FREQUENCY-CONVERSION CRYSTAL FOR FEMTOSECOND-LASER PULSES
20180307117 ยท 2018-10-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/3542
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An optically nonlinear crystal is arranged for frequency-doubling an input pulse. The crystal has parallel facets each coated with a reflective coating. The crystal is arranged with respect to the input pulse such that the input pulse makes a plurality of forward and reverse passes between the coatings. A frequency-doubled pulse is generated on the forward passes. The input pulse and the frequency-doubled pulse propagate with different group velocities in the crystal such that temporal separation the pulses occurs. The crystal and reflective coatings are configured such that the temporal separation does not exceed a predetermined value.
Claims
1. Optical apparatus for converting pulsed laser-radiation having a first wavelength to pulsed laser-radiation having a second wavelength, the apparatus comprising: an optically nonlinear crystal having first and second facets parallel to each other; and first and second reflective coatings, each thereof being highly reflective at the first and second wavelengths, the first reflective coating partially covering the first facet and the second reflective coating at least partially covering the second facet; wherein the crystal and the reflective coatings are configured and arranged such that a pulse at the first wavelength enters the crystal through a portion of the first facet not covered by the first reflective coating, makes at least one forward pass through the crystal and at least one reverse pass through the crystal, after the first forward pass the subsequent passes are directed by the reflective coatings, the forward and reverse passes at an angle to each other; wherein a pulse at the second wavelength is generated from the first-wavelength pulse during the forward passes; wherein there is a changing temporal separation between the first-wavelength pulse and the second-wavelength pulse while passing through the crystal; wherein reflection from at least one of the reflective coatings changes the temporal separation, the crystal and the reflective coatings also configured to cooperatively minimize the temporal separation such that the temporal separation does not exceed a predetermined value during the forward passes.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the predetermined value for the temporal separation during the forward passes is about equal to the full-width at half-maximum pulse-duration of the first-wavelength pulse.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the crystal and the reflective coatings are further configured and arranged such that the temporal separation is about zero at the beginning of each forward pass.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the crystal and the reflective coatings are further configured and arranged such that the temporal separation is about zero at about a mid-point along each forward pass.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the number of forward passes is greater than the number of reverse passes by one, the second-wavelength pulse exits the crystal through a portion of the second facet not covered by the second reflective coating.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein there are three forward passes and two reverse passes.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the number of forward passes equals the number of reverse passes, the second-wavelength pulse exiting the crystal through a second portion of the first facet not covered by the first reflective coating.
8. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein there are two forward passes and two reverse passes.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the crystal and the coatings are further configured and arranged such that the temporal separation is about zero at the end of each reverse pass.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first-wavelength pulse has a wavelength twice that of the second-wavelength pulse.
11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the crystal is lithium tri-borate (LBO).
12. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the first wavelength is about 1040 nanometers and the second wavelength is about 520 nanometers.
13. Optical apparatus for converting pulsed laser-radiation having a first wavelength to pulsed laser-radiation having a second wavelength, the apparatus comprising: an optically nonlinear crystal having first and second facets parallel to each other; and first and second reflective coatings, each thereof being highly reflective at the first and second wavelengths, the first reflective coating partially covering the first facet and the second reflective coating at least partially covering the second facet; wherein the crystal and the reflective coatings are configured and arranged such that a pulse at the first wavelength enters the crystal through a portion of the first facet not covered by the first reflective coating, makes at least one forward pass through the crystal and at least one reverse pass through the crystal, after the first forward pass the subsequent passes are directed by the reflective coatings, the forward and reverse passes at an angle to each other; wherein a pulse at the second wavelength is generated from the first-wavelength pulse during the forward passes; wherein there is an increasing temporal separation between the first-wavelength pulse and the second-wavelength pulse during each forward pass through the crystal due to the different group velocities thereof; wherein the temporal separation between the first-wavelength pulse and the second-wavelength pulse created during each forward pass is reduced by an opposite group delay induced by a combination of a subsequent reverse pass through the crystal and reflections from the first and second reflective coatings.
14. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the crystal and the reflective coatings are further configured and arranged such that the temporal separation is about zero at the beginning of each forward pass.
15. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the crystal and the reflective coatings are further configured and arranged such that the temporal separation is about zero at about a mid-point along each forward pass.
16. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the crystal is Brewster cut such that the second-wavelength pulse exits the crystal through one of the facets at the Brewster angle for the second wavelength.
17. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the first-wavelength pulse has a wavelength twice that of the second-wavelength pulse.
18. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the crystal is lithium tri-borate (LBO).
19. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein the first wavelength is about 1040 nanometers and the second wavelength is about 520 nanometers.
20. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the reflective coatings are multi-layer thin-film dielectric coatings.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, schematically illustrate a preferred embodiment of the present invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the preferred embodiment given below, serve to explain principles of the present invention.
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0016] Turning now to the drawings, wherein like components are designated by like reference numerals,
[0017] By way of example, for a lithium tri-borate (LBO) crystal arranged to convert a pulse have a wavelength of about 1040 nm to a pulse having a wavelength of about 520 nm, phase matching angles and are preferably 90 and 12.1, respectively. Polarization-orientation E.sub.F of the 1040 nm (fundamental) pulse is parallel to facet 14. Polarization-orientation E.sub.2H of the 520 nm (second-harmonic) pulse is perpendicular to E.sub.F. The angle of incidence of the fundamental pulse on entrance-facet 14 of crystal 12 is selected, cooperative with angles and , such that the generated second-harmonic pulse is incident on exit-facet 16 of the crystal at the Brewster angle (58.1 external in this example). Within the crystal, the fundamental and second-harmonic pulses P.sub.F and P.sub.2H, respectively, are depicted separated by above-discussed temporal walk-off.
[0018] Calculations indicate that in this exemplary arrangement for a crystal 12 having a thickness of 3 mm, there would be a total temporal walk-off between the fundamental and second-harmonic pulses of 173.7 fs, with the fundamental pulse leading the second-harmonic pulse. As discussed above, for pulses having a duration of between about 100 fs and about 200 fs, this would result in a temporal separation of the pulses.
[0019]
[0020] In embodiment 30, entrance and exit facets 14 and 16 are partially coated with reflective coatings 20 and 22, respectively. The coatings are highly reflective for the fundamental wavelength and the second-harmonic wavelength. The coatings are disposed on the respective facets such that fundamental radiation F (pulse P.sub.F) is incident on a portion 14A of facet 14; enters crystal 12 at incidence angle ; is reflected from coating 22 onto coating 20; is reflected from coating 20 back to coating 22; is reflected again from coating 22 back to coating 20; and reflected from coating 20 out of crystal 12 via an uncoated portion 16A of facet 16. Portion 14A may be uncoated as depicted or furnished with an antireflection coating.
[0021] The forward path from facet 14 to facet 16 is designated here as Path A. The reverse path from facet 16 to facet 14 is designated here as Path B. The forward and reverse paths are at an angle to each other. Second-harmonic radiation is generated only during forward passes along Paths A, which are phase-matched paths. No second-harmonic radiation is generated during reverse passes along Paths B, as these paths are not at the correct phase-matching angle with respect to the crystal axes.
[0022] Temporal walk-off t.sub.s occurs on Paths A as illustrated by the separation between pulses P.sub.F and P.sub.2H. This temporal separation changes as the pulses pass through the crystal due to the different group velocities thereof. A group delay accumulates during each forward pass through the crystal. Temporal walk-off also occurs on Paths B, however, the temporal walk-off on Paths B is generally different from the temporal walk-off on Paths A. In some crystals, for some fundamental and second-harmonic wavelengths, the temporal walk-off in the forward and reverse paths may be opposite.
[0023] Coatings 20 and 22 are designed to introduce sufficient group delay between the fundamental and second-harmonic radiation that the net temporal walk-off between the fundamental and second-harmonic pulses is kept at or below some predetermined tolerable value during the forward passes through the crystal. One preferred tolerable value of net temporal walk-off is about the pulse-duration of pulse P.sub.F measured between the two half-maximum intensity points of the pulse, generally referred to by practitioners of the art as the full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) pulse-duration. Both high-reflectivity and controlled group delay can be achieved using multi-layer thin-film dielectric coatings. The temporal separation between pulses P.sub.F and P.sub.2H is changed during reflection by a fixed amount due to different penetration depths of the pulses into a multi-layer coating.
