WO1988006358A1 - Wavelength locked laser light source - Google Patents
Wavelength locked laser light source Download PDFInfo
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- WO1988006358A1 WO1988006358A1 PCT/AU1988/000040 AU8800040W WO8806358A1 WO 1988006358 A1 WO1988006358 A1 WO 1988006358A1 AU 8800040 W AU8800040 W AU 8800040W WO 8806358 A1 WO8806358 A1 WO 8806358A1
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- laser
- dye
- pulsed
- rhodamine
- continuous wave
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01S—DEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
- H01S3/00—Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
- H01S3/10—Controlling the intensity, frequency, phase, polarisation or direction of the emitted radiation, e.g. switching, gating, modulating or demodulating
- H01S3/10084—Frequency control by seeding
- H01S3/10092—Coherent seed, e.g. injection locking
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01S—DEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
- H01S3/00—Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
- H01S3/09—Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping
- H01S3/091—Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping using optical pumping
- H01S3/094—Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping using optical pumping by coherent light
- H01S3/094034—Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping using optical pumping by coherent light the pumped medium being a dye
Definitions
- This invention relates to a wavelength locked pulsed dye laser system and a method of operating a pulsed dye laser system to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser light.
- Continuous light sources employed to date have been conventional arc discharge lamps of high intensity used with appropriate filters or a continuous dye laser pumped by an argon ion laser.
- Pulsed light of the desired wavelength and average power can be obtained using a gold vapour laser, which operates directly within the required band at 628nm or a pulsed dye laser pumped by a pulsed copper laser and whose wavelength is tuned in the required band.
- laser sources are preferred over conventional sources (for the purposes of efficient coupling of light into the fibres).
- pulsed lasers are superior to continuous lasers in therapeutic effect.
- the gold vapour laser though generating emission directly within the required band at the appropriate energy densities, also has significant disadvantages in practice.
- the very high operating temperatures, greater than 1750°C, required of the plasma tube place great stress on the construction materials; the low energy conversion efficiency (compared with the copper vapour laser) results in stress on the high-voltage electrical excitation circuitry and components and places added requirements on cooling facilities; and the laser material (gold ) is expensive in the quantities required. All these factors combine to make the gold laser also unreliable in operation and expensive to install and maintain.
- Pulsed dye Tasers based on the pulsed copper laser as a pump source have considerable advantages over both the argon-pumped dye laser and the gold vapour laser.
- the copper laser pump source itself is a practical and reliable device (with plasma tube operating temperatures only about 1500°C), relatively cheap to install and maintain and having good electrical energy conversion efficiency.
- the efficiency of conversion of the copper laser pump power (at wavelengths in the green and yellow) to high-pulse-rate dye laser output (at wavelengths in the orange, red and infrared) is high, up to 50%, in direct conversion amplifiers.
- a dye amplifier must be injected with an optical signal at the appropriate wavelength within the amplification band of the dye and with sufficient initial power.
- Such an injection signal is normally provided by a dye oscillator also optically pumped with a portion of the copper laser pump power.
- Copper-laser-pumped dye oscillators are themselves relatively inefficient ( ⁇ 15%) in converting the pump laser power to dye oscillator output.
- the optical arrangements of dye oscillators are usually complex including a loss causing frequency-selective element (often a diffraction grating) as part of the optical cavity, and, in many cases, additional optical components (lenses or prisms) to expand the optical beam at the grating.
- wavelength locked pulsed laser light source where the wavelength of the laser light is near 630nm. It is the object of the invention to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser witi high average power at good overall efficiencies (> 20%) and with low beam divergence ( ⁇ 1 rad).
- DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION The present inventors have discovered that the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from high average power copper laser pumped pulsed dye lasers can be efficiently (> 90%) locked at the wavelength of laser light from a low-power ( ⁇ 5 m ) continuous wave laser directed into the optical cavity of the dye laser.
- a wavelength locked pulsed dye laser system which comprises a low-power continuous wave laser disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity of a- pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the wavelength of the continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light.
- a method of operating a pulsed dye laser system to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser light comprises providing a low-power continuous wave laser and a pulsed dye laser and aligning the lasers relative to each other such that a continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted from the continuous wave laser is injected into the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the wavelength of the laser light injected into the opti :al cavity.
- the power of the continuous wave laser can be significantly lower than the power of the pumping light of the pulsed dye laser, e.g. a continuous wave He-Ne laser of less than 5 milliwatts power has been used to lock the wavelength of a dye laser employing rhodamine 640 or rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixtures or DCM as the fluorescent dyes and a 4W copper laser input pumping light.
- the continuous wave laser is from O.lmW to lOmW and the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 0.5W to 10W copper vapour laser.
