Development and validation of a microchip pulsed laser for ESA space altimeters

The development and validation of small size laser sources for space based range finding is of crucial importance to the development of miniature LIDAR devices for European space missions, particularly for planet lander probes. In this context, CENTRA-SIM is developing a passively q-switched microchip laser in the 1.5μm wavelength range. Pulses in the order of 2 ns and 100μJ were found to be suitable for range finding for small landing platforms. Both glass and crystalline Yb-Er doped active media are commonly available. Crystalline media present higher thermal conductivity and hardness, which allows for higher pumping intensities. However, glass laser media present longer laser upper-state lifetime and 99% Yb-Er transfer efficiency make phosphate glasses the typically preferred host for this type of application. In addition to this, passively q-switched microchip lasers with Yb-Er doped phosphate glass have been reported to output >100μJ pulses while their crystalline host counterparts achieve a few tens of μJ at best. Two different types of rate equation models have been found: microscopic quantities based models and macroscopic quantities based models. Based on the works of Zolotovskaya et al. and Spühler et al, we have developed a computer model that further exploits the equivalence between the two types of approaches. The simulation studies, using commercial available components allowed us to design a compact laser emitting 80μJ pulses with up to 30kW peak power and 1 to 2 ns pulse width. We considered EAT14 Yb-Er doped glass as active medium and Co2+:MgAl2O4 as saturable absorber. The active medium is pumped by a 975nm semiconductor laser focused into a 200μm spot. Measurements on an experimental test bench to validate the numerical model were carried out. Several different combinations of, saturable absorber length and output coupling were experimented.

[1]  A. Szabo,et al.  Theory of Laser Giant Pulsing by a Saturable Absorber , 1965 .

[2]  G Sacchi,et al.  Diode-pumped microchip Er-Yb:glass laser. , 1993, Optics letters.

[3]  Daniel Vivien,et al.  Yb3+ to Er3+ energy transfer and rate-equations formalism in the eye safe laser material Yb:Er:Ca2Al2SiO7 , 1996 .

[4]  T. Jensen,et al.  CW laser performance of Yb and Er,Yb doped tungstates , 1997 .

[5]  Rüdiger Paschotta,et al.  Eyesafe pulsed microchip laser using semiconductor saturable absorber mirrors , 1998 .

[6]  Cesare Svelto,et al.  Erbium–ytterbium microlasers: optical properties and lasing characteristics , 1999 .

[7]  John J. Zayhowski,et al.  Passively Q-switched Nd:YAG microchip lasers and applications , 2000 .

[8]  J. Abshire,et al.  Mars orbiter laser altimeter: receiver model and performance analysis. , 2000, Applied optics.

[9]  Rüdiger Paschotta,et al.  Experimentally confirmed design guidelines for passively Q-switched microchip lasers using semiconductor saturable absorbers , 2001 .

[10]  Rüdiger Paschotta,et al.  Passively Q-switched microchip laser at 1.5 µm , 2001 .

[11]  Fredrik Laurell,et al.  Development and characterization of Yb-Er laser glass for high average power laser diode pumping , 2002 .

[12]  Michael Bass,et al.  Solid-State Lasers: A Graduate Text , 2003 .

[13]  Scott J. Hamlin,et al.  Eyesafe erbium glass microlaser , 2004, SPIE LASE.

[14]  J. P. Dubois,et al.  SPICAM: studying the global structure and composition of the Martian atmosphere , 2004 .

[15]  N. Kuleshov,et al.  Diode-pumped Yb,Er:glass laser passively Q switched with a V3+:YAG crystal. , 2005, Applied optics.

[16]  Y. Tsang,et al.  Record performance from a Q-switched Er3+:Yb3+:YVO4 laser , 2009 .

[17]  Ursula Keller,et al.  Ultrafast solid-state laser oscillators: a success story for the last 20 years with no end in sight , 2010 .

[18]  Jaroslaw Mlynczak,et al.  High peak power generation in thermally bonded Er3+, Yb3+:glass/Co2+: MgAl2O3 microchip laser for telemetry application , 2015 .

[19]  Georges Kaddoum,et al.  Free Space Optical Communication: Challenges and Mitigation Techniques , 2015, ArXiv.

[20]  J. Zayhowski Passively Q-Switched Microchip Lasers , 2017 .