Progress of the injection laser system of SG-II Download: 657次
1 Introduction
Inertial confinement fusion (ICF) is thought to be a promising approach to produce clean energy. The utilization of a solid-state high power laser driver is one of the key elements involved in achieving ICF[1]. The key requirements for the high power laser driver are high energy, uniform focal spot, agile temporal pulse shape, time synchronization control, and beam target coupling. Achievement of these requirements is based on a very complex facility. As a result, all ICF laser drivers include a front end, pre-amplifier, main amplifier, transport, optics assembly (for frequency conversion, and focusing on the target chamber center), etc., as shown in Figure
The front end of the SG-II has four functions[1, 9–11].
The pre-amplifier has three main functions.
All the technologies of the injection laser system including the front end and pre-amplifier are implemented to facilitate convenient and effective globe control of the laser characters[1–5, 9–11], including frequency domain, time domain, spatial domain, etc.
2 The injection laser system of SG-II
2.1 The first generation of the injection laser system of SG
During the early period of construction of SG high power laser facility, the front end was based on a solid-state laser operating in the time domain, that is, the shaped laser pulse had a smooth time envelope and there was synchronization between different laser beams.
In the 1990s, laser diode (LD) pumped single-longitudinal-mode lasers and laser trigger synchronization were adopted by the SG facility. Four key technologies were required, which presented significant challenges during implementation and included single-longitudinal seed lasers, laser pulse waveform shaping technology, short pulse seed lasers, and synchronization between long nanosecond shaped lasers and short pulse lasers. These challenges were eventually effectively addressed.
Fig. 2. The early integrated waveguide front-end system and pre-amplifier of SG-II (AMP: amplifier).
The primary function of the seed laser source is to acquire a smooth time envelope to avoid damage to the optical mirrors caused by abnormally high peak laser outputs. The physical and technological challenges associated with cavity length control of the -switched single-mode oscillator were solved, and the laser can operate with a stable single mode for a long time period[12]. The shaped electric pulse, which was produced by a high-voltage electrical pulse transmitted through the micro-strip line, was used to trigger a Pockels electrical switch to achieve a shaped laser pulse[13].
Short pulse laser output was realized using a Nd:YAG passive mode locking technique[14]. Based on the characteristics of the GaAs photoconductive switching resistors with a linear increase in the intensity of illumination, high sensitivity and ultrafast laser positive feedback loops were developed for the first time. On this basis, the mode locking of the Nd:YAG laser, automatic tracking of the selection of single-longitudinal modes and switching were realized. The synchronization accuracy between the nanosecond laser and the picosecond laser is in the range of nanosecond orders of magnitude[14–16].
The above work played a key role in the successful development of SG-I and SG-II devices.
2.2 The second generation of the injection laser system
With the development of communication technology, the integrated waveguide front-end system was developed for the first time in China[11, 17]. The SG-II series of new front-end prototypes, with the integration of a single-longitudinal fiber laser[18, 19], fiber amplifier, high-speed integrated waveguide modulator[20], etc., have been featured in the SG-II since 2004 as shown in Figure
In recent years, with the increasing demand for physical experiments and the development of unit and integrated technology, high-precision control of synchronization, spectrum, time–power curve, polarization, near field, and energy stability, the function and scale of injection laser systems have expanded.
3 The functions of injection laser system of SG-II
The current SG-II series includes two bundles of eight beams of long nanosecond shaped pulses in addition to a 9th beam. The 9th beam is a diagnostic laser pulse, which can output either a long nanosecond shaped laser pulse or a short picosecond pulse as a high-energy PW laser or a diagnostics laser.
