Tuneable, adjustment-stable semiconductor laser light source...

Coherent light generators – Particular beam control device – Tuning

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C372S018000, C372S023000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06785305

ABSTRACT:

The Invention relates to a laser light source, having a wide-band amplifying, narrow-band tunable medium, especially a semiconductor laser light source, which is characterized by the possibility of tuning the Laser wavelength, at least in broad ranges of the laser gain curve, without mode jumps, and at the same time by high optical stability. Possible areas of application for a light source of this type include optical spectroscopy.
Tunable light sources having a semiconductor laser as the active element are known in the art in many variations. Included among these are those light sources that enable continuous tuning in a more or less broad spectral range, or that permit, with the acceptance of wavelength jumps, the adjustment of any wavelength within a given interval.
To enable continuous tunability over a given wavelength range it is necessary, during the tuning of the emission wavelength of the laser, for the optical path length in the resonator cavity to change correspondingly and simultaneously, such that in single-mode operation the number of the oscillating longitudinal mode in the given range is maintained and mode jumps are prevented. Light sources of this type are known as monolithic components and as hybrid arrangements.
Monolithic components are characterized by their compactness and by the fact that the tuning of by the emission wavelength and the corresponding change of the optical path length within the resonator cavity can be synchronized using electronic means alone. The range of continuous tunability, however, is at least 2 to 5 times narrower than the laser gain curve. Up to now, a usable, continuous tuning range of 9 nm with a central wavelength of 1555 nm (corresponding to approx. 0.6%) has been achieved/T. Wolf, S. Illek, J. Rieger, B. Borchert, M. C. Axnann: Extended Continuous Tuning Range (over 10 nm) of Tunable Twin-Guide Lasers, Technical Digest Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO'94), Anaheim, May 8-13 1994. CWB1/.
Hybrid arrangements are comprised principally of a laser diode that is preferably highly antireflection-coated on one side, so that it will no longer act as a resonator, to the greatest extent possible, and an external resonator section that permits a wavelength-selective, tunable back coupling of the emitted light onto the antireflection-coated laser facet. This enables tuning over the entire gain curve of the laser. In principle, the adjustment of the resonator cavity length can occur separately from the selection of the back-coupled spectral range, without taking additional parameters into consideration. Up to now, however, only relatively complicated devices designed for use in implementing this adjustment more or less automatically have been known in the art. The following three solutions represent the state of the art.
The first solution was described by Favre, et al./ F. Favre, D. Le Guen, J. C. Simon, B. Landousies: External-Cavity Semiconductor Laser With 15 nm Continuous Tuning Range, Electronic Letters, Vol. 22. No. 15, Jul. 17, 1986, 795-796/. The light emanating from the antireflection-coated laser facet is collimated through an optic and travels, as a parallel bundle, at a specific angle, to a flat diffraction grating. The light which has been diffracted back into the direction of incidence returns, after traveling through the optic, to the laser. The special characteristic of this solution consists in that the rotation of the grating (tuning of the selected range) via two translational elements and one coupling rod is mechanically linked to the adjustment of the resonator cavity length, so that a continuous tuning of the laser wavelength is possible over 1.2% of the center wavelength. The positioning of the grating on a piezo translator permits small deviations to be corrected.
A significant disadvantage of this solution, as with many other arrangements, consists in that the laser light is naturally coupled back as a collimated bundle of rays. The result of this is that, in addition to the two degrees of freedom that are necessary for jump-free wavelength tuning (displacement and rotation of the grating), two additional degrees of freedom, which are not necessary for the adjustment of any base parameters, must be maintained in a highly sensitive state, in the optimum position. One of these is the tilting of the beam path perpendicular to the direction of dispersion for the grating, and the other is the displacement of the laser chip along the optical axis in relation to the collimator, in order to achieve the necessary precise imaging of the laser facet. Since the optically effective laser chip facet is very small, precise requirements are placed upon the precision and stability of the mechanics. This is complicated by the fact that within this two-dimensional possibility for adjustment there is only one optimum position and only one base parameter, namely the radiant power produced, that can be used as a scale. This disadvantage also applies correspondingly to the two following examples.
In/ W. Fuhrmann, W. Demtrbder: A Continuously Tunable GaAs Diode Laser With an External Resonator. Appl. Phys. B 49, 29-32 (1989), another hybrid arrangement is described. The connection between the selected spectral range and the optical path length in the resonator cavity is produced here via an electronic control device; the controlling element used to adjust the effective resonator cavity length is a Brewster plate that can be rotated via a galvanometric device. A total tuning range of 1.8% of the average emission wavelength, but only 0.014% of this continuously, is achieved.
EP 0335691.A1, H 01 S 3/08 contains a solution in which the change in resonator cavity length is achieved using a piezo translator alone. If tuning is to take place continuously over more than a fraction of a mode interval, an electronic control device is also required. Due to the limited adjustment path of the piezo translator, the continuously tunable range is also small in this arrangement.
The mechanical construction of the first solution alone permits continuous adjustment of the wavelength over a wide range, due to the long adjustment path for the resonator cavity length. The mechanics of this solution, however, naturally permit only slow tuning. The two other solutions permit continuous tuning over only narrow ranges.
For wavelength selection in lasers having a broad-band medium that can be stimulated, especially dye lasers, another arrangement is known in the art, which is treated in different variations in DE-AS 2051328, H 01 S 3/08 and the associated supplementary patent DE-OS 2236505, H 01 S 3/08. In these, the selection of wavelength is achieved primarily in that within the resonator cavity, the light is focused in a pinhole diaphragm, and behind this pinhole diaphragm an optic having a high degree of longitudinal chromatic aberration and a low degree of aperture aberration is positioned, such that in combination with one of the resonator cavity mirrors an imaging back into the pinhole diaphragm occurs without substantial loss, for only a narrow wavelength range. The tuning is effected by shifting the optic along its optical axis. In order to increase the selectivity, the optical axis of the selection arrangement is either shifted in relation to the geometric axis of the medium that can be stimulated or shifted to form an angle with it. The optic having the high degree of longitudinal chromatic aberration can be combined with the associated resonator cavity end mirror to form a single component, a Fresnel zone plate.
The contents of this patent relate exclusively to the selection of the wavelength. No reference is made to the behavior of the modes in the resonator cavity or to the stability of the arrangement.
The state of the art in the technology of increasing adjustment tolerances for lasers having external resonator cavities is determined principally by two solutions: The first solution is described in / P. Zorabedian and W. R. Trutna, Jr.: Interference-Filter-Tuned, Alignment-Stabilized, Semiconductor External-Cavity Laser, OPTICS

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Tuneable, adjustment-stable semiconductor laser light source... does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Tuneable, adjustment-stable semiconductor laser light source..., we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Tuneable, adjustment-stable semiconductor laser light source... will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-3358632

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.