Lasers and Optoelectronics - Anil K. Maini - E-Book

Lasers and Optoelectronics E-Book

Anil K. Maini

0,0
109,99 €

-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.

Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

With emphasis on the physical and engineering principles, this book provides a comprehensive and highly accessible treatment of modern lasers and optoelectronics. Divided into four parts, it explains laser fundamentals, types of lasers, laser electronics & optoelectronics, and laser applications, covering each of the topics in their entirety, from basic fundamentals to advanced concepts.

Key features include:

  • exploration of technological and application-related aspects of lasers and optoelectronics, detailing both existing and emerging applications in industry, medical diagnostics and therapeutics, scientific studies and Defence.
  • simple explanation of the concepts and essential information on electronics and circuitry related to laser systems
  • illustration of numerous solved and unsolved problems, practical examples, chapter summaries, self-evaluation exercises, and  a comprehensive list of references for further reading

This volume is a valuable design guide for R&D engineers and scientists engaged in design and development of lasers and optoelectronics systems, and technicians in their operation and maintenance. The tutorial approach serves as a useful reference for under-graduate and graduate students of lasers and optoelectronics, also PhD students in electronics, optoelectronics and physics.

Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:

Android
iOS
von Legimi
zertifizierten E-Readern

Seitenzahl: 1087

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2013

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Preface

Part I: Laser Fundamentals

Chapter 1: Laser Basics

1.1 Introduction

1.2 Laser Operation

1.3 Rules of Quantum Mechanics

1.4 Absorption, Spontaneous Emission and Stimulated Emission

1.5 Population Inversion

1.6 Two-, Three- and Four-Level Laser Systems

1.7 Gain of Laser Medium

1.8 Laser Resonator

1.9 Longitudinal and Transverse Modes

1.10 Types of Laser Resonators

1.11 Pumping Mechanisms

1.12 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 2: Laser Characteristics

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Laser Characteristics

2.3 Important Laser Parameters

2.4 Measurement of Laser Parameters

2.5 Laser Beam Diagnostic Equipment

2.6 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Part II: Types of Lasers

Chapter 3: Solid-state Lasers

3.1 Introduction: Types of Lasers

3.2 Importance of Host Material

3.3 Operational Modes

3.4 Ruby Lasers

3.5 Neodymium-doped Lasers

3.6 Erbium-doped Lasers

3.7 Vibronic Lasers

3.8 Colour Centre Lasers

3.9 Fibre Lasers

3.10 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 4: Gas Lasers

4.1 Introduction to Gas Lasers

4.2 Helium-neon Lasers

4.3 Carbon Dioxide Lasers

4.4 Metal Vapour Lasers

4.5 Rare Gas Ion Lasers

4.6 Excimer Lasers

4.7 Chemical Lasers

4.8 Carbon Dioxide Gas Dynamic Lasers

4.9 Dye Laser

4.10 Free-electron Lasers

4.11 X-Ray Lasers

4.12 Summary

Review Questions

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 5: Semiconductor Lasers

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Operational Basics

5.3 Semiconductor Laser Materials

5.4 Types of Semiconductor Lasers

5.5 Characteristic Parameters

5.6 Gain- and Index-guided Diode Lasers

5.7 Handling Semiconductor Diode Lasers

5.8 Semiconductor Diode Lasers: Application Areas

5.9 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Part III: Laser Electronics and Optoelectronics

Chapter 6: Building Blocks of Laser Electronics

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Linear Power Supplies

6.3 Switched-mode Power Supplies

6.4 Constant Current Sources

6.5 Integrated-circuit Timer Circuits

6.6 Current-to-voltage Converter

6.7 Peak Detector

6.8 High-voltage Trigger Circuit

6.9 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 7: Solid-state Laser Electronics

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Spectrum of Laser Electronics

7.3 Electronics for Solid-state Lasers

7.4 Electronics for Pulsed Solid-state Lasers

7.5 Electronics for CW Solid-state Lasers

7.6 Solid-state Laser Designators and Rangefinders

7.7 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 8: Gas Laser Electronics

8.1 Introduction

8.2 Gas Discharge Characteristics

8.3 Gas Laser Power Supplies

8.4 Helium-Neon Laser Power Supply

8.5 Carbon Dioxide Laser Power Supplies

8.6 Power Supplies for Metal Vapour Lasers

8.7 Power Supplies for Excimer Lasers

8.8 Power Supplies for Ion Lasers

8.9 Frequency Stabilization of Gas Lasers

8.10 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 9: Laser Diode Electronics

9.1 Introduction

9.2 Laser Diode Protection

9.3 Operational Modes

9.4 Laser Diode Driver Circuits

9.5 Laser Diode Temperature Control

9.6 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 10: Optoelectronic Devices and Circuits

10.1 Introduction

10.2 Classification of Photosensors

10.3 Radiometry and Photometry

10.4 Characteristic Parameters

10.5 Photoconductors

10.6 Photodiodes

10.7 Phototransistors

10.8 Photo-FET, SCR and TRIAC

10.9 Photoemissive Sensors

10.10 Thermal Sensors

10.11 Displays

10.12 Light-emitting Diodes

10.13 Liquid-crystal Displays

10.14 Cathode Ray Tube Displays

10.15 Emerging Display Technologies

10.16 Optocouplers

10.17 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Part IV: Laser Applications

Chapter 11: Lasers in Industry

11.1 Introduction

11.2 Material-processing Applications

11.3 Laser Cutting

11.4 Laser Welding

11.5 Laser Drilling

11.6 Laser Marking and Engraving

11.7 Laser Micromachining

11.8 Photolithography

11.9 Rapid Manufacturing

11.10 Lasers in Printing

11.11 Summary

Review Questions

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 12: Lasers in Medicine

12.1 Introduction

12.2 Light–tissue Interaction

12.3 Laser Diagnostics

12.4 Therapeutic Techniques: Application Areas

12.5 Ophthalmology

12.6 Dermatology

12.7 Laser Dentistry

12.8 Vascular Surgery

12.9 Photodynamic Therapy

12.10 Thermal Therapy

12.11 Summary

Review Questions

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 13: Lasers in Science and Technology

13.1 Introduction

13.2 Optical Metrology

13.3 Laser Velocimetry

13.4 Laser Vibrometry

13.5 Electronic Speckle Pattern Interferometry

13.6 Satellite Laser Ranging

13.7 Lasers in Astronomy

13.8 Holography

13.9 Summary

Review Questions

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 14: Military Applications: Laser Instrumentation

14.1 Introduction

14.2 Military Applications of Lasers

14.3 Laser-based Instrumentation

14.4 Guided Munitions

14.5 Laser Communication

14.6 Summary

Review Questions

Problems

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Chapter 15: Military Applications: Directed-energy Laser Systems

15.1 Introduction

15.2 Laser Technology for Low-intensity Conflict (LIC) Applications

15.3 Electro-optic Countermeasures

15.4 Directed-energy Laser Weapons

15.5 Summary

Review Questions

Self-evaluation Exercise

Bibliography

Appendix A: Laser Safety

Index

This edition first published 2013

© 2013 John Wiley and Sons Ltd

Registered office

John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, United Kingdom

For details of our global editorial offices, for customer services and for information about how to apply for permission to reuse the copyright material in this book please see our website at www.wiley.com.