- the invention includes situations such as (i) high-pulse-rate, short-pulse pulsed laser pump sources other than the copper vapour laser including other pulsed metal vapour laser such as gold, manganese or lead vapour lasers, or the metal atom recombination lasers such as strontium and calcium ion lasers, or any other high-pulse-rate lasers; (ii) low power (0.1 milliwatt ⁇ power ⁇ 5 milliwatt depending on power of pulsed dye laser) lasers other than the helium-neon laser for wavelength-locking purposes including metal ion lasers such as the cadmium, zinc, mercury, or selenium ion lasers, or low-power noble-gas ion lasers such as argon or krypton ion lasers, or semi-conductor diode lasers, or any other low-power continuous-wave lasers. It is noted that continuous wave lasers of power > 5 milliwatt can also be used in the first and second embodiments of this invention
- the locked pulsed laser light can be injected into a dye amplifier(s) to increase its power to a preselected level.
- the wavelength locking is achieved using a low power continuous laser, the optical cavity of which is coupled to the dye cavity in close proximity.
- the reflectivity/transmission profiles of the mirrors defining the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser are chosen to suppress laser emission at wavelengths other than those close to the wavelength of the continuous low power injection laser.
- some optical dispersion in the dye laser cavity is provided for to aid suppression of unwanted wavelengths.
- the separation of mirrors defining the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser is smal 1.
- the laser light from the continuous wave laser can be polarised or unpolarised.
- the wavelength locked pulsed laser light source can include a continuous wave laser which is a 0.5mW to 5mW helium-neon laser, the pulsed dye laser employs a rhodamine 640, rhodamine 590, DCM, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixture or Kiton Red 620 dye and the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 2W-5W copper vapour laser.
- the invention provides locking cf pulsed laser light emitted from a pulsed dye laser of short pulse duration ( ⁇ 50ns) to the wavelength of laser light emitted from a continuous wave laser into the optical cavity of the dye laser and giving stable efficient conversion of optionally high-pulse-rate short-pulse, high peak power pump laser power (at the pump wavelength) to optionally high-pulse-rate, short-pulse, high peak power dye laser output power (at the locked wavelength) with high optical beam quality.
- alignment of the dye laser mirrors is relatively easy to reproduce as alignment can be simplified to a one mirror adjustment.
- the high optical quality of the frequency-locked output beam which stems from the high optical quality of the low-power locking laser beam is demo ⁇ strably superior to the output beam quality of conventional ftunable) pulsed dye lasers.
- Fig. 1 is a schematic depiction of a pulsed dye laser pumped by a short-pulse high-peak power laser source and a continuous wave laser disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser;
- Fig. 2 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except that mirror M4 is a totally reflecting mirror and a beamsplitter BS1 is located within the optical cavity of the dye laser;
- Fig. 3 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except that mirror M4 is a totally reflecting mirror and a grating Gl is located within the optical cavity of the dye laser;
- Fig. 4 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except that the dye pumping laser is focussed by a spherical mirror or lens to a spot on a fast flowing dye stream;
- Fig. 5 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except a ring cavity, rather than standing wave cavity, is used; and Fig. 6 is a schematic depiction which includes the arrangement of Fig. 1 in combination with a dye laser amplifier.
- Dye cell Dl contains a flowing solution of a suitable fluorescent laser dye such as rhodamine 590, rhodamine 640 (or mixtures of the two), Kiton Red 620, DCM or other appropriate dyes or dye mixtures.
- He-Ne laser 11 and its end-cavity mirrors Ml and M2 are aligned with the optical axis of cavity 12.
- Mirror M2 may be wedged to introduce dispersion into the cavity.
- Mirror M3 which partially reflects output beam B2 of He-Ne laser 11 is accurately aligned normal to B2 so that mirror M3 forms part of a three-mirror cavity for He-Ne laser 11 (along with Ml and M2 ) .
- He-Ne laser beam is not present (that is, He-Ne laser 11 is turned off)- cavity 12 emits a laser beam at B3 with a broad spectrum characteristic of the amplification properties of the dye and the reflection properties of M2 and M3 and any dispersion in the cavity.
- the distance between M2 and M3 is a critical parameter for optimum performance as is the power of He-Ne laser 11 in determining the spectral purity and stability.
- Such cavity lengths as 70 to 300nm are typical though others are allowed.
- the polarisation of He-Ne laser beam B2 can be unpolarised or linearly polarised; in the latter case the plane of polarisation can be parallel or normal to pump beam direction Bl .
- the dye cell itself may be wedged to provide further optical dispersion in the dye laser cavity.