[0024] It should be noted here that pulses P.sub.F and P.sub.2H are depicted in
[0025] It should be noted also that the path of second-harmonic radiation relative to that of the fundamental radiation (the spatial walk-off angle) is depicted in
[0026] The inventive approach to very short-pulse harmonic generation is next described in terms of a numerical example. This approach would be applicable for any frequency-conversion operation, in any particular optically nonlinear crystal material.
[0027] First, it is necessary to decide on a maximum tolerable group delay during any of the phase-matched forward passes (along Paths A in
[0028] Next, the reflective coatings (coatings 20 and 22 in
[0029] In the above-discussed example of frequency-doubling a 1040 nm pulse having a FWHM pulse-duration of about 150 fs by type-I phase-matching in a Brewster-cut LBO crystal, a crystal thickness of 3 mm would lead to a temporal walk-off (group delay) along one Path A of +173.7 fs. The positive sign of the temporal walk-off indicates that the 1040 nm pulse being converted would lead a generated 520 nm pulse at the first incidence on facet 16 of crystal 12. A reverse pass along one Path B would introduce a temporal walk-off of 161.0 fs. Accordingly, if reflection from coating 22 did not introduce any additional group delay, the net temporal walk-off would be +12.7 fs.
[0030] If it were desired that the 1040 nm pulse and the 520 nm pulse be exactly re-synchronized (have zero temporal walk-off) following reflection from coating 20 along a second Path A, then coatings 20 and 22 together must provide a net group delay of 12.7 fs. This net group delay could be provided by any combination of individual group delays for the two coatings. Here it should be noted that it is extremely unlikely that a coating specified to have high reflectivity at such a high incidence angle, and with different polarization-orientations for the two wavelengths, would not introduce any group delay unless that were specified and part of the coating design. For example, a coating specified to have 99% or greater reflectivity at both 1040 nm and 520 nm at an internal angle-of-incidence of about 32 in the exemplary LBO crystal.
[0031] By building the appropriate group delay into coatings 20 and 22, the 1040 nm and 520 nm pulses can be re-synchronized following each reflection from coating 20. For example, the temporal separation could be zero at the beginning of each forward pass along Path A. Alternatively, the temporal separation could be zero at about a mid-point along Path A. This re-synchronization would provide that the temporal walk-off between the 1040 nm and 520 nm pulses never exceeded the tolerable value during any forward pass through crystal 12. Group delay accumulated during each forward pass would be reduced by an opposite group delay induced by a combination of the next reverse pass and reflections from the first and second reflective coatings.
[0032] The inventive arrangement as depicted in
[0033] If in the arrangement of
[0034] The arrangement of embodiment 40 is similar to the arrangement of embodiment 30, with an exception that fundamental pulses enter and generated second-harmonic pulses and residual fundamental pulses exit crystal 12 via the same facet, here, facet 14. This is achieved in the example of
[0035] Regarding reflective coatings 20 and 22, design principles for coatings having specific reflection properties combined with specific group-delay properties have been described in patent and open literature references over the past several years. Custom design and deposition of such coatings is commercially available. One supplier of user-specified group-delay controlled coatings is LaserOptik GmbH of Garbsen, Germany.
[0036] It should be noted here that the present invention is described above with reference to a type-I critical frequency-doubling (second-harmonic generating) operation. Those skilled in the art will recognize from the description of the present invention presented herein, that the invention is applicable to other frequency-conversion operations, such as sum-frequency operations and to type-0 and type-II frequency-conversion operations. The invention is also applicable to optical parametric generation (frequency-division) operations. Those skilled in the art will also recognize that embodiments of the present invention may be combined in groups of two or more for multi-step frequency-conversion, or for spatial (angular) walk-off compensation.
[0037] In summary, the present invention is described above with reference to two preferred embodiments. The invention is not limited, however, to embodiments described and depicted herein. Rather the invention is limited only by the claims appended hereto.