The right of the author to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, except as permitted by the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, without the prior permission of the publisher.

Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The publisher is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book.

Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. It is sold on the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering professional services and neither the publisher nor the author shall be liable for damages arising herefrom. If professional advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Maini, Anil Kumar.

Lasers and optoelectronics : fundamentals, devices, and applications / Dr Anil K. Maini.1 online resource.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.

ISBN 978-1-118-68894-6 – ISBN 978-1-118-68895-3 – ISBN 978-1-118-68896-0 – ISBN 978-1-118-45887-7 (cloth) 1. Lasers. 2. Optoelectronic devices. I. Title.

TA1675

621.36′6–dc23

2013023492

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN: 978-1-118-45887-7

Affectionately dedicated to:The loving memory of my parentsShri Sukhdev Raj MainiandSmt Vimla Maini

Preface

Laser, an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation (as coined by Gould in his notebooks) is a household name today. In their early stages of development and evolution, lasers were originally confined to the premises of prominent research centres such as the Bell laboratories and Hughes research laboratories and to major academic institutes such as Columbia University. More than five decades after Theodore Maiman demonstrated the first laser in May 1960 at Hughes, this is no longer the case. Lasers are undoubtedly one of the greatest inventions of the 20th century along with satellites, computers and integrated circuits. Their use in commercial, industrial, bio-medical, scientific and military applications continues to expand today.

Lasers and Optoelectronics: Fundamentals, Devices and Applications is a comprehensive treatise on the physical and engineering principles of laser operation, laser system design, optoelectronics and laser applications. It provides a first complete account of the technological and application-related aspects of the subject of lasers and optoelectronics. The book is divided into four parts: laser fundamentals; types of lasers; laser electronics and optoelectronics; and laser applications.

The first chapter of Part I (Laser Fundamentals) aims to introduce the readers to the operational fundamentals of lasers with the necessary dose of quantum mechanics. The topics discussed in Chapter 1 include the principles of laser operation; concepts of population inversion, absorption, spontaneous emission and stimulated emission; three-level and four-level lasers; basic laser resonator; longitudinal and transverse modes of operation; and pumping mechanisms. Chapter 2 discusses the special characteristics that distinguish laser radiation from ordinary light. This is followed by a discussion of the various laser parameters that interest the designers and users of laser devices and systems.

Chapters 3–5 (Part II) describe the three main types of lasers. Based on the nature of the lasing medium, lasers are classified as either solid-state lasers (Chapter 3), gas lasers (Chapter 4) and semiconductor lasers (Chapter 5). Chapter 3 is focused on the operational fundamentals of solid-state lasers, their salient features and typical applications. Gas lasers covered in Chapter 4 include helium-neon lasers, carbon dioxide lasers, metal vapour lasers, rare gas ion lasers, excimer lasers, chemical lasers and gas dynamic carbon dioxide lasers. Again, the emphasis is on operational fundamentals, salient features and typical applications of these lasers. (Dye lasers, free electron lasers and x-ray lasers are also covered in Chapter 4, although these do not belong to any of the three main categories.) Chapter 5 discusses semiconductor diode lasers, which typically emit in the visible to near-infrared bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. Optically pumped semiconductor lasers, quantum cascade lasers, lead salt lasers and antimonide lasers are also covered briefly. Topics covered in this chapter include operational fundamentals, semiconductor materials used in the fabrication of semiconductor lasers, different types of semiconductor diode lasers, characteristic parameters, handling precautions and application areas.

Part III (Chapters 7–10) provides information on the electronics that accompany most laser systems. Chapter 6 describes the basic building blocks of electronics generally used in the design of electronics packages of prominent laser sources and systems configured around them. The intention is to familiarize the readers with the operational basics of these building blocks, allowing an understanding of the specific laser electronics packages discussed in the following chapters. This chapter will particularly benefit laser and optoelectronics students and professionals who do not have a comprehensive knowledge of electronics.

Chapters 7–9 describe the electronics that feature in the three major categories of lasers. Chapter 7 deals with the design and the operational aspects of different types of power supplies, pulse repetition rate and high-voltage trigger generation circuits used in pulsed and continuous wave solid-state lasers. Chapter 8 describes the fundamentals of gas laser power supplies in terms of requirement specifications, circuit configurations and design guidelines, with particular reference to the two most commonly used gas lasers (helium-neon and carbon dioxide lasers). Power supply configurations for metal vapour lasers and excimer lasers (and to a large extent noble gas ion lasers) are similar to those used for helium-neon and carbon dioxide lasers except for minor deviations, which are discussed during the course of the text. Frequency stabilization techniques used in the case of helium-neon and carbon dioxide lasers are also discussed. Chapter 9 discusses the different topics related to semiconductor diode laser electronics. The chapter describes the common mechanisms of laser damage and the precautions which must be observed to protect them. The different topologies commonly used in the design of laser diode drive circuits and temperature controllers to meet the requirements of different applications are also described. Chapter 10 provides detailed information on the fundamentals and application circuits of different types of optoelectronic devices.

Part IV (Chapters 11–15) comprehensively covers applications of lasers and optoelectronic devices. Chapters 11, 12 and 13 cover industrial, medical and scientific applications respectively, and Chapters 14 and 15 cover military applications. The major industrial applications of lasers discussed in Chapter 11 includes cutting, welding, drilling, marking, rapid prototyping, photolithography and laser printing. The use of lasers in medical disciplines such as angioplasty, cancer diagnosis and treatment, dermatology, ophthalmology, cosmetic applications such as hair and tattoo removal and dentistry are discussed in Chapter 12. Chapter 13 describes some of the important applications of lasers in the pursuit of science and technology. Topics discussed include the use of lasers for optical metrology, laser velocimetry, laser vibrometry, electron speckle pattern interferometry, Earth and environmental studies, astronomy and holography. The use of lasers and optoelectronic devices in defence are exhaustively covered in Chapters 14 and 15.

The book is concluded with an appendix including a brief discussion on laser safety, which is of paramount importance to a wide cross-section of designers and users of laser systems.

