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Compact ps-pulse laser source with free adjustable repetition rate and nJ pulse energy on microbench
A. Klehr, A. Liero, Th. Hoffmann, S. Schwertfeger, H. Wenzel, G. Erbert, W. Heinrich and G. Tränkle
Ferdinand-Braun-Institut, Leibniz-Institut für Höchstfrequenztechnik, Gustav-Kirchhoff-Strasse 4, 12489 Berlin, Germany
Published in:
Proc. SPIE, vol. 7953, no. 79531D (2011).
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Abstract:
A new compact picosecond light source is presented. It consists of a master oscillator, an ultra fast pulse picker
element and integrated high-frequency electronics arranged on a micro bench with a footprint of 5 cm x 4 cm.
The master oscillator is a 10 mm long laser consisting of 200 µm long saturable absorber, 1500 µm long gain,
8000 µm long cavity, 200 µm long DBR and 100 µm long monitor sections. Pulses with a width of 7 - 10 ps
(depending on output power) and a peak power of 1 W are generated by hybrid mode locking. Despite the 10 mm
long cavity, the repetition rate is still 4.3 GHz, which is too high for many applications. In order to reduce
the repetition rate to values between 1 kHz and 100 MHz, one has to pick single pulses out of the continuous
pulse sequence generated by the mode-locked laser. For this purpose a semiconductor pulse picking element
based on a ridge waveguide, which acts as an optical gate, and a tapered section for pulse amplification is
developed. Selective pulse picking with a free choice of the repetition rate is achieved by driving the RW section
by a high frequency GaN high-electron mobility transistor with low capacitances and high current density. If a
current pulse with a width of about 200 ps (smaller than the spacing of the pulses) is injected, the RW section
becomes transparent and an injected optical pulse can pass the RW section. This pulse is subsequently amplified
by injecting short current pulses with a width of 2 ns and a peak current up to 20 A into the tapered section.
Pulse energies in the nJ range at a frequency of 16 MHz are obtained.
Index Terms:
semiconductor laser, DBR laser, mode locking, high power optical pulse generation, pulse picking.
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