- Fig. 2 partially reflecting (transmitting) mirror M3 of Fig. 1 is replaced by a totally reflecting mirror M4 and output beam B3 from the dye laser taken from a variable coupling-plate or beamsplitter BS1 within the dye laser cavity between M2 and M4.
- grating Gl is added to the dye laser cavity between M2 and M4; grating Gl is oriented so that the first ( or higher) order diffraction of He-Ne beam B2 is colinear with the dye laser optical axis.
- Output beam B3 of the dye laser is taken from the grating as the zeroth (or other) diffraction order.
- Other arrangements of gratings or alternative dispersive elements including a prism or prisms are envisaged, in particular the replacement of mirror M4 in Fig. 2 with a broadband-reflecting Littrow prism.
- Fig. 4 the transverse pumping arrangement is replaced by a longitudinal pumping arrangement where the input (copper laser) pump beam is focussed by a spherical mirror or lens to a spot on a fast flowing dye stream (in a closed cell or free jet) oriented at Brewsters angle to the dye laser optical axis.
- the dye laser cavity is otherwise unaltered from that of Fig. 1
- Alternative arrangements of the dye laser cavity such as are illustrated in Figs. 2 and 3 but employing longitudinal pumping as in Fig. 4 are envi saged.
- the standing wave cavity (figures 1 ⁇ - 4) is replaced by a ring cavity comprising mirrors M2, M3 and M4.
- the He-Ne injection locking signal is coupled into the cavity through mirror M2 (also the output coupler of the He-Ne laser) and the output from the locked - oscillator extracted for either M3 or M4.
- mirror M2 also the output coupler of the He-Ne laser
- Other arrangements incorporating additional mirrors, mirror and prism or prism cavities are envisaged.
- Fig. 6 shows the dye laser oscillator as illustrated in Fig. 1 employed in conjunction with dye amplifiers (oscillator cavities such as those of Figs. 2-4 may be substituted for that of Fig. 1).
- the input (copper laser) pump beam is split at beamsplitter BS2, a fraction of the beam being redirected to the dye oscillator as for Fig. 1.
- the remaining pump beam passes to beamsplitter BS3 where a further fraction is redirected to dye amplifier DlA, via focussing optics L2.
- the dye amplifier contains a flowing solution of a fluorescent dye or dye mixture as described for the dye oscillator.
- Output beam B3 of the dye oscillator passes through beam transfer optics BT1 (which might include apertures, lens or dispersing elements or a combination of such as is required to effect any desirable "clean-up" of the oscillator beam) to the dye amplifier and emerges as a power-amplified beam at B4.
- This amplified beam may be employed directly or further amplified after passage through beam transfer optics BT2 to an additional dye amplifier stage.
- B4 1 Watt output beam
- a single-step conversion efficiency near 20% may be obtained from a single frequency locked dye oscillator pumped with 3-4 Watts direct input. Note that arrangements similar to that of Fig. 6 but where the dye amplifiers are pumped transversely from both sides are also envisaged.
- a feature of the output beams generated by the devices described herein is excellent power and wavelength stability in high-average-power, high-pulse rate operation.
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Abstract
A wavelength locked pulsed dye laser system. The system includes a low-power continuous wave He-Ne laser (11) disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity (12) of a pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the single wavelength (632.8nm) of the He-Ne laser light. Transverse pump beam B1 is from a copper vapour laser (13) and is line-focussed by cylindrical lens L1 onto dye cell D1.
Description
W ELENGTH LOCKED LASER LIGHT SOURCE TECHNICAL FIELD This invention relates to a wavelength locked pulsed dye laser system and a method of operating a pulsed dye laser system to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser light.
BACKGROUND ART There are a wide variety of fields which utilise laser light. A particular application is in the treatment of human cancer tumours. It has been established that illumination of tumours previously labelled with suitable photoactive substances (for example, HPD - haematoporphyrin derivative) is an effective method of treating such tumours. The wavelength (colour) of the illumination light must be such that interaction with the photoactive substance occurs while at the same time adequate penetration of the tissue is permitted. In the case of the drug HPD, for example, photoactivi ty occurs for wavelengths in a narrow band (± 5nm) centred at 630nm while good transmission of light through haemoglobin and thus through the tissue is obtained for wavelengths greater than 600nm.
Both continuous and pulsed light have been used for the above purpose. Continuous light sources employed to date have been conventional arc discharge lamps of high intensity used with appropriate filters or a continuous dye laser pumped by an argon ion laser. Pulsed light of the desired wavelength and average power can be obtained using a gold vapour laser, which operates directly within the required band at 628nm or a pulsed dye laser pumped by a pulsed copper laser and whose wavelength is tuned in the required band. Given that fibre-optics are required to deliver the light to tumour sites within the body, laser sources are preferred over conventional sources (for the purposes of efficient coupling of light into the fibres). Moreover there is evidence that pulsed lasers are superior to continuous lasers in therapeutic effect.