The book covers each of the topics in its entirety from basic fundamentals to advanced concepts, thereby leading the reader logically from the basics of laser action to advanced topics in laser system design. Simple explanations of the concepts, a number of solved examples and unsolved problems and references for further reading are significant features of each chapter.

The motivation to write this book was provided by the absence of any one volume combining the technology and application-related aspects of laser and optoelectronics. The book is aimed at a wide range of readers, including: undergraduate students of physics and electronics, graduate students specializing in lasers and optoelectronics, scientists and engineers engaged in research and development of lasers and optoelectronics; and practising professionals engaged in the operation and maintenance of lasers and optoelectronics systems.

Part I

Laser Fundamentals

1

Laser Basics

1.1 Introduction

Although lasers were confined to the premises of prominent research centres such as the Bell laboratories, Hughes research laboratories and major academic institutes such as Columbia University in their early stages of development and evolution, this is no longer the case. Theodore Maiman demonstrated the first laser five decades ago in May 1960 at Hughes research laboratories. The acronym ‘laser’, Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation, first used by Gould in his notebooks is a household name today. It was undoubtedly one of the greatest inventions of the second half of the 20th century along with satellites, computers and integrated circuits; its unlimited application potential ensures that it continues to be so even today. Although lasers and laser technology are generally applied in commercial, industrial, bio-medical, scientific and military applications, the areas of its usage are multiplying as are the range of applications in each of these categories.

This chapter, the first in Laser basics, is aimed at introducing the readers to operational fundamentals of lasers with the necessary dose of quantum mechanics. The topics discussed in this chapter include: the principles of laser operation; concepts of population inversion, absorption, spontaneous emission and stimulated emission; three-level and four-level lasers; basic laser resonator; longitudinal and transverse modes of operation; and pumping mechanisms.

1.2 Laser Operation

The basic principle of operation of a laser device is evident from the definition of the acronym ‘laser’, which describes the production of light by the stimulated emission of radiation. In the case of ordinary light, such as that from the sun or an electric bulb, different photons are emitted spontaneously due to various atoms or molecules releasing their excess energy unprompted. In the case of stimulated emission, an atom or a molecule holding excess energy is stimulated by a previously emitted photon to release that energy in the form of a photon. As we shall see in the following sections, population inversion is an essential condition for the stimulated emission process to take place. To understand how the process of population inversion subsequently leads to stimulated emission and laser action, a brief summary of quantum mechanics and optically allowed transitions is useful as background information.

1.3 Rules of Quantum Mechanics

According to the basic rules of quantum mechanics all particles, big or small, have discrete energy levels or states. Various discrete energy levels correspond to different periodic motions of its constituent nuclei and electrons. While the lowest allowed energy level is also referred to as the ground state, all other relatively higher-energy levels are called excited states. As a simple illustration, consider a hydrogen atom. Its nucleus has a single proton and there is one electron orbiting the nucleus; this single electron can occupy only certain specific orbits. These orbits are assigned a quantum number N with the innermost orbit assigned the number N = 1 and the subsequent higher orbits assigned the numbers N = 2, 3, 4…outwards. The energy associated with the innermost orbit is the lowest and therefore N = 1 also corresponds to the ground state. Figure 1.1 illustrates the case of a hydrogen atom and the corresponding possible energy levels.

Figure 1.1 Energy levels associated with the hydrogen atom.

The discrete energy levels that exist in any form of matter are not necessarily only those corresponding to the periodic motion of electrons. There are many types of energy levels other than the simple-to-describe electronic levels. The nuclei of different atoms constituting the matter themselves have their own energy levels. Molecules have energy levels depending upon vibrations of different atoms within the molecule, and molecules also have energy levels corresponding to the rotation of the molecules. When we study different types of lasers, we shall see that all kinds of energy levels – electronic, vibrational and rotational – are instrumental in producing laser action in some of the very common types of lasers.

Transitions between electronic energy levels of relevance to laser action correspond to the wavelength range from ultraviolet to near-infrared. Lasing action in neodymium lasers (1064 nm) and argon-ion lasers (488 nm) are some examples. Transitions between vibrational energy levels of atoms correspond to infrared wavelengths. The carbon dioxide laser (10 600 nm) and hydrogen fluoride laser (2700 nm) are some examples. Transitions between rotational energy levels correspond to a wavelength range from 100 microns (μm) to 10 mm.

In a dense medium such as a solid, liquid or high-pressure gas, atoms and molecules are constantly colliding with each other thus causing atoms and molecules to jump from one energy level to another. What is of interest to a laser scientist however is an optically allowed transition. An optically allowed transition between two energy levels is one that involves either absorption or emission of a photon which satisfies the resonance condition of ΔE = hν, where ΔE is the difference in energy between the two involved energy levels, h is Planck's constant (= 6.626 075 5 × 10−34 J s or 4.135 669 2 × 10−15 eV s) and ν is frequency of the photon emitted or absorbed.

1.4 Absorption, Spontaneous Emission and Stimulated Emission

Absorption and emission processes in an optically allowed transition are briefly mentioned in the previous section. An electron or an atom or a molecule makes a transition from a lower energy level to a higher energy level only if suitable conditions exist. These conditions include:

1. the particle that has to make the transition should be in the lower energy level; and
2. the incident photon should have energy (=hν) equal to the transition energy, which is the difference in energies between the two involved energy levels, that is, ΔE = hν.

If the above conditions are satisfied, the particle may make an absorption transition from the lower level to the higher level (Figure 1.2a). The probability of occurrence of such a transition is proportional to both the population of the lower level and also the related Einstein coefficient.

Figure 1.2 Absorption and emission processes: (a) absorption; (b) spontaneous emission; and (c) stimulated emission.

There are two types of emission processes, namely: spontaneous emission and stimulated emission. The emission process, as outlined above, involves transition from a higher excited energy level to a lower energy level. Spontaneous emission is the phenomenon in which an atom or molecule undergoes a transition from an excited higher-energy level to a lower level without any outside intervention or stimulation, emitting a resonance photon in the process (Figure 1.2b). The rate of the spontaneous emission process is proportional to the related Einstein coefficient. In the case of stimulated emission (Figure 1.2c), there first exists a photon referred to as the stimulating photon which has energy equal to the resonance energy (hν). This photon perturbs another excited species (atom or molecule) and causes it to drop to the lower energy level, emitting a photon of the same frequency, phase and polarization as that of the stimulating photon in the process. The rate of the stimulated emission process is proportional to the population of the higher excited energy level and the related Einstein coefficient. Note that, in the case of spontaneous emission, the rate of the emission process does not depend upon the population of the energy state from where the transition has to take place, as is the case in absorption and stimulated emission processes. According to the rules of quantum mechanics, absorption and stimulated emission are analogous processes and can be treated similarly.

