We review solid-state laser amplifiers for generation of intense picosecond pulses, in various regimes from single shot to repetition rates of GHz. Such laser sources are becoming increasingly attractive for many industrial and scientific applications. In particular, we have exploited the technology of side-pumped grazing-incidence bounce amplifiers. Such amplifiers yield very high gain per pass, up to several thousands, and offer excellent beam quality preservation owing to the total reflection leading to left-right inversion. This technology allows the realization of compact, efficient and modular amplifiers, significantly simpler than, for example, cavity-based regenerative schemes. Starting from robust, low-power diode-pumped solid-state oscillators, using programmable pulse-pickers one can select either a single pulse or a properly shaped pulse train for further amplification and compensation of envelope distortions due to gain saturation. For single pulse amplification it is preferred to start with a relatively low-repetition-rate oscillator (< 100 MHz). Picosecond fiber oscillators are most promising in this respect. Using quasi-cw diode arrays as the pump source of Nd:YVO4 slab amplifier, starting from ≈ 1 nJ, 10-ps pulse seed, amplified pulse energy as high as 200 μJ at 1 kHz can be obtained. Efficient harmonic and traveling-wave parametric generation are readily achieved with such high pulse peak powers. Some other applications require instead the amplification of pulse trains, that can be conveniently extracted and amplified from a low-power oscillator at the desired repetition rate. For example, starting from a 20-mW, 5-GHz picosecond oscillator we amplified trains of few thousands of pulses up to 2 mJ with three slab amplifiers (as much as 300 mJ were achieved with two additional Nd:YAG flash-lamp-pumped post-amplifiers). Such pulse trains are very effective for synchronous pumping of optical parametric oscillators, lowering significantly their threshold with respect to the traveling-wave geometry. When multi-MHz picosecond pulses are required, cw diode arrays are chosen as pump sources for the slab amplifiers. An 8-W, 8-ps laser system has been demonstrated starting from a 50-mW cw oscillator, at 150 MHz. Owing to the effective gain shaping of the tightly pumped amplifier, no significant thermal distortion were detected, allowing nearly diffraction limited operation. Although high power picosecond oscillators have been demonstrated lately, this result is interesting since it suggests an alternative way for power-scaling of picosecond sources without pushing delicate intracavity components (such as semiconductor saturable absorbers) to the damage limit. Numerical models of the amplifiers and their dynamics are also reviewed. The effects of amplified spontaneous emission are discussed, as well as the most effective methods for its suppression.

High gain solid-state amplifiers for picosecond pulses

AGNESI, ANTONIANGELO;PIRZIO, FEDERICO
2010-01-01

Abstract

We review solid-state laser amplifiers for generation of intense picosecond pulses, in various regimes from single shot to repetition rates of GHz. Such laser sources are becoming increasingly attractive for many industrial and scientific applications. In particular, we have exploited the technology of side-pumped grazing-incidence bounce amplifiers. Such amplifiers yield very high gain per pass, up to several thousands, and offer excellent beam quality preservation owing to the total reflection leading to left-right inversion. This technology allows the realization of compact, efficient and modular amplifiers, significantly simpler than, for example, cavity-based regenerative schemes. Starting from robust, low-power diode-pumped solid-state oscillators, using programmable pulse-pickers one can select either a single pulse or a properly shaped pulse train for further amplification and compensation of envelope distortions due to gain saturation. For single pulse amplification it is preferred to start with a relatively low-repetition-rate oscillator (< 100 MHz). Picosecond fiber oscillators are most promising in this respect. Using quasi-cw diode arrays as the pump source of Nd:YVO4 slab amplifier, starting from ≈ 1 nJ, 10-ps pulse seed, amplified pulse energy as high as 200 μJ at 1 kHz can be obtained. Efficient harmonic and traveling-wave parametric generation are readily achieved with such high pulse peak powers. Some other applications require instead the amplification of pulse trains, that can be conveniently extracted and amplified from a low-power oscillator at the desired repetition rate. For example, starting from a 20-mW, 5-GHz picosecond oscillator we amplified trains of few thousands of pulses up to 2 mJ with three slab amplifiers (as much as 300 mJ were achieved with two additional Nd:YAG flash-lamp-pumped post-amplifiers). Such pulse trains are very effective for synchronous pumping of optical parametric oscillators, lowering significantly their threshold with respect to the traveling-wave geometry. When multi-MHz picosecond pulses are required, cw diode arrays are chosen as pump sources for the slab amplifiers. An 8-W, 8-ps laser system has been demonstrated starting from a 50-mW cw oscillator, at 150 MHz. Owing to the effective gain shaping of the tightly pumped amplifier, no significant thermal distortion were detected, allowing nearly diffraction limited operation. Although high power picosecond oscillators have been demonstrated lately, this result is interesting since it suggests an alternative way for power-scaling of picosecond sources without pushing delicate intracavity components (such as semiconductor saturable absorbers) to the damage limit. Numerical models of the amplifiers and their dynamics are also reviewed. The effects of amplified spontaneous emission are discussed, as well as the most effective methods for its suppression.
2010
9789537619800
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/209932
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