Continuous dye lasers pumped by argon ion lasers have been found to have considerable disadvantages in practice for the above application. These systems are complex requiring delicate alignment which can alter over time and are therefore unreliable for routine use; they are also very expensive to install and maintain and electrically extremely inefficient.
The gold vapour laser, though generating emission directly within the required band at the appropriate energy densities, also has significant disadvantages in practice. The very high operating temperatures, greater than 1750°C, required of the plasma tube place great stress on the construction materials; the low energy conversion efficiency (compared with
the copper vapour laser) results in stress on the high-voltage electrical excitation circuitry and components and places added requirements on cooling facilities; and the laser material (gold) is expensive in the quantities required. All these factors combine to make the gold laser also unreliable in operation and expensive to install and maintain.
Pulsed dye Tasers based on the pulsed copper laser as a pump source have considerable advantages over both the argon-pumped dye laser and the gold vapour laser. In the first place the copper laser pump source itself is a practical and reliable device (with plasma tube operating temperatures only about 1500°C), relatively cheap to install and maintain and having good electrical energy conversion efficiency. Second, the efficiency of conversion of the copper laser pump power (at wavelengths in the green and yellow) to high-pulse-rate dye laser output (at wavelengths in the orange, red and infrared) is high, up to 50%, in direct conversion amplifiers. However to achieve such high conversion efficiencies a dye amplifier must be injected with an optical signal at the appropriate wavelength within the amplification band of the dye and with sufficient initial power. Such an injection signal is normally provided by a dye oscillator also optically pumped with a portion of the copper laser pump power. Copper-laser-pumped dye oscillators are themselves relatively inefficient (< 15%) in converting the pump laser power to dye oscillator output. The optical arrangements of dye oscillators are usually complex including a loss causing frequency-selective element (often a diffraction grating) as part of the optical cavity, and, in many cases, additional optical components (lenses or prisms) to expand the optical beam at the grating. Although such dye oscillators have the advantage that the operating wavelength is tunable over the amplification band of the dye used in the oscillator, the tolerance to misalignment can be low and, in applications where a fixed operating wavelength is required, wavelength and power stability are difficult to achieve. Moreover the optical quality of such dye oscillator output beams is low, often requiring very inefficient beam clean-up techniques to be applied before injection into the subsequent dye ampl ifier(s) .
It follows from above that there is a need for a wavelength locked pulsed laser light source where the wavelength of the laser light is near 630nm. It is the object of the invention to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser witi high average power at good overall efficiencies (> 20%) and with low beam divergence (< 1 rad).
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION The present inventors have discovered that the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from high average power copper laser pumped pulsed dye lasers can be efficiently (> 90%) locked at the wavelength of laser light from a low-power (< 5 m ) continuous wave laser directed into the optical cavity of the dye laser. This result is novel since it has been previously shown that low-power continuous laser light directed into high gain short pulse (< 50 nsec) dye laser optical cavities is ineffective in locking the wavelength or controlling beam characteristics of the pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser under conditions appropriate to efficient energy conversion in the dye laser. (It has been reported previously that locking efficiencies up to 50% can be achieved only for very low energy conversion efficiencies < 1% for short optical pulses of < 50 nsec). The reason for this is that the spontaneous fluorescent emission from the dye pumped by short (< 50 nsec) pulses of high peak power (> 10 kH) is comparable to the injected intensity from the low power continuous laser.
In the first embodiment of this invention there is provided a wavelength locked pulsed dye laser system which comprises a low-power continuous wave laser disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity of a- pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the wavelength of the continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light.
In a second embodiment of this invention the.re is provided a method of operating a pulsed dye laser system to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser light which method comprises providing a low-power continuous wave laser and a pulsed dye laser and aligning the lasers relative to each other such that a continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted from the continuous wave laser is injected into the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the wavelength of the laser light injected into the opti :al cavity.
The power of the continuous wave laser can be significantly lower than the power of the pumping light of the pulsed dye laser, e.g. a continuous wave He-Ne laser of less than 5 milliwatts power has been used to lock the wavelength of a dye laser employing rhodamine 640 or rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixtures or DCM as the fluorescent dyes and a 4W copper
laser input pumping light. Preferably the continuous wave laser is from O.lmW to lOmW and the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 0.5W to 10W copper vapour laser.