We have seen that absorption, spontaneous emission and stimulated emission are all optically allowed transitions. Stimulated emission is the basis for photon multiplication and the fundamental mechanism underlying all laser action. In order to arrive at the necessary and favourable conditions for stimulated emission and set the criteria for laser action, it is therefore important to analyze the rates at which these processes are likely to occur. The credit for defining the relative rates of these processes goes to Einstein, who determined the well-known ‘A ’ and ‘B ’ constants known as Einstein's coefficients. The ‘A ’ coefficient relates to the spontaneous emission probability and the ‘B ’ coefficient relates to the probability of stimulated emission and absorption. Remember that absorption and stimulated emission processes are analogous phenomenon. The rates of absorption and stimulated emission processes also depend upon the populations of the lower and upper energy levels, respectively.

For the purposes of illustration, consider a two-level system with a lower energy level 1 and an upper excited energy level 2 having populations of N1 and N2, respectively, as shown in Figure 1.3a. Einstein's coefficients for the three processes are B12 (absorption), A21 (spontaneous emission) and B21 (stimulated emission). The subscripts of the Einstein coefficients here represent the direction of transition. For instance, B12 is the Einstein coefficient for transition from level 1 to level 2. Also, since absorption and stimulated emission processes are analogous according to laws of quantum mechanics, B12 = B21. According to Boltzmann statistical thermodynamics, under normal conditions of thermal equilibrium atoms and molecules tend to be at their lowest possible energy level, with the result that population decreases as the energy level increases. If E1 and E2 are the energy levels associated with level 1 and level 2, respectively, then the populations of these two levels can be expressed by Equation 1.1:

(1.1)

where

k=Boltzmann constant = 1.38 × 10−23 J K−1 or 8.6 × 10−23 eV K−1T=absolute temperature in degrees Kelvin

Figure 1.3 Absorption, spontaneous emission and stimulated emission.

Under normal conditions, N1 is greater than N2. When a resonance photon (ΔE = hν) passes through the species of this two-level system, it may interact with a particle in level 1 and become absorbed, in the process raising it to level 2. The probability of occurrence of this is given by B12 × N1 (Figure 1.3b). Alternatively, it may interact with a particle already in level 2, leading to emission of a photon with the same frequency, phase and polarization. The probability of occurrence of this process, known as stimulated emission, is given by B21 × N2 (Figure 1.3d). Yet another possibility is that a particle in the excited level 2 may drop to level 1 without any outside intervention, emitting a photon in the process. The probability of this spontaneous emission is A21 (Figure 1.3c). The spontaneously emitted photons have the same frequency but have random phase, propagation direction and polarization.

If we analyze the competition between the three processes, it is clear that if N2 > N1 (which is not the case under the normal conditions of thermal equilibrium), there is the possibility of an overall photon amplification due to enhanced stimulated emission. This condition of N2 > N1 is known as population inversion since N1 > N2 under normal conditions. We shall explain in the following sections why population inversion is essential for a sustained stimulated emission and hence laser action.

Example 1.1

Refer to Figure 1.4. It shows the energy level diagram of a typical neodymium laser. If this laser is to be pumped by flash lamp with emission spectral bands of 475–525 nm, 575–625 nm, 750–800 nm and 820–850 nm, determine the range of emission wavelengths that would be absorbed by the active medium of this laser and also the wavelength of the laser emission.

Figure 1.4 Example 1.1: Energy level diagram.

Solution

1. Referring to the energy level diagram of Figure 1.4, two edges of the absorption band correspond to energy levels of 12 500 cm−1 and 13 330 cm−1. Corresponding wavelengths (of photons) that would have these energy levels are computed as:
Wavelength corresponding to 12 500 cm−1 = (1/12 500) cm = (107/12 500) nm = 800 nm
Wavelength corresponding to 13 330 cm−1 = (1/13 330) cm = (107/13 330) nm = 750.19 nm ≅ 750 nm
2. The absorption band of the active medium is therefore 750–800 nm. This is the band of wavelengths that would be absorbed by the active medium.
3. Lasing action takes place between metastable energy level 11 935 cm−1 and the lower energy level 2500 cm−1. The difference between two energy levels is 11 935−2500 cm−1 = 9435 cm−1.
4. This energy corresponds to a wavelength of (1/9435) cm = (107/9435) nm = 1059.88 nm ≅ 1060 nm.
5. The emitted laser wavelength is therefore = 1060 nm.

Example 1.2

Figure 1.5 shows the energy level diagram of a popular type of a gas laser. Determine the possible emission wavelengths.

Figure 1.5 Example 1.2: Energy level diagram.

Solution

1. The emission wavelength is such that the corresponding energy value equals the energy difference between the involved lasing levels.
2.For emission 1, the energy difference (from Figure 1.5) = 0.117 eV.
If λ1 is the emission wavelength, then hc /λ1 = 0.117 where
h = Planck's constant = 6.626 075 5 × 10−34 J s = 4.135 669 2 × 10−15 eV s
c = 3 × 1010 cm s−1
Substituting these values, λ1 = (4.135 669 2 × 10−15 × 3 × 1010)/0.117 cm = 106.04 × 10−5 cm = 10 604 nm.
3.For emission 2, the energy difference (from Figure 1.5) = 0.129 eV
If λ1 is the emission wavelength, then hc /λ1 = 0.129. Substituting these values, λ1 = (4.1 356 692 × 10−15 × 3 × 1010)/0.129 cm = 96.178 × 10−5 cm = 9617.8 nm.
4. The energy level diagram shown in Figure 1.5 is that of carbon dioxide laser, which is also evident from the results obtained for the two emission wavelengths.

Example 1.3

We know that absorption and emission between two involved energy levels takes place when the photon energy corresponding to the absorbed or emitted wavelength equals the energy difference between the two energy levels. If ΔE is energy difference in eV, prove that the absorbed or emitted wavelength (in nm) approximately equals (1240/ΔE).

Solution

1. Emitted or absorbed wavelength λ = hc /ΔE
2. In the above expression, if we substitute the value of h in eV s, c in nm s−1 and ΔE in eV, we obtain λ in nm.
3. Now, h = 4.135 669 2 × 10−15 eV s and c = 3 × 108 m s−1 = 3 × 1017 nm s−1
Therefore, λ (in nm) = 4.135 669 2 × 10−15 × 3 × 1017/ΔE ≅ 1240/ΔE.

1.5 Population Inversion

We shall illustrate the concept of population inversion with the help of the same two-level system considered above. If we compute the desired transition energy for an optically allowed transition, let us say at a wavelength of 1064 nm corresponding to the output wavelength of a neodymium-doped yttrium aluminium garnet (Nd:YAG) laser, it turns out to be about 1 eV (transition energy ΔE = hν). For a transition energy of 1 eV, we can now determine the population N2 of level 2, which is the upper excited level here, for a known population N1 of the lower level at room temperature of 300 K from Equation 1.1. The final relationship is .

