Towards the development of a femtosecond laser and thermal simulation of all-solid-state high power diode lasers J
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Pulsed lasers differ from continuous lasers in several ways. A femtosecond laser
has a pulse duration in the range of 10 −15 seconds and can achieve peak power of up
to some GW for mJ energy pulses. When they focused on materials, non-linear dy-
namics properties could be seen inside the material because of their high intensity.
In the second chapter of this thesis, we aimed to develop a Ti: Sapphire femtosec-
ond laser from scratch. Towards that we developed an all-solid-state, highly power
stable, and temperature-controlled green cw diode pump laser with up to 10W out-
put power for our Ti: Sapphire Femtosecond Laser until submission with a size of
15 × 15 × 5 cm. The equilibrium temperature of this laser at 2 W output power
was recorded at 14 o C, and for 8 W output power, it was 45 o C. Next, we collimated
the beam and successfully focused this pump laser into a 200 × 500 micron area of
Ti: Sapphire crystal. We demonstrated that our pump laser produces fluorescence
emission from Ti: Sapphire crystal from 600 nm to 750 nm.
Motivated by the recent demonstration of successful optical pumping of a Ti:
Sapphire crystal with blue diode lasers, we theoretically proposed an all-solid-state
thermal management system for a high power blue laser operating at 100W contin-
uous wave output. In the Third chapter of this thesis we modeled an all-solid-state
high power blue laser system that can operate up to 100W output power in Comsol
multiphysics 5.3 software. We used the thermoelectric effect to extract Heat from
laser diodes. We used four 75 W power Thermoelectric coolers(TECs) to transfer a
maximum of 300W Heat from laser diodes to the surroundings.
We believe that this work will lead to high power visible and femtosecond laser
system for intriguing applications.