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1.
Opt Express ; 28(14): 20162-20176, 2020 Jul 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32680082

RESUMO

High repetition rates in high energy solid-state laser systems can yield to a rise of temperature in amplifiers despite the use of cooling systems. This effect can significantly impact the performance of amplifiers by inducing thermal stress, birefringence or thermal lensing. Here, we develop a multiphysics model to support the design, optimization and commissioning of a liquid-cooled large aperture split-slab laser glass amplifier. This multiphysics model includes optical pumping in the amplifying medium, heat loading, hydraulic effects induced by the liquid coolant, mechanical deformation and their potential coupled effects on the optical wavefront. The accuracy of each model is assessed by carrying out specific experimental measurements and characterizations. We show that this set of models allows the prediction of performance of a liquid-cooled amplifier from the flash-lamp emission to the amplified wavefront at a repetition rate of one shot per minute.

2.
Opt Express ; 27(5): 7354-7364, 2019 Mar 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30876300

RESUMO

We report an effect potentially harmful occurring in regenerative amplifiers due to stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS). Most high energy laser facilities use phase-modulated pulses to prevent the transverse SBS effect in large optical components and to smooth the focal spot on target. However, this kind of pulse format may undergo a detrimental effect known as frequency modulation to amplitude modulation (FM-AM) conversion in the presence of spectral distortions. In the present letter, we show experimentally and numerically, that SBS can also potentially be created in the regenerative amplifier located in the front-end. In this scenario, some of the side bands of the pulse reflected by regen end-cavity mirror may act as a seed for SBS in an optical component, if the pulse spectrum contains frequency components exactly separated by the Brillouin frequency shift. This self-seeded SBS induces amplitude modulation with a nonlinear dependence that may be detrimental during down-stream propagation. However, we show that a careful choice of the modulation frequencies can mitigate this effect.

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