Lithium tantalate single-crystal and photo-functional device

Optical: systems and elements – Optical frequency converter

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C359S328000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06211999

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to lithium tantalate (LiTaO
3
) single-crystal of many applications in various technical fields of optical information processing, optical working, photo-chemical reaction, optical instrumentation control and others where laser rays are used. The invention also relates to a photo-functional device comprising lithium tantalate single-crystal, in which the polarization of the crystal is periodically inverted to thereby shorten or prolong the fundamental wavelength of a laser ray being incident on the device. This invention is the result of a contract with the Department of Energy (Contract No. W7405-ENG-36).
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Lithium tantalate is well know as one of the most excellent and useful ferroelectric materials for piezoelectric, linear electro-optic and nonlinear optic device applications, besides lithium niobate, lithium tantalate has similar characteristics with those of lithium niobate in many respects, having the same crystal structure and a similar nature of nonstoichiometry. Although commonly referred to as “LiTaO
3
”, the phase exists over a wide solid solution range, from compositions near the stoichiometric value to Lithium-poor compositions. Therefore, the congruent melting composition, which is used in the conventional Czochralski method for the commercial crystal growth, also shifts towards the Ta excess composition side from the stoichiometric composition. In analogy with the nonstoichiometric defect model of lithium niobate, almost all lithium tantalate produced commercially should contain large amount of Ta anti-site defects and cation vacancies.
The phase diagram of lithium tantalate single-crystal was known from long ago. The Li
2
O-Ta
2
O
5
phase diagram in the vicinity of LiTaO
3
has been reported by Miyazawa et al. in the Journal of Crystal Growth 10(1971) 276-278. Its congruent composition did not coincide with the stoichiometric composition and the phase relation is very similar to that of the Li
2
O-Nb
2
O
5
system. For producing lithium tantalate single-crystal with high compositional homogeneity, one conventional method known in the art comprises rotational pulling of crystal from a flux as combined with growing the crystal being pulled, in which the flux has a congruent melt composition of such that the crystal being grown and the flux are equilibrated to have the same composition, and has a molar fraction of Li
2
O/(Ta
2
O
5
+Li
2
O) of being 0.4875. Since the as-grown lithium tantalate single-crystal thus produced in the method is in a multi-domain condition, it is subjected to poling treatment of applying a voltage thereto in the direction of the Z-axis of the crystal being heated at a temperature not lower than its Curie temperature of about 600° C. to thereby unipolarize the crystal, followed by cooling it. Then, the resulting, single-domain crystal is worked to have a predetermined size and used in various fields.
As having a favorable electrooptical constant and a favorable non-linear optical constant, the lithium tantalate single-crystal is widely noticed as a substrate material for optical modulators, optical switches, Q switches, frequency conversion devices, etc. Recently, in particular, expected is the development of waveguide-type, optical second-harmonic genetation (SHG) devices capable of converting a semiconductor and solid state lasers having a near infrared wavelength into UV or visible light having a semi-wavelength by means of a non-linear optical effect. Above all, most studied are SHG devices comprising an element of lithium tantalate single-crystal with its polarization structure being periodically inverted, as light sources for high-density recording and reproduction of optical discs. The SHG devices of that type are driven in a quasi-phase matching (QPM) system, in which the difference between the propagation constant of the fundamental wave and that of the higher harmonic wave is compensated for by the periodic structure to gain the phase matching. This system has many excellent characteristics in that its conversion efficiency is high, that parallel beaming and diffraction-limited collection of the light being outputted therefrom is easy, and that there is no limitation on the applicable material and wavelength. As the periodic structure for QPM, a structure of which the SHG coefficient (d coefficient) attribute is periodically inverted is most preferred for obtaining a high efficiency, and the positive or negative attribute of the d coefficient of ferroelectric crystal corresponds to the polarity of the ferroelectric polarization of the crystal. Therefore, the periodically-inverting structure of polarized ferroelectric domains is used in the QPM system. In the QPM-SHG system, usable are non-linear optical constants d
22
and d
33
, which, however, could not be used in a phase matching system based on birefringence, and the QPM-SHG system of that type has the great advantage of high-efficiency wavelength conversion.
As compared with any other non-linear, optical single-crystal, lithium tantalate single-crystal has a large non-linear optical constant (d
33
of −26.0 pm/V), and this is one of materials which have heretofore been most studied for producing optical devices comprising them. The most important technique for realizing QPM-SHG devices comprising ferroelectric crystal is to produce periodic polarization-inversion domains with accuracy. The phase matching period around the fundamental wavelength, 0.8 &mgr;m of lithium tantalate single-crystal is about 4 &mgr;m or so. However, the single-domain LT (lithium tantalate) single-crystal as prepared by poling the as-grown one is extremely stable around room temperature, and it is not easy to invert the polarity of the crystal in an ordinary electric field. In this connection, reported were some techniques for polarization inversion of LT single-crystal at a temperature not higher than the Curie point of the crystal by various methods. The reported methods include, for example, 1) SiO
2
-charged thermal treatment, 2) proton-exchanging thermal treatment, 3) electron beam-scanning irradiation, and 4) voltage application. There are known many reports referring to the voltage application method 4). In one report, a periodic electrode is provided on one surface of a Z-cut LT single-crystal substrate, while a uniform electrode on the other surface thereof, and a pulse voltage is imparted to the crystal substrate via those electrodes to thereby obtain periodic polarization inversion of nearly the same pattern as that of the periodic electrode. By applying a near infrared laser to the QPM-SHG device thus produced in that manner, obtained is a blue SHG laser ray of a few mW or so. Except for SHG, QPM devices comprising LT single-crystal are further studied for application to wavelength conversion systems such as near infrared OPO, etc.
As has been mentioned hereinabove, the most important technique for realizing QPM-SHG devices comprising ferroelectric single-crystal is to produce periodic polarization-inversion domains with accuracy. Ideally, it is important to enlarge the overlapping of the inverted structure with the guided wave mode and to reduce the normalization matching error, or that is, to gain the polarization to inversion width ratio of 1/1. In fact, however, since the tolerance for the QPM condition is very narrow, the inversion period insufficiency, if any, in the devices produced ends in failure in realizing small-sized, high-efficiency devices. The method of electronic beam-scanning irradiation or voltage application to lithium tantalate crystal for the polarization inversion of the crystal will be advantageous in that inverted lattices which are nearly uniform in the direction of the thickness of the crystal are formed. Even in this, however, it is still extremely difficult to gain the polarization to inversion width ratio of being completely 1/1. In addition, the process itself is problematic in its reproducibility. For example, in the voltage application method, a periodic electrode

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