中国物理B ›› 2009, Vol. 18 ›› Issue (11): 4912-4918.doi: 10.1088/1674-1056/18/11/049

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Analytical modelling of end thermal coupling in a solid-state laser longitudinally bonded by a vertical-cavity top-emitting laser diode

H.D.Summers1, 吴坚2   

  1. (1)School of Physics and Astronomy, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF 24 3YB, Wales, UK; (2)School of Physics, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Beijing 100191, China
  • 收稿日期:2009-02-09 修回日期:2009-03-22 出版日期:2009-11-20 发布日期:2009-11-20

Analytical modelling of end thermal coupling in a solid-state laser longitudinally bonded by a vertical-cavity top-emitting laser diode

Wu Jian (吴坚)a, H. D. Summersb   

  1. a School of Physics, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Beijing 100191, China; b School of Physics and Astronomy, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF 24 3YB, Wales, UK
  • Received:2009-02-09 Revised:2009-03-22 Online:2009-11-20 Published:2009-11-20

摘要: The intrinsic features involving a circularly symmetric beam profile with low divergence, planar geometry as well as the increasingly enhanced power of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) have made the VCSEL a promising pump source in direct end bonding to a solid-state laser medium to form the minimized, on-wafer integrated laser system. This scheme will generate a surface contact pump configuration and thus additional end thermal coupling to the laser medium through the joint interface of both materials, apart from pump beam heating. This paper analytically models temperature distributions in both VCSEL and the laser medium from the end thermal coupling regarding surface contact pump configuration using a top-emitting VCSEL as the pump source for the first time. The analytical solutions are derived by introducing relative temperature and mean temperature expressions. The results show that the end contact heating by the VCSEL could lead to considerable temperature variations associated with thermal phase shift and thermal lensing in the laser medium. However, if the central temperature of the interface is increased by less than 20~K, the end contact heating does not have a significant thermal influence on the laser medium. In this case, the thermal effect should be dominated by pump beam heating. This work provides useful analytical results for further analysis of hybrid thermal effects on those lasers pumped by a direct VCSEL bond.

Abstract: The intrinsic features involving a circularly symmetric beam profile with low divergence, planar geometry as well as the increasingly enhanced power of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) have made the VCSEL a promising pump source in direct end bonding to a solid-state laser medium to form the minimized, on-wafer integrated laser system. This scheme will generate a surface contact pump configuration and thus additional end thermal coupling to the laser medium through the joint interface of both materials, apart from pump beam heating. This paper analytically models temperature distributions in both VCSEL and the laser medium from the end thermal coupling regarding surface contact pump configuration using a top-emitting VCSEL as the pump source for the first time. The analytical solutions are derived by introducing relative temperature and mean temperature expressions. The results show that the end contact heating by the VCSEL could lead to considerable temperature variations associated with thermal phase shift and thermal lensing in the laser medium. However, if the central temperature of the interface is increased by less than 20~K, the end contact heating does not have a significant thermal influence on the laser medium. In this case, the thermal effect should be dominated by pump beam heating. This work provides useful analytical results for further analysis of hybrid thermal effects on those lasers pumped by a direct VCSEL bond.

Key words: solid-state laser, end pump, thermal coupling, vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser

中图分类号:  (Semiconductor lasers; laser diodes)

  • 42.55.Px
42.60.By (Design of specific laser systems)