A single-longitudinal-mode continuous-wave
Ho
3
+
:
YVO
4
laser at 2.05 μm pumped by a Tm-fibre laser
National Key Laboratory of Tunable Laser Technology, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150001, China
† Corresponding author. E-mail:
daitongyu2006@126.com
1. IntroductionSingle-longitudinal-mode (SLM) solid-state lasers near 2
have been widely used as seed lasers for Lidar systems owing to their eye safety at low power and good transparency in the atmosphere.[1, 2] They also have important applications for remote sensing, range finding, optical communication,[3, 4] and so on. Among the ordinary techniques for achieving SLM operation of a solid state laser, including use of microchips,[5] coupled cavities,[6] twisted-mode cavities,[7, 8] and intracavity etalons, the intracavity etalon is the simplest one with which the laser wavelength can be continuously tuned. In 2004, Scholle et al. reported an SLM Tm,Ho:LuAG laser that produces a maximum output power of 51 mW.[9] In 2011, Yao et al. demonstrated a Tm,Ho:YAP laser composed of double Fabry–Perot (F–P) etalons that has an output power of 72.6 mW at 2102.5 nm.[10] In 2014, Zhang et al. constructed a tunable single-frequency Tm,Ho:LLF laser operating at 2064.4 nm, from which the highest power obtained is 221 mW, corresponding to a slope efficiency of 15.4%.[11]
Previous ∼2
SLM lasers have employed mainly Tm, Ho-codoped crystals, such as Tm, Ho:YAG, Tm, Ho:YLF, and Tm, Ho:YVO4.[12–15] However, these lasers suffer from the drawbacks of high lasing threshold and low conversion efficiency owing to the severe upconversion losses.[16] Instead, use of a holmium-doped crystal pumped by a 1.9-
Tm-doped laser can avoid these problems. Meanwhile, YVO4 crystals have been attracting significant attention because of their stabilised chemical properties, better mechanical properties, and high thermal conductivity. Compared to YAG and YLF analogues, YVO4 crystals doped by Ho
ions have similar upper state lifetime, wider pump bandwidth, and larger emission cross section, all of which enable higher efficiency of laser operation.[17, 18] Over the past few years, both Q-switched and continuous-wave (CW) Ho:YVO4 lasers have been reported, yet the output characteristics of such SLM lasers have not been investigated. In 2013, Duan et al. reported a CW Ho:YVO4 laser at 2067 nm operating at room temperature with a maximum output power of 0.54 W and a slope efficiency of 20.0%.[17] In 2014, Han et al. built a CW and Q-switched dual-mode Ho:YVO4 laser with a maximum CW power at 2052 nm of 3.9 W and a maximum pulse energy at the Q-switched mode of 0.38 mJ.[19] In 2015, Ding et al. constructed a Q-switched Ho:YVO4 laser that achieves its highest averaged power of 11.4 W at 10 kHz.[18] In 2015, Dai et al. demonstrated an Ho:YVO4 laser at 114.6 kHz in which Cr
:ZnS is used as a saturable absorber for Q-switching and whose maximum pulse energy is 70.3
J.[20]
To date, an SLM Ho:YVO4 laser pumped by a 1.94-
Tm-doped fibre laser has not been reported in the literature. Here we introduce an SLM Ho:YVO4 laser in which intracavity etalons are inserted for improving the spectral selectivity of the cavity. A highest SLM power of 282 mW at 2052.5 nm is observed when the pump power is set at 9.45 W, and its slope efficiency reaches 6.9%.
3. Experimental results and discussionThe absorbed pump power by the Ho:YVO4 crystal and the corresponding absorption efficiency versus the incident pump power are plotted in Fig. 2. As can be seen, the absorption efficiency ranges from 55% to 27% with increasing incident pump power, whereas the maximum absorbed pump power is 6.0 W. Along with increasing incident pump power, the pump saturation effect emerges owing to the ground-state loss. This effect usually leads to a reduction of the absorbed pump power by the crystal. Especially, at higher incident pump power, the Ho:YVO4 crystal will be completely saturated and the absorption efficiency should be approximately constant.
The output power of the Ho:YVO4 laser (without F–P etalons) as a function of the incident pump power is displayed in Fig. 3. The maximum output power for operation in this multimode is 4.09 W at an incident pump power of 21.9 W, corresponding to an optical conversion efficiency of 18.6% and a slope efficiency of 26%.