To meet the demands of the SG-II facility, the injection laser system has numerous functions which can be seen in Figure
The injection laser system of the SG-II provides 9 beams to the SG-II facility. The front end provides 6 beams of nanosecond shaped laser pulses for the SG-II series operated at 1053.02 nm. This is the center of the gain spectrum of the -doped amplifier, which is utilized to decrease the FM-to-AM effect (amplitude modulation caused by frequency modulation)[22]. Two nanosecond beams are used for the SG-II and SG-II upgrade. The fifth and sixth nanosecond shaped pulse provides a 100 ps–25 ns long pulse for the 9th beam, which allows it to act as a diagnostic laser to separately serve the SG-II and SG-II upgrade. The 7th beam provides a 30 ps/80 ps laser pulse for the 9th beam, and also acts as a diagnostic laser. The 8th beam provides a nanosecond single frequency pump source for the optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification (OPCPA), which is part of the front end of PW system. The 9th beam was also used to provide the mode-locked short pulse seed source for the OPCPA.
The synchronization unit is used to facilitate the synchronization between short and long shaped pulses.
In addition, the injection laser system provides optical and electric timescales for physical experiments.
In order to achieve laser characteristics control, we developed several technologies including frequency domain control, time domain control, spatial shaping control and pre-amplifier technologies since the beginning of the SG facility.
The specifications of the SG-II injection laser system are shown in Table
Table 1. The specifications of SG-II.
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4 The progress of key technologies
4.1 Frequency domain control technology
The frequency domain control unit addresses three critical issues. The first is the acquisition of a single frequency laser output to achieve a smooth waveform in time domain. The second is the broadening of the spectrum to decrease the spectral power density in order to suppress the transverse stimulated Brillouin scattering (TSBS) effect. This phenomenon may cause damage to the large aperture optics components. The third is the broadening of the spectrum with high-frequency to meet the demands of focal spot smoothing by spectral dispersion.
In order to acquire smooth waveforms, the single frequency laser was used to minimize interference modulation[18, 19, 23]. The bandwidth of the single frequency is less than 100 kHz[11] and it induces TSBS at the large aperture optics which results in damage[24, 25]. Therefore, the single frequency, narrow bandwidth laser should be broadened to at least 0.1 nm to suppress TSBS and to protect the large aperture optics component. This can be accomplished using a phase modulator[1, 11, 26, 27].
In addition, in order to provide a smooth focal spot in a predetermined integration time, such that the instability invoked by laser–plasma interaction (LPI) is suppressed, a high-frequency phase modulation technology was developed[1, 26–29]. Moreover, two-dimensional SSD[30, 31] or multi-frequency modulation was investigated in this regard[32, 33].
Fig. 4. (a) The spectrum of a single frequency output; (b) the broadened spectrum with 3 GHz phase modulation; (c) the broadened spectrum with 22 GHz modulation; (d) the broadened spectrum with modulation.
Fig. 5. (a) The relationship between the effective length and the actual length of the crystal under different velocity matching conditions (the design frequency is 10.5 GHz, the crystal is lithium niobate). (b) The structure of the resonant cavity modulator based on the cut-off waveguide (A: the injection waveguide; B, D: cutoff waveguide; C: electro-optic crystal).
Table 2. The key parameters of the bulk phase modulators of SG-II and OMEGA.
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Figure
Multi-dimensional spectrum dispersion smoothing would further improve the focal spot smoothing[31, 35]. The high-frequency bulk phase modulator was developed by our team, as a key component of multi-dimensional spectrum dispersion[35].
4.1.1 The bulk modulator
One of the most important parameters for evaluating the efficiency of high-frequency bulk phase modulators is the modulation depth (Table
A cut-off waveguide based on the resonator cavity modulator design was adopted and the structure is shown in Figure
We have developed high-frequency bulk phase modulators with 3.25 GHz and 10.302 GHz modulation frequencies, a maximum modulation bandwidth of approximately 6.7 Å240 W (1 Å nm), and a maximum aperture of approximately (Figure
4.1.2 Fail-safe system for the spectrum broadening
To avoid damage to the large diameter optical components caused by the TSBS under high-energy density[38], there are two technical difficulties. The first is that discrimination between the spectrally broadened signal and the unmodulated signal is challenging. The second is the timely generation of the control signal for the subsequent device to ensure that the shut-off time of the laser is sufficiently short when spectrum broadening fails.
