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Large aperture N31 neodymium phosphate laser glass for use in a high power laser facility

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2014

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Abstract

Large aperture Nd:phosphate laser glass is a key optical element for an inertial confinement fusion (ICF) facility. N31, one type of neodymium doped phosphate glasses, was developed for high peak power laser facility applications in China. The composition and main properties of N31 glass are given, together with those of LHG-8, LG-770, and KGSS-0180 Nd:phosphate laser glasses, from Hoya and Schott, and from Russia. The technologies of pot melting, continuous melting, and edge cladding of large size N31 phosphate laser glass are briefly described. The small signal gain profiles of N31 glass slabs from both pot melting and continuous melting at various values of the pumping energy of the xenon lamp are presented. N31 glass is characterized by a stimulated emission cross section of $3.8 \times 10^{{-20}}\ \text {cm}^{{2}}$ at 1053 nm, an absorption coefficient of 0.10–0.15% $\text {cm}^{{-1}}$ at laser wavelength, small residual stress around the interface between the cladding glass and the laser glass, optical homogeneity of $\sim $$\times $ $10^{{-6}}$ in a 400 mm aperture, and laser damage threshold larger than $42\ \text {J/cm}^{{2}}$ for a 3 ns pulse width at 1064 nm wavelength.

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Research Article
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© The Author(s) 2014

1. Introduction

Large aperture Nd:phosphate laser glass is at the heart of a high power laser system. For high peak power inertial confinement fusion (ICF) facility application, there are many strict technical requirements on laser glass, such as high gain, low nonlinear refractive index, low attenuation at laser wavelength, excellent optical homogeneity, and large laser damage threshold. Large aperture Nd:phosphate laser glasses have been successfully applied in the NIF facility in the United States, and an over 2 MJ ultraviolet laser has already been realized in this largest laser facility[Reference Campbell and Suratwala1, Reference Hand2]. Phosphate glass has good solubility to rare earth ions, medium phonon energy, low nonlinear refractive index, strong ability to resolve platinum particles, and good spectroscopic properties for $\text {Nd}^{{3+}}$ ions compared with silicate glass. Since the late 1970s, Nd:phosphate laser glass has been developed for high peak power laser facility use. LHG-8 and LG-770 Nd:phosphate laser glasses, which are used in the NIF facility in the United States, were developed and fabricated by Hoya and Schott, with continuous melting technology[Reference Campbell, Suratwalaa, Thorsnessa, Haydenb, Thorneb, Ciminob, Marker IIIb, Takeuchic, Smolleyc and Ficini-Dornd3]. KGSS-0180 Nd:phosphate glass was developed in Russia, and it has been used in the four-channel laser system “Luch”[Reference Arbuzov, Fyodorov, Kramarev, Lunter, Nikitina, Pozharskii, Shashkin, Semyonov, Ter-Nersesyants, Charukhchev, Sirazetdinov, Garanin and Sukharev4]. In China, N21 and N31, two types of Nd:phosphate laser glass, have been used in high power laser facilities. N21 Nd:phosphate laser glass was developed in the 1980s in Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics (SIOM), and it was used in Shen Guang I and Shen Guang II high peak power laser facilities[Reference Jiang5, Reference Jiang, Zhang, Xu, Ma, Ying, Mao, Mao and Li6]. N31 Nd:phosphate laser glass was developed in Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics in the 1990s. It has been applied in the Shen Guang series of high power laser facilities in China for more than ten years[Reference Hu and Jiang7]. In recent years, different technologies concerning the mass fabrication of large aperture N31 laser glass have been explored[Reference Hu, Chen, Meng, Chen, Tang, Wang, Hu, Wen, Li, Jiang, Zhang and Jiang8]. In this paper we present the composition, main properties, and fabrication techniques of large aperture N31 glass.

* Parameters which vary with $\mathrm{Nd}_{2}\mathrm{O}_{3}$ concentration.