This implies that practically all atoms or molecules are in the lower level under thermodynamic equilibrium conditions. Let us not go that far and instead consider a situation where the population of the lower level is only ten times that of the excited upper level. We shall now examine what happens when there is a spontaneously emitted photon. Now there are two possibilities: either this photon stimulates another excited species in the upper level to cause emission of another photon of identical character, or it would hit an atom or molecule in the lower level and be absorbed. Since there are 10 atoms or molecules in the lower level for every excited species in the upper level, we can say that 10 out of every 11 spontaneously emitted photons hit the atoms or molecules in the lower level and become absorbed. Only 9% (1 out of every 11) of the photons can cause stimulated emission. The photons emitted by the stimulated process will also become absorbed successively due to the scarcity of excited species in the upper level. Another way of expressing this is that when the population of the lower level is much larger than the population of the excited upper level, the probability of each spontaneously emitted photon hitting an atom or molecule in the lower level and becoming absorbed is also much higher than the same stimulating another excited atom or molecule in the upper level. The same concept underlies the expressions for the probability of absorption, spontaneous emission and stimulated emission previously outlined in Section 1.4:

Probability of absorption = B12 × N1

Probability of spontaneous emission = A12

Probability of stimulated emission = B21 × N2

If we want the stimulated emission to dominate over absorption and spontaneous emission, we must have a greater number of excited species in the upper level than the population of the lower level. Such a situation is known as population inversion since under normal circumstances the population of the lower level is much greater than the population of the upper level. Population inversion is therefore an essential condition for laser action. The next obvious question is that of the desired extent of population inversion. Spontaneous emission depletes the excited upper level population (N2 in the present case) at a rate proportional to A21 producing undesired photons with random phase, direction of propagation and polarization. Due to this loss and other losses associated with laser cavity (discussed in Section 1.7), each laser has a certain minimum value of N2−N1 for the production of laser output. This condition of population inversion is known as the inversion threshold of the laser. Lasing threshold is an analogous term.

Next, we shall discuss how we can produce population inversion.

1.5.1 Producing Population Inversion

That population inversion is an essential condition for laser action is demonstrated above. Population inversion ensures that there are more emitters than absorbers with the result that stimulated emission dominates over spontaneous emission and absorption processes. There are two possible ways to produce population inversion. One is to populate the upper level by exciting extra atoms or molecules to the upper level. The other is to depopulate the lower laser level involved in the laser action. In fact, for a sustained laser action, it is important to both populate the upper level and depopulate the lower level.

Two commonly used pumping or excitation mechanisms include optical pumping and electrical pumping. Both electrons and photons have been successfully used to create population inversion in different laser media. While optical pumping is ideally suited to solid-state lasers such as ruby, Nd:YAG and neodymium-doped glass (Nd:Glass) lasers, electrical discharge is the common mode of excitation in gas lasers such as helium-neon and carbon dioxide lasers.

The excitation input, optical or electrical, usually raises the atoms or molecules to a level higher than the upper laser level from where it rapidly drops to the upper laser level. In some cases, the excitation input excites atoms other than the active species. The excited atoms then transfer their energy to the active species to cause population inversion. A helium-neon laser is a typical example of this kind where the excitation input gives its energy to helium atoms, which subsequently transfer the energy to neon atoms to raise them to the upper laser level.

The other important concept essential for laser action is the existence of a metastable state as the upper laser level. For stimulated emission, the excited state needs to have a relatively longer lifetime of the order of a few microseconds to a millisecond or so. The excited species need to stay in the excited upper laser level for a longer time in order to allow interaction between photons and excited species, which is necessary for efficient stimulated emission. If the upper laser level had a lifetime of a few nanoseconds, most of the excited species would drop to the lower level as spontaneous emission. The crux is that, for efficient laser action, the population build-up of the upper laser level should be faster than its decay. A longer upper laser level lifetime helps to achieve this situation.

1.6 Two-, Three- and Four-Level Laser Systems

Another important feature that has a bearing on the laser action is the energy level structure of the laser medium. As we shall see in the following sections, energy level structure, particularly the energy levels involved in the population inversion process and the laser action, significantly affect the performance of the laser.

1.6.1 Two-Level Laser System

In a two-level laser system, there are only two levels involved in the total process. The atoms or molecules in the lower level, which is also the lower level of the laser transition, are excited to the upper level by the pumping or excitation mechanism. The upper level is also the upper laser level. Once the population inversion is achieved and its extent is above the inversion threshold, the laser action can take place. Figure 1.6 shows the arrangement of energy levels in a two-level system. A two-level system is, however, a theoretical concept only as far as lasers are concerned. No laser has ever been made to work as a two-level system.

Figure 1.6 Two-level laser system.

1.6.2 Three-Level Laser System

In a three-level laser system, the lower level of laser transition is the ground state (the lowermost energy level). The atoms or molecules are excited to an upper level higher than the upper level of the laser transition (Figure 1.7). The upper level to which atoms or molecules are excited from the ground state has a relatively much shorter lifetime than that of the upper laser level, which is a metastable level. As a result, the excited species rapidly drop to the metastable level. A relatively much longer lifetime for the metastable level ensures a population inversion between the metastable level and the ground state provided that more than half of the atoms or molecules in the ground state have been excited to the uppermost short-lived energy level. The laser action occurs between the metastable level and the ground state.

Figure 1.7 Three-level laser system.

A ruby laser is a classical example of a three-level laser. Figure 1.8 shows the energy level structure for this laser. One of the major shortcomings of this laser and other three-level lasers is due to the lower laser level being the ground state. Under thermodynamic equilibrium conditions, almost all atoms or molecules are in the ground state and so it requires more than half of this number to be excited out of the ground state to achieve laser action. This implies that a much larger pumping input would be required to exceed population inversion threshold. This makes it very difficult to sustain population inversion on a continuous basis in three-level lasers. That is why a ruby laser cannot be operated in continuous-wave (CW) mode.

Figure 1.8 Energy level diagram of ruby laser.

An ideal situation would be if the lower laser level were not the ground state so that it had much fewer atoms or molecules in the thermodynamic equilibrium condition, solving the problem encountered in three-level laser systems. Such a desirable situation is possible in four-level laser systems in which the lower laser level is above the ground state, as shown in Figure 1.9.

Figure 1.9 Four-level laser system.

