Review of the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory's 10-kW RADICL laser

The US Air Force Research Laboratory has actively pursued the development of the Chemical Oxygen-Iodine Laser (COIL) since its invention in 19771. The power scaling potential of the COIL was verified in the late 1980's on the RotoCOlL device, which was later decommissioned. A smaller COIL teststand (ReCOIL) was then upgraded with a rotating-disk oxygen generator and a variable-height slit nozzle to become the principal testbed for continued COIL development. The modified device was named the Research assessment evice Iodine chemical Laser (RADICL). RADICL has supported several major test campaigns during the past 9 years, many of which have been published. These include 2-D gain maps2, iodine dissociation studies3, magnetic gainswitching demonstrations4, mode-locking5, metal cutting/fiber delivery demonstrations, and more recently measurements of water concentration and oxygen yield . Areview of the major results of these test programs and previously unpublished data are presented.