2. Compositions and properties of N31 phosphate laser glass

Similar to other neodymium phosphate laser glasses used in an ICF facility, N31 glass is a kind of metaphosphate glass composed of $\mathrm{P}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{5}}\mbox{-}\mathrm{R}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}\mbox{-}\mathrm{MO}\mbox{-}\mathrm{T}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{3}}$ . $\mathrm{R}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}$ represents an alkali oxide. MO represents an alkaline oxide. $\mathrm{T}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{3}}$ represents mixtures of $\mathrm{Al}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{3}}$ , $\mathrm{La}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{3}}$ , and $\mathrm{Nd}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{3}}$ . Up to 5wt% $\mathrm{Nd}_{{2}}\mathrm{O}_{{3}}$ can be easily doped in N31 glass without obvious change of properties besides density and refractive index. Its composition is satisfied for the requirements of mass fabrication and laser facility applications.

A comparison of the main basic properties of N31 with those of LHG-8, LG-770, and KGSS-0180 glasses is given in table 1. The most important property of neodymium laser glass is gain coefficient. It is expressed in eq. (1). In order to get optimal gain properties and energy extraction efficiency from neodymium phosphate laser glass, the stimulated emission cross section at emission peak wavelength is required to be in the range 3.5 to 4.0  $\times $   $10^{{-20}}\ \text {cm}^{{2}}$ for ICF applications.

(1) $$\begin {equation} {\rm g}=[\sigma (\lambda )N^{\ast }- \alpha ],\label {eq1} \end {equation}$$

where $ \sigma $ is the emission cross section at wavelength $ \lambda $ . For Nd:phosphate glass, the maximum emission cross section in the near infrared region is at 1053 nm. N* is the $\text {Nd}^{{3+}}$ inversion density in the $^{{4}}\text {F}_{{3/2}}$ state. It is determined by the fluorescent lifetime and fluorescence effective bandwidth of this state. $ \alpha $ is the attenuation at laser wavelength. In order to obtain a high gain coefficient, large stimulated emission cross section and long fluorescent lifetime are preferred.

The stimulated emission cross section of N31 glass is higher than that of LHG-8 glass and close to that of LG-770 glass. In order to suppress the damage from self focus due to the optical nonlinear effect at high peak energy fluence, the nonlinear refractive index n $ _{{2}}$ of neodymium phosphate laser glass should be controlled. From Table 1 it is seen that n $ _{{2}}$ is below 1.2  $\times $   $10^{{-13}}$ esu for these Nd:phosphate glasses.

The laser gain curves of N3122 and N3130 glasses, with 2.2wt% and 3.0wt% $\text {Nd}_{{2}}\text {O}_{{3}}$ doping concentration, were detected at various xenon lamp pumping voltages. The fluorescence lifetime and optical loss at 1053 nm will have an important influence on the small signal gain. Only samples with an optical loss of 0.1–0.15%  $\text {cm}^{{-1}}$ and a lifetime of 340  $\rm \mu $ s (for 2.2wt%) or 320  $\rm \mu $ s (for 3.0wt% ) were chosen for measurement. The results, shown in Figure 1, were detected by the same experimental setup and under the same pumping conditions. It clearly indicates that the small signal gain of N31 neodymium phosphate laser glass increases with $\text {Nd}_{{2}}\text {O}_{{3}}$ concentration.

Figure 1. Gain profiles of N3122 and N3130 glass rods of size $ \Phi $ $\times $  162 mm at various xenon lamp pumping voltages. N3122 and N3130 correspond to the glasses with $\text {Nd}_{{2}}\text {O}_{{3}}$ concentration of 2.2 wt% and 3.0 wt%.

3. Melting technologies of 400 mm large aperture N31 phosphate laser glass

It is well known that most of the key parameters of laser glass such as fluorescent lifetime, number of platinum inclusions, bubble and optical homogeneity, birefringence, optical attenuation at lasing wavelength, residual $\text {OH}^{{-}}$ , and absorption at 400 nm are determined by the fabrication technology. The fabrication process of a laser glass slab includes melting, forming, rough annealing, fine annealing, and edge cladding. The fabrication technology, especially the melting technology, is very important in ensuring the quality of laser glass. An N31 glass rod with diameter 90 mm and a slab with a clear aperture of 400 mm have been fabricated in SIOM.

The melting technology of N31 glass has been explored since the mid 1990s, and several fabrication technologies concerning pot melting of N31 laser glass were developed in early 2000. A patented pot melting technology has been established instead of traditional two-step melting[Reference Zhang, Mao, Chen, Ying, Wang, Zhou, Zhu and Jin10]. The glass melt was directly flowed into a platinum crucible to refine and homogenize after the primary melting and dehydration in a refractory crucible. This patented pot melting method ensures a lower degree of contamination by impurities and high efficiency of dehydration.