1.6.3 Four-Level Laser System

In a four-level laser system, the atoms or molecules are excited out of the ground state to an upper highly excited short-lived energy level. Remember that the lower laser level here is not the ground state. In this case, the number of atoms or molecules required to be excited to the upper level would depend upon the population of the lower laser level, which is much smaller than the population of the ground state. Also if the upper level to which the atoms or molecules are initially excited and the lower laser level have a shorter lifetime and the upper laser level (metastable level) a longer lifetime, it would be much easier to achieve and sustain population inversion. This is achievable due to two major features of a four-level laser. One is rapid population of the upper laser level, which is a result of an extremely rapid dropping of the excited species from the upper excited level where they find themselves with excitation input to the upper laser level accompanied by the longer lifetime of the upper laser level. The second occurrence is the depopulation of the lower laser level due to its shorter lifetime. Once it is simpler to sustain population inversion, it becomes easier to operate the laser in the continuous-wave (CW) mode. This is one of the major reasons that a four-level laser such as an Nd:YAG laser or a helium-neon laser can be operated in the continuous mode while a three-level laser such as a ruby laser can only be operated as a pulsed laser.

Nd:YAG, helium-neon and carbon dioxide lasers are some of the very popular lasers with a four-level energy structure. Figure 1.10 shows the energy level structure of a Nd:YAG laser. The pumping or excitation input raises the atoms or molecules to the uppermost energy level, which in fact is not a single level but instead a band of energy levels. This is a highly desirable feature, the reason for which is discussed more fully in Section 1.11 on pumping mechanisms. The excited species rapidly fall to the upper laser level (metastable level). This decay time is about 100 ns. The metastable level has a metastable lifetime of about 1 ms and the lower laser level has a decay time of 30 ns. If we compare the four-level energy level structure of a Nd:YAG laser with that of a neodymium-doped yttrium lithium fluoride (Nd:YLF) laser, another solid-state laser with a four-level structure, we find that there is a striking difference in the lifetime of the metastable level. Nd:YLF has a higher metastable lifetime (typically a few milliseconds) as compared to 1 ms of Nd:YAG. This gives the former a higher storage capacity for the excited species in the metastable level. In other words, this means that a Nd:YLF rod could be pumped harder to extract more laser energy than a Nd:YAG rod of the same size.

Figure 1.10 Energy level diagram of Nd:YAG laser.

1.6.4 Energy Level Structures of Practical Lasers

In the case of real lasers, the active media do not have the simple three- or four-level energy level structures as described above, but are far more complex. For instance, the short-lived uppermost energy level, to which the atoms or molecules are excited out of the ground state and from where they drop rapidly to the metastable level, is not a single energy level. It is in fact a band of energy levels, a desirable feature as it makes the pumping more efficient and a larger part of the pumping input is converted into a useful output to produce population inversion. The energy levels involved in producing laser output are not necessarily single levels in all lasers. There could be multiple levels in the metastable state, in the lower energy state of the laser transition or in both states. This means that the laser has the ability to produce stimulated emission at more than one wavelength. Helium-neon and carbon dioxide lasers are typical examples of this phenomenon. Figure 1.11 shows the energy level structure of a helium-neon laser.

Figure 1.11 Energy level diagram of He-Ne laser.

Another important point worth mentioning here is that it is not always the active species alone that constitute the laser medium or laser material. Atoms or molecules of other elements are sometimes added with specific objectives. In some cases, such as in a helium-neon laser, the active species producing laser transition is the neon atoms. Free electrons in the discharge plasma produced as a result of electrical pumping input excite the helium atoms first as that can be done very efficiently. When the excited helium atoms collide with neon atoms, they transfer their energy to them. As another example, in a carbon dioxide laser the laser gas mixture mainly consists of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and helium. While nitrogen participates in the excitation process and plays the same role as that played by helium in a helium-neon laser, the helium in a carbon dioxide laser helps in depopulating the lower laser level.

1.7 Gain of Laser Medium

When we talk about the gain of the laser medium we are basically referring to the extent to which this medium can produce stimulated emission. The gain of the medium is defined more appropriately as a gain coefficient, which is the gain expressed as a percentage per unit length of the active medium. When we say that the gain of a certain laser medium is 10% per centimetre, it implies that 100 photons with the same transition energy as that of an excited laser medium become 110 photons after travelling 1 cm of the medium length. The amplification or the photon multiplication offered by the medium is expressed as a function of the gain of the medium and the length of the medium, as described in Equation 1.2:

(1.2)

where

GA=amplifier gain or amplification factorα=gain coefficientx=gain length

The above expression for gain can be re-written in the form:

(1.3)

Therefore, to a reasonably good approximation, we can write

This implies that when the medium with a gain coefficient of 100% is excited and population inversion created, a single spontaneously emitted photon will become two photons after this spontaneously emitted photon travels 1 cm of the length of the medium. The two photons cause further stimulated emission as they travel through the medium. This amplification continues and the number of photons emitted by the stimulation process keeps building up just as the principal amount builds up with compound interest. The above relationship can be used to compute the amplification. It would be interesting to note how photons multiply themselves as a function of length. For instance, although 10 photons become 11 photons after travelling 1 cm for a gain coefficient of 10% per centimetre, the number reaches about 26 for 10 cm and 1173 after travelling gain length of 50 cm, as long as there are enough excited species in the metastable state to ensure that stimulated emission dominates over absorption and spontaneous emission. On the other hand it is also true that, for a given pump input, there is a certain quantum of excited species in the upper laser level. As the stimulated emission initially triggered by one spontaneously emitted photon picks up, the upper laser level is successively depleted of the desired excited species and the population inversion is adversely affected. This leads to a reduction in the growth of stimulated emission and eventually saturation sets in; this is referred to as gain saturation.

Another aspect that we need to look into is whether the typical gain coefficient values that the majority of the active media used in lasers have are really good enough for building practical systems. Let us do a small calculation. If a 5 mW CW helium-neon laser were to operate for just 1 s, it would mean an equivalent energy of 5 mJ. Each photon of He-Ne laser output at 632.8 nm would have energy of approximately 3 × 10−19 J, which further implies that the above laser output would necessitate generation of about 1.7 × 1016 photons. With the kind of gain coefficient which the helium-neon laser plasma has, the required gain length can be calculated for the purpose. For any useful laser output, the solution therefore lies in having a very large effective gain length, if not a physically large gain length.

If we enclose the laser medium within a closed path bounded by two mirrors, as shown in Figure 1.12, we can effectively increase the interaction length of the active medium by making the photons emitted by stimulated emission process back and forth. One of the mirrors in the arrangement is fully reflecting and the other has a small amount of transmission. This small transmission, which also constitutes the useful laser output, adds to the loss component. This is true because the fraction of the stimulated emission of photons taken as the useful laser output is no longer available for interaction with the excited species in the upper laser level. The maximum power that can be coupled out of the system obviously must not exceed the total amount of losses within the closed path. For instance, if the gain of the full length of the active medium is 5% and the other losses such as those due to absorption in the active medium, spontaneous emission, losses in the fully reflecting mirror (which will not have an ideal reflectance of 100%) and so on are 3%, the other mirror can have at the most a transmission of 2%.