In order to shut down the laser in case the spectrum broadened system failed, monitor and safety equipment were developed by our team to improve the operational safety of the high power laser facility.
In this equipment, a narrow-band filter was used to monitor the laser spectrum, as shown in Figure
4.1.3 High-resolution single-shot spectrometer
The laser spectrum needs to be accurately tested for accurate frequency control. However, it is difficult to obtain high-resolution spectral information for a single-shot laser pulse using currently available commercial spectrometers.
A set of gratings was used to build such a spectrometer by our team, which can be sampled using a fiber as shown in Figure
Fig. 8. (a) High-resolution single-shot spectrometer prototype; (b) the calibration results with the wavelength meter.
The key parameters of the single-shot spectrometer include:
The spectral width of the front-end system was measured by the spectrometer as shown in Figure
Fig. 9. The laser spectrum (bandwidth is 0.52 nm) which was measured using a home-made single-shot spectrometer.
The successful development of a high-resolution single-shot spectrometer provides an important means of testing the spectral control techniques of high power laser devices.
4.2 Time domain control technology
Time domain control technology includes synchronization and waveform (that is the time–power curve) control.
For synchronization control, there are two technology routes. The first is the optically driven synchronization technology. The second is the homologous clock-lock, phase-locked frequency synchronization technology.
For the waveform control, a single-longitudinal-mode laser with amplitude waveguide modulator was utilized to achieve smooth waveform shaping. The FM-to-AM effect, which is caused by polarization-mode dispersion and group velocity dispersion, needs to be effectively controlled during the process.
4.2.1 The synchronization control technology
4.2.1.1 Optical driven synchronization technology
The high-precision and high-stability synchronization performance of different laser beams is a key requirement for active diagnosis, fast ignition research and high-efficiency implosion studies. Therefore, accurate synchronization of different laser beams is one of the most important technical indicators of the front-end subsystem of the SG-II. Optically triggered synchronization technology was proposed to achieve precise synchronization between hundred picosecond pulses and nanosecond laser pulses[11, 21]. The main difficulty involves obtaining a sufficiently large amplitude, width and fast-rising edge for the high stability trigger signal so that the shaping pulse unit works in a highly stable time trigger state.
For synchronization in high power laser systems, not only is the synchronization between the main nanosecond laser pulse and the diagnostic picosecond pulse involved, but also the synchronization between the main laser pulse and the diagnostic instrument.
In the SG-II series, dual oscillators were separately used as laser sources for the main laser and the diagnostic laser. Optical trigger technology was used to achieve synchronization. In the early SG-II, the optical trigger module included a four-stage amplifier and a Si photoconductive switch, as shown in Figures
Fig. 10. The early synchronization scheme of SG-II between the nanosecond shaped laser and the short pulse picosecond laser.
However, during operation, synchronization is not stable over the long term and this process can degrade to as high as 400 ps (PV), due to the instability of the two-pass double head Nd:YLF amplifier. This directly depends on the stability of the picosecond laser and the coupling injection stability. In addition, since the output electrical pulse amplitude is linearly dependent on the output of the Nd:YLF amplifier, this signal is also not stable. When the trigger time for the nanosecond shaping system is changed, this influences the synchronization between the short pulse laser and the shaped nanosecond laser. So the stability of the short pulse laser and Nd:YLF amplifier has a great influence on the synchronization stability of the main and diagnostic pulses.
Fig. 12. Synchronization stability testing results for (a) 4 minutes and (b) 2 hours between the nanosecond laser and the picosecond pulse laser.