High purity raw materials with Fe, Cu, Cr, Ni, and V trace elements (less than 3 ppm) have been domestically fabricated. Through the controlling of the purity of raw materials and melting processing, the total amount of transition metal oxides is less than 10 ppm in N31 glass. Research has been done on the effect of Fe and Cu impurities on the optical attenuation of N31 glass[Reference Xu, Li, Hu and Chen11, Reference Xu, Li, Hu and Chen12]. It is found that the most harmful trace element is copper ions, which can seriously affect the optical absorption at laser wavelength even at an amount of only several tens of ppb in glass[Reference Xu, Li, Hu and Chen12]. The high purity raw materials and patented pot melting technology make the attenuation at lasing wavelength lower than 0.15%  $\text {cm}^{{-1}}$ . Using the reactive atmosphere processing (RAP) dehydration method[Reference Jiang, Zhang, Xu, Ma, Ying, Mao, Mao and Li6, Reference Zhuo, Xu and Jiang13], the absorption at 3000  $\text {cm}^{{-1}}$ can be controlled to be less than $1\ \text {cm}^{{-1}}$ in N31 glass produced by pot melting. Platinum inclusions were removed by controlling the redox condition of glass melting in order to ionize the metallic platinum[Reference Zhou, Hu, Jiang, Mao and Zhang14].

The pot melting efficiency is too low to manufacture thousands of laser glass slabs. Since 2006, research on continuous melting technology of N31 glass has been carried out. The continuous melting technology of large aperture laser glass is more complicated than that of traditional optical glass due to its special technical parameters. Based on the matured laser glass fabrication technology of pot melting[Reference Zhang, Mao, Chen, Ying, Wang, Zhou, Zhu and Jin10] as well as theoretical and small scale experimental modeling[Reference Tang, Hu and Gan15, Reference Tang, Hu, Ying, Jin and Gan16], we successfully developed a continuous melting technology for N31 laser glass[Reference Tang, Wang and Hu17].

The continuous melting line of N31 laser glass consists of an interconnected melter, conditioner, refiner, homogenizer, forming, and annealing lehr. Figure 2 shows the N31 glass running from the annealing lehr in a continuous melting line. Large size N31 glass with thickness greater than 50 mm and width of about 500 mm was formed through a platinum pipe into a special mold. A series of technical issues has been overcome in which the greatest challenges are melting batched raw materials with low contamination from refractory materials, dehydration, forming, and fracture in the annealing lehr. Now 400 mm large aperture N31 laser glass can be fabricated by both pot melting and continuous melting in SIOM.

Figure 2. Large size N31 glass running from the annealing lehr of a continuous melting line.

Table 2. Parameters of mass production N3135 glass.

Table 2 lists the main parameters of mass produced N31 glass with 3.5wt% $\text {Nd}_{{2}}\text {O}_{{3}}$ (denoted N3135). The absorption coefficients at 3333 nm $(3000\ \text {cm}^{{-1}})$ and 400 nm were measured with a commercial Nicolet 6700 FTIR Infrared Spectrometer and Lambda UV/VIS/NIR 1050Spectrophotometers with a glass sample of size 10  $\times $  10  $\times $   $20\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$ . The loss at lasing wavelength was measured with a self-made double beam spectrometer using a Nd:YAG laser using a glass rod of size $\Phi $ $\times $   $160\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$ . The fluorescence lifetime was measured with an Edinburgh FLSP920 time resolved fluorescence spectrometer with a glass sample of size 10  $\times $  10  $\times $   $10\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$ . The refractive index of the glass at a wavelength of 587.6 nm was measured with a Shimadzu KPR-2000 Refractometer. The optical homogeneity of the glass slab was measured and calculated using a Zygo $24^{\prime \prime }$ MST interferometer. A 650 nm laser diode was used to measure the platinum inclusions of full size 400 mm aperture N31 glass slab. A $\text {TEM}_{{00}}$ Nd:YAG laser with a pulse width of 12 ns was used to detect the bulk laser damage threshold of N3135 glass.

