Laser Types 1 PDF
Laser Types 1 PDF
Laser Types 1 PDF
gas laser
In a gas laser, the laser active medium is a gas at a
lasers:
Electrical Discharge
Optical Pumping
He-Ne lasers which gives up to 1 [mW] (The standard type used at for student laboratory
experiments), usually use a DC High Voltage power supply of 2,000 [Volts].
To initialize the lasing action, the gas in the tube needs to be ionized. This action is done with a
pulse of maximum voltage of the power supply. This voltage is called the Ignition Voltage of the
laser. At the moment of beginning breakdown, the electrical resistance of the tube suddenly falls to a
low value. This means that the voltage suddenly drops, while the current rises. Thus, by Ohm's law it
is a negative electrical resistance (Decrease in voltage with increase in current).
To overcome this problem, a Ballast Resistor is connected very close to the anode, in series with the
power supply. The role of the ballast resistor is to limit the current through the tube when the tube
resistance falls.
Flowing
CO
gas
lasers
2
A fresh gas mixture is flowing continuously through
the laser tube while lasing lasts.
possible.
Four level laser.
Excimer Laser
There are lasers in which the required conditions for lasing are achieved in
exotic ways.
As an example, we shall examine a family of lasers in which the radiation
is emitted from a molecule which only exists for a very short time.
This molecule is composed of an atom of noble gas: Argon, Krypton or
Xenon, and an atom of halogen: Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine or Iodine.
An Excimer is a molecule which has a bound state (existence) only in an
excited state.
In the ground state this molecule does not exist, and the atoms are
separated.
The excited state exists for a very short time, less than 10 nanoseconds.
The name Excimer comes from the combination of the two words: exited
Nd Laser
In Nd laser Nd+3 ions (as impurities of up to a few
Nd Laser Glass
Glass is used as the host material when a pulsed laser is needed,
with each pulse at high power,
and the pulse repetition rate is slow.
The active medium of Nd-Glass Laser can be manufactured
in a shape of disk or rod, with diameters of up to 0.5 meter
Such dimensions are possible because glass is isotropic material,
cheap, and can be easily worked to the right shape.
High percentage (up to about 6%) of Nd ions can be added to glass as
impurity.
The problem with glass as a host is its poor thermal conductivity.
Thus cooling the laser when it operates continuously or at high repetition
rate is difficult.
Diode Lasers
All diode lasers are built from semiconductor
materials, and all show electric properties which are
characteristics of electrical diodes. For this reason the
diode lasers have other names such as:
Semiconductor Lasers - According to the composed
materials.
Junction Lasers - Since they are composed of p-n
junction.
Injection Lasers - Since the electrons are injected
into the junction by the applied voltage.
Historic Development
The diode laser was invented independently in 1962,
The researchers succeeded in getting a coherent
electromagnetic radiation from a forward biased diode
(p-n junction) made from the semiconductor GaAs
The confinement
is accomplished by placing different materials close to the active layer. Thus, the
first division of diode lasers into groups is according to the structure of layers close to the
active layer (see figure 6.28 below).
The name of each family of diode lasers is given by the type of materials near the active
layer:
Homojunction laser - The entire laser is made from one substance, usually GaAs. In
this simple structure, the emitted photons are not confined in the directions
perpendicular to the laser axis. Thus, the laser is not efficient.
Single Heterostructure - On one side of the active layer is a material with a different
energy gap. Different energy gaps of the two layers cause a difference in the index of
refraction of the materials, so we can build waveguide structures that confine the
photons to a specific area. Usually, the second layer is made of a material which is similar
to the first layer but has a lower index of refraction. Example:
GaAs and GaAlAs are typical materials used for adjacent layers in a diode laser.
Double Heterostructure - On both sides of the active layer is another material, which is
different from the active layer and has a lower index of refraction (higher energy gap).
Dye Laser
A dye laser can be considered as a special device to
spectrum range.
All the transitions from energy bands create a continuum of
wavelengths
the lifetime of the excited level to be very short for two reasons:
There is a large number of possible transitions for lasing.
The number of collisions between molecules in a liquid is very big, and
the energy transfer during each collision cause rapid decay of the
excited state.