In order to solve this problem, the fiber stacker, high-speed electronics, and analog to digital conversion technology were adopted as shown in Figure
To test the level of synchronization, a 3 dB coupler was used to couple the shaped laser pulse and the short laser pulse to the same fiber. This signal was converted into an electrical signal using PIN(GD4961T) and tested using an oscillator (Tek,TDS6124C). The acquired data is shown in Figure
4.2.1.2 Homologous clock-lock, phase-locked frequency synchronization technology
Since the optical-triggered synchronization technique is limited by the stability of the mode-locked laser sequence, changes in the cavity length of the mode-locked laser caused by temperature shifts lead to changes in the repetition frequency (time interval between pulses). Thus, the long-term stability of the system’s long and short pulse synchronization accuracy is affected. Thus, a homogeneous clock lock, which clamps the laser frequency of the high-precision synchronization program was proposed as shown in Figure
Physical experiments require high-precision synchronous trigger signals, in addition to optical and electric scale signals, for multi-channel physical test diagnosis. The electric scale signals produced by the pulse picker and the optical–electrical conversion of the femtosecond laser pulse signal are shown in Figure
4.2.2 The optical pulse shaping technology of injection shaped laser sources
In order to acquire smooth laser pulse envelopes, the front end of the SG-II adopted an integrated waveguide modulator shaping system in combination with an electrical waveform generator[17, 20, 41–43], as shown in Figure
The integrated waveguide modulator can be controlled using an electric waveform generator. There are three kinds of electric waveform shaping technologies. The first is electric pulse stacker[43, 44], which is based on a micro-wave GaAs-FET, but ripple is a problem and the precise pulse shape near the peak of the pulse cannot be maintained[44]. The second is the aperture-coupled strip line (ACSL), which consists of two strip-lines coupled through an aperture in their common ground plane[11, 20, 41, 42]. The ACSL pulse shaping technology can accurately acquire stable laser pulse envelopes without ripple waves for 120 ps–3 ns. The longest pulse can be as much as 8 ns[11]. However, for the longer pulses, it was difficult to reach the same level of precision. In addition, because the strip line must be processed by photo etching, several days are needed to change the laser pulse waveform. The third is arbitrary electrical waveform generator based on field programmable gate array (FPGA) technology. This approach is sufficiently flexible to be able to adjust the waveform online in real time. However, because the output voltage of the AWG is too small to reach the half-wave voltage of the waveguide modulator, a high-speed electric amplifier must be used and the linear characteristics of this device must be considered. The 4G RF-amplifier is used to achieve more agile waveform shaping and the 10G RF-amplifier is used as the gate pulse amplifier to increase the rise edge.
Using the 2-stage intensity modulator, different kinds of output temporal waveforms can be acquired. The maximum contrast ratio can be greater than 600 : 1 as shown in Figure
Fig. 15. The high contrast temporal waveform (600 : 1). (a) Low amplitude pedestal; (b) high amplitude step.
One of the problems with the approach is the drift of the bias voltage of the intensity modulator, which influences the signal-to-noise ratio of the laser. Shortening the pulse width of the bias voltage load on the amplitude modulator may alleviate the problem. In addition, a separate unit to monitor the signal-to-noise ratio of the intensity modulator in case of drift of the bias voltage should be constructed.
The waveform can be controlled using a closed loop with feedback control as shown in Figure
In the defined operating state (AWG sampling frequency, the bias voltage of the electrical amplifier), the state of the pulse shaping system is first calibrated, including the output characteristic curve of the amplitude modulator and the amplification characteristics of the electric amplifier. According to the required regenerative output waveform, the regenerative injection pulse waveform is obtained by solving the inverse problem of regenerative amplification. According to the output characteristic curve of the amplitude modulator and the amplification characteristic curve of the electric amplifier, the AWG shaping electric pulse is obtained as the initial condition of pulse shaping.
The closed-loop control is adopted in the shaping process to reduce the influence of noise, calibration error, and nonlinearity of the electric amplifier on the shaping precision. Each iteration process varies the pulse voltages according to the deviation between the target power and the measured power.
The correction factor in this iterative process is dynamically adjusted with the change of the target powers and . In the pulse shaping process, the iterative process is repeated until the convergence criterion is implemented. In the iterative process, the integral error is expressed as
The following figure shows the results of Haan pulse shaping. For the case of the pre-injection waveform and AWG closed-loop deviation with the use of a 2 ns window error analysis, the closed-loop pulse waveform deviation is less than 10% and 3% separately within the entire window, and within the main pulse as shown in Figure
Figure
Fig. 17. (a) The main amplifier output waveform; (b) the actual output and the expected output deviation.