While the invention is particularly described below with reference to a dye laser employing rhodamine 640, Kiton Red 620 dye, rhodamine 590, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixtures or DCM as the dye laser medium optically pumped by the green (λ = 510.6nm) and/or yellow (λ = 578.2 n ) emissions from a high-pulse-rate copper vapour laser and locked to the wavelength (λ = 632.8nm) of a low-power continuous-wave (cw) helium-neon laser, it is not limited to these particular (pump or locking) laser wavelengths. In particular, the invention includes situations such as (i) high-pulse-rate, short-pulse pulsed laser pump sources other than the copper vapour laser including other pulsed metal vapour laser such as gold, manganese or lead vapour lasers, or the metal atom recombination lasers such as strontium and calcium ion lasers, or any other high-pulse-rate lasers; (ii) low power (0.1 milliwatt < power < 5 milliwatt depending on power of pulsed dye laser) lasers other than the helium-neon laser for wavelength-locking purposes including metal ion lasers such as the cadmium, zinc, mercury, or selenium ion lasers, or low-power noble-gas ion lasers such as argon or krypton ion lasers, or semi-conductor diode lasers, or any other low-power continuous-wave lasers. It is noted that continuous wave lasers of power > 5 milliwatt can also be used in the first and second embodiments of this invention.
The locked pulsed laser light can be injected into a dye amplifier(s) to increase its power to a preselected level.
In the present invention the wavelength locking is achieved using a low power continuous laser, the optical cavity of which is coupled to the dye cavity in close proximity. The reflectivity/transmission profiles of the mirrors defining the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser are chosen to suppress laser emission at wavelengths other than those close to the wavelength of the continuous low power injection laser. In addition, some optical dispersion in the dye laser cavity is provided for to aid suppression of unwanted wavelengths.
The separation of mirrors defining the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser is smal 1.
The laser light from the continuous wave laser can be polarised or unpolarised.
The wavelength locked pulsed laser light source can include a continuous wave laser which is a 0.5mW to 5mW helium-neon laser, the pulsed
dye laser employs a rhodamine 640, rhodamine 590, DCM, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixture or Kiton Red 620 dye and the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 2W-5W copper vapour laser.
The invention provides locking cf pulsed laser light emitted from a pulsed dye laser of short pulse duration (< 50ns) to the wavelength of laser light emitted from a continuous wave laser into the optical cavity of the dye laser and giving stable efficient conversion of optionally high-pulse-rate short-pulse, high peak power pump laser power (at the pump wavelength) to optionally high-pulse-rate, short-pulse, high peak power dye laser output power (at the locked wavelength) with high optical beam quality. Further, alignment of the dye laser mirrors is relatively easy to reproduce as alignment can be simplified to a one mirror adjustment. The high optical quality of the frequency-locked output beam which stems from the high optical quality of the low-power locking laser beam is demoπstrably superior to the output beam quality of conventional ftunable) pulsed dye lasers.
In terms of one of the applications envisaged for the invention (viz. HPD cancer phototherapy) the present invention based on a copper laser-pumped dye laser locked to the wavelength (λ = 632.8nm) of the He-Ne laser has considerable operational advantages over the alternative laser systems as described above.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
Preferred embodiments of the invention are now described, with reference to the following drawings in which:
Fig. 1 is a schematic depiction of a pulsed dye laser pumped by a short-pulse high-peak power laser source and a continuous wave laser disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser;
Fig. 2 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except that mirror M4 is a totally reflecting mirror and a beamsplitter BS1 is located within the optical cavity of the dye laser;
Fig. 3 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except that mirror M4 is a totally reflecting mirror and a grating Gl is located within the optical cavity of the dye laser;
Fig. 4 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except that the dye pumping laser is focussed by a spherical mirror or lens to a spot on a fast flowing dye stream;
Fig. 5 is a schematic depiction of the arrangement of Fig. 1 except a ring cavity, rather than standing wave cavity, is used; and
Fig. 6 is a schematic depiction which includes the arrangement of Fig. 1 in combination with a dye laser amplifier.
MODES FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
Referring to Fig. 1 a wavelength locked pulsed dye laser light system 10 includes a He-Ne continuous wave laser 11 which is disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength (λ = 632.8nm) laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity 12 of a pulsed dye laser.