The output F–P spectrum of this multimode Ho:YVO4 laser is measured by a Fabry–Perot scanning interferometer (Thorlabs SA200-18B, with a free spectral range of 1.5 GHz) in which a sinusoidal waveform is applied to the piezo actuator (see Fig. 4). The blue line indicates the driving voltage of the piezo actuator and the red line represents the longitudinal modes of the laser. As can be seen in Fig. 4, the competition between modes is quite intense. The output spectra of this Ho:YVO4 laser (without F–P etalons) recorded by a wavemeter (Bristol, with 0.7-pm resolution) is shown in Fig. 5; it is clear that the laser emits multiple wavelengths under this condition.
As mentioned previously, to accomplish SLM operation of this Ho:YVO4 laser, two F–P etalons (of 1 and 6 mm in thickness) with 20% reflectivity are inserted into the resonator. Figure 6 shows the transmission band of the SLM F–P cavity, resulting from a theoretical analysis of the cavity selectivity. The transmission curve of the F–P etalon is the cumulative effect of its refractivity, thickness, and angle of the etalon. Greater refractivity and thicker etalons result in narrower transmission curves but also bring a larger cavity loss. Thus, the parameter settings for the F–P etalons are particularly crucial when balancing narrow-band operation and high output power. The reference frequency (zero point in Fig. 6) is set at 146.16 THz (2052.5 nm). Figure 6(a) shows the transmission curves of the two etalons, with the 1-mm etalon plotted as a red solid line and the 6-mm etalon plotted as a green solid line. The transmission curve of the 6-mm etalon is much narrower than that of the 1-mm etalon. Combining the transmission curves of the two etalons gives a resulting frequency difference between the two transmission peaks of ∼82.5 GHz. The blue solid line in Fig. 6(b) represents the final transmission curve (which is a combination of the 1-mm etalon curve (red dashed line) and the 6-mm etalon curve (green dashed line)). The black solid line represents the longitudinal modes that fit the transmission band of the free-running cavity, the frequency difference being ∼1.17 GHz. Hence, the gain difference between the adjacent longitudinal modes is enlarged by using two etalons. As seen in Fig. 6(b), only one mode achieves the highest gain, with other modes being suppressed by precise matching of the angles of the two F–P etalons. Thus, SLM operation of the Ho:YVO4 laser can be achieved with this F–P cavity structure.
In our experiment, by carefully regulating the angle of the F–P etalons, possible SLM operation can be monitored by a Fabry–Perot scanning interferometer. Figure 7 shows the typical time behaviour of the laser spectrum spanning 50 ms, as monitored with an oscilloscope (LeCory, WaveSurfer, 64Xs). It is clearly seen in Fig. 7 that the extreme peaks located on opposite sides of the maximum voltage arise between the 1.5-GHz free spectra range (the free spectra range voltage being ∼11 V) and the Ho:YVO4 laser is operating in an SLM.
As shown in Fig. 8, the output power of the Ho:YVO4 laser containing the 1-mm etalon and an SLM were investigated. With the 1-mm etalon and in an SLM, the output power is 600 and 282 mW, respectively, with the same incident pump power of 9.45 W, corresponding to slope efficiency values of 14.1% and 6.9%. The high threshold and low efficiency of the SLM Ho:YVO4 laser may be due to the large loss caused by the two F–P etalons with 20% reflectivity. When the pump power was
W, mode-hopping occurred and several (at least two) longitudinal modes were generated (as observed in the oscilloscope) simultaneously, which were caused by the effect of spatial hole burning in the standing-wave cavity. Figure 9 depicts the single-wavelength output spectrum of the SLM Ho:YVO4 laser, whose centre wavelength is 2052.5 nm (0.7 nm spectral bandwidth).
4. ConclusionIn summary, we constructed an SLM Ho:YVO4 laser pumped by a 1.94-
Tm-doped fibre laser by employing a double F–P etalon technique. A maximum SLM power of 282 mW at 2052.5 nm was obtained with an incident pump power of 9.45 W. Optical conversion efficiency and slope efficiency reached 3% and 6.9%, respectively. The SLM Ho:YVO4 laser at 2.05
m has potential applications to coherent Lidar, differential absorption Lidar, optical remote sensing, and other research areas.