therefore considerably enlarge a field of possible applications of VECSELs.
These and other aspects of the invention are apparent from and will be elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
The proposed solid-state laser system will be described hereinafter by way of example without limiting the scope of protection as defined by the claims. In the drawings,
In contrast to edge emitting laser diodes, surface emitting lasers exhibit a symmetric and homogeneous beam profile. A special example of such a surface emitting laser is the VECSEL, which consists of a surface emitting laser with an extended cavity that defines and controls the mode of the laser. A sketch of a typical example of a VECSEL is shown in
In the proposed solid-state laser system, such a VECSEL may be used as the pump laser for the solid-state laser. According to the present invention, the extended cavity mirror 7 of the VECSEL is formed by one of the resonator end mirrors of the solid-state laser. A first example of such a construction is shown in
In the proposed solid-state laser device, as shown, for example, in
An even higher degree of integration can be achieved when the solid-state laser is placed within the extended cavity of the VECSEL, as depicted in
The second cavity mirror 10 of the solid-state laser is also placed inside the extended cavity and may be attached to the layer stack forming part of the VECSEL. This second cavity mirror is designed to be highly transmissive to the pump radiation of the VECSEL and highly reflective to the converted radiation, i.e. the radiation emitted by the solid-state laser. In
The invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and the foregoing description by way of example and is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. Different embodiments described above and in the claims can also be combined. Other variants of the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure and the appended claims. For example, the construction of the VECSEL is not limited to that shown in the Figures. Also other constructions of such a VECSEL, for example, a VECSEL having the substrate on the other side of the layer stack may be used. Furthermore, the invention is not limited to any materials or sequences of layers of the stack of the VECSEL forming the DBRs and the active layer. The invention is neither limited to embodiments in which the resonator cavity mirrors are directly attached to or formed as coatings on the end faces of the solid-state medium. These cavity mirrors may also be arranged separately and away from the solid-state medium.
In the claims, use of the verb “comprise” and its conjugations does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. The mere fact that measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage. Any reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting the scope of these claims.
1 DBR
2 active layer
3 partial DBR
4 substrate
5 heat sink
6 electric contacts
7 extended cavity mirror
8 thermal lens or collimation lens
9 pump laser beam
10 second end mirror
11 solid-state laser medium
12 first end mirror
13 solid-state laser beam
14 length of pump laser cavity
15 length of solid-state laser cavity
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07123571.7 | Dec 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/055320 | 12/16/2008 | WO | 00 | 6/11/2010 |