Incoming pump beam Bl from copper vapour laser 13 containing green Cλ = 510.6nm) and/or yellow (λ = 578.2nm) wavelengths is line-focussed by cylindrical lens LI (or a combination of cylindrical and spherical lenses) onto dye cell Dl in a direction transverse (that is, perpendicular) to the optical axis of cavity 12. Dye cell Dl contains a flowing solution of a suitable fluorescent laser dye such as rhodamine 590, rhodamine 640 (or mixtures of the two), Kiton Red 620, DCM or other appropriate dyes or dye mixtures. He-Ne laser 11 and its end-cavity mirrors Ml and M2 are aligned with the optical axis of cavity 12. Mirror M2 may be wedged to introduce dispersion into the cavity. Mirror M3 which partially reflects output beam B2 of He-Ne laser 11 is accurately aligned normal to B2 so that mirror M3 forms part of a three-mirror cavity for He-Ne laser 11 (along with Ml and M2) . When He-Ne laser beam is not present (that is, He-Ne laser 11 is turned off)- cavity 12 emits a laser beam at B3 with a broad spectrum characteristic of the amplification properties of the dye and the reflection properties of M2 and M3 and any dispersion in the cavity. When, however, the He-Ne laser beam is present in cavity 12 (He-Ne laser 11 is turned on), the output wavelength at B3 of cavity 12 becomes locked to that of He-Ne laser 11 (at g = 632.8nm) with high spectral purity. The distance between M2 and M3 is a critical parameter for optimum performance as is the power of He-Ne laser 11 in determining the spectral purity and stability. Such cavity lengths as 70 to 300nm are typical though others are allowed. The polarisation of He-Ne laser beam B2 can be unpolarised or linearly polarised; in the latter case the plane of polarisation can be parallel or normal to pump beam direction Bl . The transmission of mirrors M2 and M3 are typically 0.5-2.0% and 10-80% respectively at λ = 632.8nm; other transmissions are allowed for. The dye cell itself may be wedged to provide further optical dispersion in the dye laser cavity.
In Fig. 2 partially reflecting (transmitting) mirror M3 of Fig. 1 is replaced by a totally reflecting mirror M4 and output beam B3 from the dye laser taken from a variable coupling-plate or beamsplitter BS1 within the dye laser cavity between M2 and M4.
In Fig. 3 an additional component, grating Gl , is added to the dye laser cavity between M2 and M4; grating Gl is oriented so that the first ( or higher) order diffraction of He-Ne beam B2 is colinear with the dye laser optical axis. Output beam B3 of the dye laser is taken from the grating as the zeroth (or other) diffraction order. Other arrangements of gratings or alternative dispersive elements including a prism or prisms are envisaged, in particular the replacement of mirror M4 in Fig. 2 with a broadband-reflecting Littrow prism.
In Fig. 4 the transverse pumping arrangement is replaced by a longitudinal pumping arrangement where the input (copper laser) pump beam is focussed by a spherical mirror or lens to a spot on a fast flowing dye stream (in a closed cell or free jet) oriented at Brewsters angle to the dye laser optical axis. The dye laser cavity is otherwise unaltered from that of Fig. 1 Alternative arrangements of the dye laser cavity such as are illustrated in Figs. 2 and 3 but employing longitudinal pumping as in Fig. 4 are envi saged.
In Fig. 5, the standing wave cavity (figures 1 →- 4) is replaced by a ring cavity comprising mirrors M2, M3 and M4. The He-Ne injection locking signal is coupled into the cavity through mirror M2 (also the output coupler of the He-Ne laser) and the output from the locked - oscillator extracted for either M3 or M4. Other arrangements incorporating additional mirrors, mirror and prism or prism cavities are envisaged.
Fig. 6 shows the dye laser oscillator as illustrated in Fig. 1 employed in conjunction with dye amplifiers (oscillator cavities such as those of Figs. 2-4 may be substituted for that of Fig. 1). The input (copper laser) pump beam is split at beamsplitter BS2, a fraction of the beam being redirected to the dye oscillator as for Fig. 1. The remaining pump beam passes to beamsplitter BS3 where a further fraction is redirected to dye amplifier DlA, via focussing optics L2. The dye amplifier contains a flowing solution of a fluorescent dye or dye mixture as described for the dye oscillator. Output beam B3 of the dye oscillator passes through beam transfer optics BT1 (which might include apertures, lens or dispersing elements or a combination of such as is required to effect any desirable "clean-up" of the oscillator beam) to the dye amplifier and emerges as a power-amplified beam at B4. This amplified beam may be employed directly or further amplified after passage through beam transfer optics BT2 to an additional dye amplifier stage.
As an example, for a 4 Watt copper laser input pump beam, some 30% or about 1-1.5 W may be employed to pump the fixed-wavelength oscillator
generating approximately 0.1 W at λ = 632.8nm from the oscillator. Injection of this output beam into an amplifier, pumped by the remaining 2.5-3W of the copper laser pump beam results in amplification by a factor typically X10 to generate a 1 Watt output beam (B4) at λ = 632.8nm at overall conversion efficiency 25% from the original copper laser pump beam. Alternatively, a single-step conversion efficiency near 20% may be obtained from a single frequency locked dye oscillator pumped with 3-4 Watts direct input. Note that arrangements similar to that of Fig. 6 but where the dye amplifiers are pumped transversely from both sides are also envisaged.
