Influence Of Temperature On Nanosecond Pulse Amplification In Thulium Doped Fiber Lasers

Abstract

Thulium silica doped fiber (TDF) lasers are becoming important laser sources in both research and applications in industry. A key element of all high-power lasers is thermal management and its impact on laser performance. This is particularly important in TDF lasers, which utilize an unusual cross-relation pumping scheme, and are optically less efficient than other types of fiber lasers. The present work describes an experimental investigation of thermal management in a high power, high repetition-rate, pulsed Thulium (Tm) fiber laser. A tunable nanosecond TDF laser system across the 1838 nm - 1948 nm wavelength range, has been built to propagate 2μm signal seed pulses into a TDF amplifier, comprising a polarized large mode area (PLMA) thulium fiber (TDF) with a 793nm laser diode pump source. The PLMA TDF amplifier is thermally managed by a separately controlled cooling system with a temperature varied from 12°C to 36°C. The maximum output energy (∼400 μJ), of the system is achieved at 12°C at 1947 nm wavelength with ∼32 W of absorbed pump power at 20 kHz with a pulse duration of ∼ 74 ns.

Publication Date

5-25-2018

Publication Title

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Volume

1003

Issue

1

Document Type

Article; Proceedings Paper

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/1003/1/012120

Socpus ID

85048449919 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85048449919

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