In the measurement of the single shot laser induced bulk damage threshold (bulk LIDT), ISO 11254-1 was taken as a standard[18]. Because the polished surface is the weakest part of the glass sample under laser radiation, the laser beam was focused into the sample by a lens with 100 mm focal length to evaluate the bulk LIDT. The spot size was measured with a beam analyzer, and the effective spot area was about $0.02\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ . The test error of the spot size is about 25% because of the highly convergent beam. The laser energy on the target was controlled by an attenuator, and the pulse energy was recorded for each shot by an energy meter from a split-off portion of the beam. The fluctuation of output energy was 3%. A He–Ne laser was used to monitor the glass sample, and high sensitivity on-line damage detection was performed by using a microscopy system. Under the condition of 12 ns pulse width, the damage threshold is around 85.2–86.2  $\text {J/cm}^{{2}}$ . Accordingly, the calculated threshold for N3135 neodymium phosphate laser glass is around 42.6-43.2  $\text {J/cm}^{{2}}$ under a 3 ns laser radiation.

Figure 3. Gain coefficient of 400 mm aperture N3135 glass slabs from pot melting and continuous melting.

Figure 3 shows a comparison of the gain coefficient of N3135 glasses produced by pot melting and continuous melting. A 4  $\times $  2  $\times $  3 amplifier module, where the $n$   $\times $   $m$   $\times $   $q$ designation denotes the slab number (height  $\times $  width  $\times $  length) of parallel amplifying channels, was used to measure the small signal gain coefficient. The tested rectangular glass slabs of 810  $\times $  460  $\times $   $40\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$ were placed in the amplifier module and oriented at the Brewster angle with respect to the input beam with aperture of 380  $\times $   $380\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ , respectively. The central flashlamps cassettes with eight flashlamps pump glass slabs in both directions, while two sided flashlamp cassettes, each with six flashlamps and large silver reflectors, pump glass slabs in one direction. These flashlamps are configured as 20 circuits, with each circuit having two flashlamps in series. The operating voltage is from 15 to 23.5 kV, the capacitance is 308  $\rm \mu $ F per circuit, and the duration of discharge is 360  $\rm \mu $ s. When the charge voltage is 23.5 kV, the power condition module will deliver nominally 92 kJ of energy to each flashlamp pair during the main discharge pulse. In Figure 3, it can been seen that the N3135 laser glasses produced by the pot melting and continuous melting techniques provide nearly the same gain performance.

A typical 633 nm transmitted wavefront of 400 mm aperture N3135 laser glass, which was measured by Zygo interferometer with a test aperture of 600 mm, is shown in Figure 4. To measure the optical homogeneity of one 810  $\times $  460  $\times $   $43.7\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$ glass slab with a wedge angle of $1^{\prime }$ $5^{\prime }$ , a four-step procedure [Reference Schwider, Burow, Elssner and Spolaczyk19] was done on the digital phase-shift Fizeau interferometer, for both the left and the right part of the slab. Figure 4 shows the 633 nm transmitted wavefront of the left and the right parts of the same glass slab. The peak and valley (PV) data shown in Figure 4 are the results obtained by subtracting the PV of two reflection surfaces of the slab, as well as PV of the empty cavity of the interferometer, by the same 400 mm aperture testing laser beam normal to the slab surface. In the light of the PV values shown in Figures 4a and 4b, the optical homogeneity $\Delta $ n of the slab can be estimated by $ \Delta n =$ PV * 632.8 nm / $t$ , where $t$ is the thickness of the slab. Thus, the optical homogeneity of the refractive index is 2.6  $\times $   $10^{{-6}}$ and 2.5.  $\times $   $10^{{-6}}$ , for the left and right 400  $\times $   $400\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ aperture of the N3135 slab, respectively. The testing precision of optical homogeneity by this four-step procedure method is about 1  $\times $   $10^{{-6}}$ .

Figure 4. 633 nm transmitted wavefront of a N3135 glass slab of size 810  $\times $  460  $\times $   $43.7\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$ . (a) The left part of 400  $\times $   $400\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ and (b) the right part of 400  $\times $   $400\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ .

4. Edge cladding of N31 phosphate laser glass

Edge cladding is an important technology to suppress the amplified stimulated emission ASE and to ensure the gain properties of large size Nd:phosphate glass. $\text {Cu}^{{2+}}$ ion doped phosphate glass with a precise refractive index match to N31 laser glass has been designed as a cladding glass. A kind of self-developed epoxy adhesive agent with precise refractive index match to both the laser glass and the cladding glass is used to bond these two glasses. It provides an adhesive strength of 18 MPa. This adhesive agent has been tested to be highly resistant to high intensity pump and laser power as well as humid environments in the polishing process.