A feature of the output beams generated by the devices described herein is excellent power and wavelength stability in high-average-power, high-pulse rate operation.
References 1. Vrehen, W.M.F. and Breimer, A.J. Opt. Commun. 4 (1972) 1_6
Claims
1. A wavelength locked pulsed dye laser system which comprises a low-power continuous wave laser disposed to inject continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted therefrom into the optical cavity of a pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the wavelength of the continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light.
2. The laser light source as defined in claim 1 wherein the continuous wave laser is selected from the group consisting of helium-neon laser, cadmium ion laser, mercury-cadmium laser, zinc ion laser, mercury ion laser, selenium ion laser, argon ion laser and krypton ion laser.
3. The laser light source as defined. in claim 2 wherein the continuous wave laser is a helium-neon laser.
4. The laser light source as defined in claim 2 wherein the continuous wave laser is from O.lmW to lOmW.
5. The laser light source as defined in claim 1 wherein the pulsed dye laser employs rhodamine 640, Kiton Red 620 dye, rhodamine 590, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixtures or DCM as fluorescent dye.
6. The laser light source as defined in claim 5 wherein the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a pumping laser selected from copper vapour laser, gold vapour laser, manganese vapour laser, lead vapour laser strontium ion laser and calcium ion laser.
7. The laser light source as defined in claim 6 wherein the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 0.5W to 10W copper vapour laser.
8. The laser light source as defined in claim 1 wherein the continuous wave laser is a 0.5mW to 5mW helium-neon laser, the pulsed dye laser employs a rhodamine 640, rhodamine 590, DCM, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixture or Kiton Red 620 dye and the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 2W-5W copper vapour laser.
9. A method of operating a pulsed dye laser system to provide a wavelength locked pulsed laser light which method comprises providing a low-power continuous wave laser and a pulsed dye laser and aligning the lasers relative to each other such that a continuous wave, single wavelength, laser light emitted from the continuous wave laser is injected into the optical cavity of the pulsed dye laser whereby the wavelength of pulsed laser light emitted from the dye laser is locked at the wavelength of the laser light injected into the optical cavity.
10. The method as defined in claim 9 wherein the continuous wave laser is selected from the group consisting of helium-neon laser, cadmium ion laser, mercury-cadmium laser, zinc ion laser, mercury ion laser, selenium ion laser, argon ion laser and krypton ion laser.
11. The method as defined in claim 10 wherein the continuous wave laser is a helium-neon laser.
12. The method as defined in claim 10 wherein the continuous wave laser is from O.lmW to lOmW.
13. The method as defined in claim 9 wherein the pulsed dye laser employs rhodamine 640, Kiton Red 620 dye, rhodamine 590, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixtures or DCM as fluorescent dye.
14. The method as defined in claim 13 wherein the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a pumping laser selected from copper vapour laser, gold vapour laser, manganese vapour laser, lead vapour laser strontium ion laser and calcium ion laser.
15. The method as defined in claim 14 wherein the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 0.5W to 10W copper vapour laser.
16. The method as defined in claim 9 wherein the continuous wave laser is a 0.5mW to 5mW helium-neon laser, the pulsed dye laser employs a rhodamine 640, rhodamine 590, DCM, rhodamine 640 - rhodamine 590 mixture or Kiton Red 620 dye and the pulsed dye laser is pumped by a 2W-5W copper vapour laser.
Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| AT88901768T ATE82654T1 (en) | 1987-02-11 | 1988-02-11 | FREQUENCY-LOCKED LASER LIGHT SOURCE. |
| DE8888901768T DE3876031D1 (en) | 1987-02-11 | 1988-02-11 | FREQUENCY COUPLED LASER LIGHT SOURCE. |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| AUPI0297 | 1987-02-11 | ||
| AUPI029787 | 1987-02-11 |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| WO1988006358A1 true WO1988006358A1 (en) | 1988-08-25 |
Family
ID=3772015
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/AU1988/000040 Ceased WO1988006358A1 (en) | 1987-02-11 | 1988-02-11 | Wavelength locked laser light source |
Country Status (7)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US4955027A (en) |
| EP (1) | EP0302094B1 (en) |
| AT (1) | ATE82654T1 (en) |
| AU (1) | AU1344188A (en) |
| CA (1) | CA1297935C (en) |
| DE (1) | DE3876031D1 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO1988006358A1 (en) |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GB2239733A (en) * | 1990-01-03 | 1991-07-10 | British Telecomm | A laser oscillator |
Families Citing this family (12)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US5046184A (en) * | 1990-04-05 | 1991-09-03 | University Of California | Method and apparatus for passive mode locking high power lasers |
| US5325393A (en) * | 1992-11-06 | 1994-06-28 | Carl Zeiss, Inc. | Dual laser resonator and beam combiner |
| DE69724588T2 (en) * | 1996-02-09 | 2004-07-01 | Laser Industries Ltd. | LASER BEAM TRANSPORT SYSTEM FOR A HIGH-PERFORMANCE MULTIPLE-WAVELENGTH LASER SYSTEM |
| US6671296B2 (en) * | 2000-10-10 | 2003-12-30 | Spectrasensors, Inc. | Wavelength locker on optical bench and method of manufacture |
| US6587484B1 (en) | 2000-10-10 | 2003-07-01 | Spectrasensor, Inc,. | Method and apparatus for determining transmission wavelengths for lasers in a dense wavelength division multiplexer |
| US6611341B2 (en) | 2000-10-10 | 2003-08-26 | Spectrasensors, Inc. | Method and system for locking transmission wavelengths for lasers in a dense wavelength division multiplexer utilizing a tunable etalon |
| US6693928B2 (en) | 2000-10-10 | 2004-02-17 | Spectrasensors, Inc. | Technique for filtering chirp from optical signals |
| US6690687B2 (en) | 2001-01-02 | 2004-02-10 | Spectrasensors, Inc. | Tunable semiconductor laser having cavity with ring resonator mirror and mach-zehnder interferometer |
| US6930822B2 (en) * | 2001-11-20 | 2005-08-16 | Spectra Physics, Inc. | Wavelength locker |
| US7599413B2 (en) * | 2006-05-19 | 2009-10-06 | Pavilion Integration Corp. | Self-contained module for injecting signal into slave laser without any modifications or adaptations to it |
| CN107591673A (en) * | 2017-10-09 | 2018-01-16 | 中国科学院上海光学精密机械研究所 | laser relaxation oscillation noise suppression device |
| CN110448789B (en) * | 2019-08-07 | 2021-04-16 | 郑州大学第一附属医院 | Lumen wall tumor chemotherapy drug intervention device |
Citations (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AU8606575A (en) * | 1974-11-01 | 1977-05-05 | Jersey Nuclear-Avco Isotopes, Inc | Laser amplifier system |
| AU7350487A (en) * | 1986-04-29 | 1987-11-24 | Macquarie University | Mode locked pulsed dye laser |
Family Cites Families (5)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3766489A (en) * | 1972-02-07 | 1973-10-16 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Optical device, such as a dye laser, employing a free-flowing liquid stream |
| US3754195A (en) * | 1972-03-16 | 1973-08-21 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Double-folded astigmatically compensated optical cavities |
| US4019157A (en) * | 1976-04-06 | 1977-04-19 | The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Energy Research And Development Administration | Method and apparatus for tuning high power lasers |
| US4410995A (en) * | 1981-09-16 | 1983-10-18 | Photochemical Research Associates Inc. | Cascaded dye laser cavities |
| US4689794A (en) * | 1985-01-28 | 1987-08-25 | Northrop Corporation | Injection locking a xenon chloride laser at 308.4 nm |
-
1988
- 1988-02-10 CA CA000558590A patent/CA1297935C/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1988-02-11 WO PCT/AU1988/000040 patent/WO1988006358A1/en not_active Ceased
- 1988-02-11 AU AU13441/88A patent/AU1344188A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1988-02-11 DE DE8888901768T patent/DE3876031D1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1988-02-11 EP EP88901768A patent/EP0302094B1/en not_active Expired
- 1988-02-11 US US07/257,291 patent/US4955027A/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1988-02-11 AT AT88901768T patent/ATE82654T1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
Patent Citations (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AU8606575A (en) * | 1974-11-01 | 1977-05-05 | Jersey Nuclear-Avco Isotopes, Inc | Laser amplifier system |
| AU7350487A (en) * | 1986-04-29 | 1987-11-24 | Macquarie University | Mode locked pulsed dye laser |
Non-Patent Citations (1)
| Title |
|---|
| Applied Physics Letters, Volume 47, No. 8, 15 October 1985, J.B. HOPKINS et al, 'Pico Second Pulse Amplification Using a Copper Vapour Laser', pages 776-778 * |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GB2239733A (en) * | 1990-01-03 | 1991-07-10 | British Telecomm | A laser oscillator |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| DE3876031D1 (en) | 1992-12-24 |
| EP0302094A1 (en) | 1989-02-08 |
| EP0302094A4 (en) | 1990-04-09 |
| US4955027A (en) | 1990-09-04 |
| EP0302094B1 (en) | 1992-11-19 |
| AU1344188A (en) | 1988-09-14 |
| ATE82654T1 (en) | 1992-12-15 |
| CA1297935C (en) | 1992-03-24 |
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