Figure 1.12 Lasing medium bounded by mirrors.

In a closed system like this, the power inside the system is going to be much larger than the power available as useful output. For instance, for 1% transmission and assuming other losses to be negligible, if the output power is 1 mW the power inside the system would be 100 mW.

Example 1.4

Determine the gain coefficient in case of a helium-neon laser if a 50 cm gain length produces amplification by a factor of 1.1.

Solution

1. We have that x = 50 cm and the amplification factor GA = 1.1
2. The gain coefficient α can be computed from
or

1.8 Laser Resonator

The active laser medium within the closed path bounded by two mirrors as shown in Figure 1.12 constitutes the basic laser resonator provided it meets certain conditions. Resonator structures of most practical laser sources would normally be more complex than the simplistic arrangement of Figure 1.12. As stated in the previous section, with the help of mirrors we can effectively increase the interaction length of the active medium by making the photons emitted by the stimulated emission process travel back and forth within the length of the cavity. One of the mirrors in the arrangement is fully reflecting and the other has a small amount of transmission. It is clear that if we want the photons emitted as a result of the stimulated emission process to continue to add to the strength of those responsible for their emission, it is necessary for the stimulating and stimulated photons to be in phase. The addition of mirrors should not disturb this condition. For example, if the wave associated with a given photon was at its positive peak at the time of reflection from the fully reflecting mirror, it should again be at its positive peak only after it makes a round trip of the cavity and returns to the fully reflecting mirror again. If this happens, then all those photons stimulated by this photon would also satisfy this condition. This is possible if we satisfy the condition given in Equation 1.4:

(1.4)

where

L=length of the resonatorλ=wavelengthn=an integer

The above expression can be rewritten as

(1.5)

where

c=velocity of electromagnetic wavef=frequency

1.9 Longitudinal and Transverse Modes

The above expression for frequency indicates that there could be a large number of frequencies for different values of the integer n satisfying this resonance condition. Most laser transitions have gain for a wide range of wavelengths. Remember that we are not referring to lasers that can possibly emit at more than one wavelength (such as a helium-neon laser). Here, we are referring to the gain-bandwidth of one particular transition. We shall discuss in detail in Chapter 4 how gas lasers such as He-Ne and CO2 lasers have Doppler-broadened gain curves. A He-Ne laser has a bandwidth of about 1400 MHz for 632.8 nm transition (Figure 1.13a) and a CO2 laser has a bandwidth of about 60 MHz at 10 600 nm (Figure 1.13b).

Figure 1.13 Gain-bandwidth curves for He-Ne and CO2 lasers.

It is therefore possible to have more than one resonant frequency, each of them called a longitudinal mode, simultaneously present unless special measures are taken to prevent this from happening. As is clear from Equation 1.5, the inter-mode spacing is given by c/2L. For a He-Ne laser with a cavity length of 30 cm for example, inter-mode spacing would be 500 MHz which may allow three longitudinal modes to be simultaneously present as shown in Figure 1.14a. Interestingly, the cavity length could be reduced to a point where the inter-mode spacing exceeds the gain-bandwidth of the laser transition to allow only a single longitudinal mode to prevail in the cavity. For instance, a 10 cm cavity length leading to an inter-mode spacing of 1500 MHz would allow only a single longitudinal mode (Figure 1.14b). However, there are other important criteria that also decide the cavity length.

Figure 1.14 Longitudinal modes.

Another laser parameter that we are interested in and that is also largely influenced by the design of the laser resonator is the transverse mode structure of the laser output. We have already seen in the previous sections how the resonator length and the laser wavelength together decide the possible resonant frequencies called longitudinal modes, which can simultaneously exist. The transverse modes basically tell us about the irradiance distribution of the laser output in the plane perpendicular to the direction of propagation or, in other words, along the orthogonal axes perpendicular to the laser axis. To illustrate this further, if the z axis is the laser axis, then intensity distribution along the x and y axes would describe the transverse mode structure.

TEMmn describes the transverse mode structure, where m and n are integers indicating the order of the mode. In fact, integers m and n are the number of intensity minima or nodes in the spatial intensity pattern along the two orthogonal axes. Conventionally, m represents the electric field component and n indicates the magnetic field component. Those who are familiar with electromagnetic theory should not find this difficult at all to grasp. Remember that transverse modes must satisfy the boundary conditions such as having zero amplitude on the boundaries. The simplest mode, also known as the fundamental or the lowest order mode, is referred to as TEM00 mode. The two subscripts here indicate that there are no minima along the two orthogonal axes between the boundaries. The intensity pattern in both the orthogonal directions has a single maximum with the intensity falling on both sides according to the well-known mathematical distribution referred to as the Gaussian distribution. The Gaussian distribution (Figure 1.15) is given by Equation 1.6:

(1.6)

where

I (r)=intensity at a distance r from the centre of the beamw=beam radius at (1/e2) of peak intensity point, which is about 13.5% of the peak intensityWe also have

(1.7)

where

P=total power in the beam

Figure 1.15 Gaussian distribution.

Before we discuss the definite advantages that the operation at lowest order or fundamental modes TEM00 offers, we shall have quick look at higher-order modes and also how different transverse mode appear in relation to their intensity distributions. Figure 1.16 shows the spatial intensity distribution of the laser spot for various transverse mode structures of the laser resonator.

Figure 1.16 Spatial intensity distribution for various transverse modes.

Going back to the fundamental mode, we can appreciate that this mode has the least power spreading. To add to this, this mode has the least divergence; it has the minimum diffraction loss and therefore can be focused onto the smallest possible spot. The transverse mode structure is also critically dependent upon parameters such as laser medium gain, type of laser resonator and so on. There are established resonator design techniques to ensure operation at the fundamental mode. Often, lasers optimized to produce maximum power output operate at one or more higher-order modes. Also, lasers with low gain and stable resonator configuration can conveniently be made to operate at fundamental mode. Details are beyond the scope of this book, however.

Example 1.5

Given that the Doppler-broadened gain curve of a helium-neon laser with a 50-cm-long resonator emitting at 1.15 μm is 770 MHz, determine (a) inter-longitudinal mode spacing and (b) the number of maximum possible sustainable longitudinal modes.

Solution: Resonator length L = 50 cm. Therefore, inter-longitudinal mode spacing = c /2L = 3 × 1010/100 = 300 MHz.

Width of Doppler-broadened gain curve = 770 MHz. The number of longitudinal modes possible within this width = 3 (Figure 1.17).

Figure 1.17 Diagram for Example 1.5.