The $\text {Cu}^{{2+}}$ doping level is limited by the temperature rise at the interface between the cladding glass and the laser glass. This temperature rise is due to strong absorption of ASE energy of a laser pulse. The temperature rise $ \Delta T$ after a laser shot can be expressed by

(2) $$\begin {equation} \Delta T(x) = \frac {\beta I_{O} }{\rho \cdot C_{P} }\exp (-\beta x),\label {eq2} \end {equation}$$

where $ x$ is the distance from the interface to the inside of laser glass. $I_{{0}}$ is the pumping energy fluence. $ \rho $ is the density of the cladding glass. $\text {C}_{{p}}$ is heat capacity. $\beta $ is absorption coefficient of cladding glass at 1  $\rm \mu $ m. The absorption coefficient of $\text {Cu}^{{2+}}$ doped cladding glass is usually 3–5  $\text {cm}^{{-1}}$ at 1053 nm to suppress the temperature rise between the interface of the cladding and laser glasses. A small temperature rise can limit the thermal stress around the interface between the cladding glass and the laser glass after a laser shot.

A patented edge cladding technique has been developed for large aperture N31 laser glass[Reference Meng, Tang, Hu, Wen, Chen, Chen and Hu20]. It has been applied in the fabrication of large aperture N31 laser glass slab. More than 10,000 shots of high energy fluence have been applied in our edge cladding N31 glass slab in the Shen Guang facility.

Figure 5. The stress distribution of 400 mm aperture N31 glass slab before and after cladding.

The residual stress caused by edge cladding is kept small by the proper choice of adhesive agent and its curing parameters. Figure 5 shows the averaged stress distribution within 50 mm distance to the interface of the cladding for a 400 mm aperture N31 laser glass slab before and after cladding, which was scanned with a Strain Optics DIAS 1600 stress analyzer. The test area is 70  $\times $   $100\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ for one time scanning. In the measurement, the polarized beam is normal to the surface of the slab. The averaged result indicates that this patented cladding technique does not induce additional stress inside the neodymium glass 12 mm away from the interface between the neodymium glass and the cladding glass.

Figure 6. 400 mm aperture N31 glass slabs before installation.

Figure 6 shows 400 mm aperture N31 laser glass slabs with edge cladding after fine polishing and cleaning. These glass slabs have been successfully applied in the Shen Guang facility.

5. Conclusions

The main composition and properties of N31 Nd-doped phosphate laser glass are reported. Three key techniques for laser glass fabrication (pot melting, continuous melting, and edge cladding) have been developed in Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics. The glass parameters and laser gain of N3135 phosphate glass produced by continuous melting are almost the same as those obtained by pot melting. 400 mm clear aperture N31 glass slabs with high quality have been fabricated for building the Shen Guang high peak power laser facilities in China.

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Figure 0

Table 1. Main parameters of neodymium phosphate laser glasses from Hoya[1], Schott[1], Russia (GOI)[4, 9], and SIOM.

Figure 1

Figure 1. Gain profiles of N3122 and N3130 glass rods of size $ \Phi $$\times $ 162 mm at various xenon lamp pumping voltages. N3122 and N3130 correspond to the glasses with $\text {Nd}_{{2}}\text {O}_{{3}}$ concentration of 2.2 wt% and 3.0 wt%.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Large size N31 glass running from the annealing lehr of a continuous melting line.

Figure 3

Table 2. Parameters of mass production N3135 glass.

Figure 4

Figure 3. Gain coefficient of 400 mm aperture N3135 glass slabs from pot melting and continuous melting.

Figure 5

Figure 4. 633 nm transmitted wavefront of a N3135 glass slab of size 810 $\times $ 460 $\times $ $43.7\ \text {mm}^{{3}}$. (a) The left part of 400 $\times $ $400\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$ and (b) the right part of 400 $\times $ $400\ \text {mm}^{{2}}$.

Figure 6

Figure 5. The stress distribution of 400 mm aperture N31 glass slab before and after cladding.

Figure 7

Figure 6. 400 mm aperture N31 glass slabs before installation.

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