1.10 Types of Laser Resonators

According to the type of end mirrors used and the inter-element separation, which largely dictates the extent of interaction between the emitted photons and the laser medium and also the immunity of the laser resonator to misalignment of end components, the resonators can be broadly classified as stable and unstable resonators. A stable resonator is one in which the photons can bounce back and forth between the end components indefinitely without being lost out the sides of the components. Due to the focusing nature of one or both components, the light flux remains within the cavity in such a resonator. A plane-parallel resonator (Figure 1.18) in which both end components are plane mirrors and are placed precisely at right angles to the laser axis is a stable resonator. In practice, however, this is not true. A slight misalignment of even one of the mirrors would ultimately lead to light flux escaping the laser cavity after several reflections from the two mirrors. Nevertheless, such a resonator encompasses a large volume of the active medium. It is not used in practice, as it is highly prone to misalignment.

Figure 1.18 Plane-parallel resonator.

This problem can be overcome by using one plane and one curved mirror, as is the case for hemispherical and hemifocal resonators shown in Figure 1.19a and b, respectively, or two curved mirrors, as is the case for concentric and confocal resonators shown in Figure 1.20a and b, respectively.

Figure 1.19 (a) Hemispherical resonator and (b) hemifocal resonator.

Figure 1.20 (a) Concentric resonator and (b) confocal resonator.

Although the problem of sensitivity of the plane-parallel resonator to misalignment of cavity mirrors is largely overcome by the use of different stable resonator configurations discussed above (Figures 1.19 and 1.20), not all of them have emitted photons interacting with a large volume of the excited species, which is also equally desirable. It is also true that in the case of low-gain media with consequent very low transmission output mirrors, the photons travel back and forth a large number of times within the cavity before their energy appears at the output. This makes the resonator alignment more critical. That is why a plane-parallel resonator will never be the choice for a low-gain laser medium.

On the other hand, in a high-gain medium a certain amount of light flux leakage can be tolerated. This fact is made use of in an unstable resonator configuration, which otherwise achieves interaction of the emitted photons with a very large volume of the excited species. Figure 1.21 shows one possible type of unstable resonator. Note that photons escape from the sides of the mirror after one or two passes within the cavity. This light leakage, which also constitutes the useful laser output, is more than compensated for by a high-gain medium and large interaction volume. Further, since the photons have to make relatively fewer passes within the cavity as compared to a low-gain stable resonator configuration before drifting out, the alignment becomes much less critical.

Figure 1.21 Unstable resonator.

1.11 Pumping Mechanisms

By pumping mechanism, we mean the mechanism employed to create population inversion of the lasing species. Commonly employed pumping mechanisms include:

1. optical pumping;
2. electrical pumping; and
3. other mechanisms such as pumping by chemical reactions, electron beams and so on.

One aspect that is common to all pumping mechanisms is that the pumping energy/power must be greater than the laser output energy/power. When applied to optical pumping, it is obvious that the optical pump wavelength must be smaller than the laser output wavelength. This has to be true as the lasing species are first excited to the topmost level from where they drop to the upper laser level. Since the energy difference between the ground state and the topmost pump level is always greater than the energy difference between the two laser levels, the wavelength of the pump photon must be less than the wavelength of the laser output. Another aspect that is common to all schemes is that pumping efficiency largely affects the overall laser efficiency. For instance, if the energy difference for the pump transition is much greater than that of the laser transition, the laser efficiency is bound to be relatively poorer. An argon-ion laser is a typical example. Yet another aspect that is common to all pumping mechanisms is that the topmost pump level is not a single energy level but rather a band of closely spaced energy levels with allowed transitions to a single and, in some cases, more than one metastable level. When applied to optical pumping, this allows the use of optical sources such as flash lamps with broadband outputs.

1.11.1 Optical Pumping

Optical pumping is employed for those lasers that have a transparent active medium. Solid-state and liquid-dye lasers are typical examples. The most commonly used pump sources are the flash lamp in the case of pulsed and the arc lamp in the case of continuous-wave solid-state lasers.

Flash lamps are pulsed sources of light and are widely used for the pumping of pulsed solid-state lasers. These are available in a wide range of arc lengths (from a few centimetres to as large as more than a metre, although arc length of 5–10 cm is common), bore diameter (typically in the range of 3–20 mm), wall thickness (typically 1–2 mm) and shape (linear, helical). Figures 1.22 and 1.23 depict the constructional features of typical linear (Figure 1.22) and helical (Figure 1.23) flash lamps.

Figure 1.22 Linear flash lamps.

Figure 1.23 Helical flash lamp.

Flash lamps for pumping solid-state lasers are usually filled with a noble gas such as xenon or krypton at a pressure of 300–400 torr. Two electrodes are sealed in the envelope that is usually made of quartz. An electrical discharge created between the electrodes leads to a very high value of pulsed current, which further produces an intense flash. The electrical energy to be discharged through the lamp is stored in an energy storage capacitor/capacitor bank.

Xenon-filled lamps produce higher radiative output for a given electrical input as compared to krypton-filled lamps. Krypton however offers a better spectral match, more so with Nd:YAG. That is, the emission spectrum of a krypton flash lamp is better matched to the absorption spectrum of Nd:YAG. Emission spectra in the case of xenon- and krypton-filled lamps are depicted by Figures 1.24 and 1.25, respectively. The absorption spectrum of a Nd:YAG laser is given in Figure 1.26.

Figure 1.24 Emission spectrum of xenon-filled flash lamp.

Figure 1.25 Emission spectrum of Krypton-filled flash lamp.

Figure 1.26 Absorption spectrum of Nd:YAG.

Major electrical parameters include the flash lamp impedance parameter, maximum average power, maximum peak current, minimum trigger voltage and explosion energy. Impedance characteristics of a flash lamp are extremely important as they determine the energy transfer efficiency from energy storage capacitor, where it is stored, to the flash lamp.

Table 1.1 gives typical values of various characteristic parameters of xenon-filled and krypton-filled pulsed flash lamps from Heraeus Noblelight Ltd. The type numbers chosen for the purpose include both air-cooled as well as liquid-cooled flash lamps of different bore diameter and arc length. This assortment of flash lamps highlights the variation of the electrical parameters with bore diameter and arc length for a given category of flash lamps, and also the range of values for bore diameter and arc length with the different categories of flash lamps.

Table 1.1 Characteristic parameters of linear flash lamps. (In the case of maximum average power specification of air-cooled lamps, the listed value is for forced-air cooling. In the case of convection air-cooled, it is half of the value given for forced-air cooling.)

Arc lamps are used for CW pumping of solid-state lasers. Like flash lamps, arc lamps are also gas-discharge devices. Arc lamps suitable for solid-state laser pumping are linear lamps (Figure 1.27