4.2.3 FM-to-AM effect suppression technology
Due to the need to suppress the TSBS to protect the large aperture optics and for uniformity of the focal spot, spectrum broadened technology was used in the high power laser systems, such as the NIF, OMEGA, LMJ and SG series[1–5, 9–11, 24–29]. However, after spectral broadening, the discrepancy of the transmission rate of the spectral phase or amplitude leads to modulation of the time waveform, which is an FM-to-AM effect[22, 45–52].
In high power laser systems, the main causes of FM-to-AM include group dispersion, polarization-mode dispersion[51], gain narrowing, interference effect caused by weak reflection of the optical components, and harmonic conversion processes[52].
The FM-to-AM effect causes two primary problems for high power laser systems. Firstly, it influences the precise control of the laser waveform, which is the key to the power balance of the laser facility. Secondly, it decreases the safety operation fluency of target optics because of the ability to produce higher power in a short distance, which can destroy the optical components.
In the case of the phase transmission rate discrepancy, a reduction of the transmission dispersion or pre-compensation of the remainder dispersion can effectively address the problem.
There are several different spectrum pre-compensation schemes for the NIF[1, 10, 22, 48] and LMJ[50, 52].
The NIF adopted a chirp fiber grating to pre-compensate the spectrum dispersion[9]. The air F–P (Fabry–Perot interferometer) was used to pre-compensate the gain narrowing effect[9]. It is difficult to adjust the F–P adopted by the NIF and it is not stable. According to reports in 2012, 18 hours was required to adjust the pre-compensation when the laser wavelength was changed[48]. Polarization-mode dispersion of maintaining-fiber was then used to achieve AM compensation in the 48 beams of the front-end system, which greatly reduced the AM suppression control time[48]. In 2016[1], the NIF reported that the front end of the system in addition to the gain fiber realized single polarization fiber transmission. Single polarization fiber is characterized by a fast axis cut-off, that is, it acts as an optical fiber polarizer. As the transmission distance increases, the laser optical signal transmitted along the fast axis will dissipate, thus avoiding AM due to polarization-mode dispersion. The NIF reported in October 2016[53] on a front-end system gain fiber which also achieved single polarization. Since then, the front-end system of the NIF has fully realized single polarization transmission to fundamentally suppress the FM-to-AM effect due to polarization-mode dispersion. In addition, a birefringent crystal was added to the regenerative amplifier to pre-compensate the spectral loss caused by the gain narrowing of the amplifiers[1]. The goal of the NIF is to eliminate the need for active FM-to-AM suppression measures.
Fig. 18. (a) The output laser waveform of Nd-doped regenerative amplifier and (b) the output laser waveform of one beam of SG-II at 5000 J, (0.3 nm).
The PM fiber was used by the LMJ to maintain a highly stable single polarization output; however, the FM-to-AM effect is a serious concern because of polarization-mode coupling[50, 51]. The polarization dispersion was pre-compensated by controlling the temperature of PM fiber, which has been demonstrated to decrease the FM-to-AM effect. The key is that the precision control of the temperature of the PM fiber should reach . However, for a polarization-maintaining fiber, the coupling between the fiber fast axis and the slow axis is subject to external temperature and stress. Therefore, the AM effect due to polarization-mode dispersion will have random fluctuations. Through theoretical calculations and experimental testing, the FM-to-AM random fluctuations due to polarization-mode coupling of the PM fiber can approximate 20%[54].
For mercury, a spatial modulator was used to shape the spectral agility, but the pixel structure limited the shaping ability for multi-frequency modulation. In addition, the system is complex for dispersion beams[47].
For the SG-II series high power laser systems, the transmission fiber was a single-mode fiber for 1053 nm, to avoid random FM-to-AM fluctuations caused by the coupling between the fiber fast axis and the slow axis of the PM fiber. The polarization stability of the laser output was controlled by an active polarization controller. In order to easily control the spectrum and fail-safe feedback system, the phase modulator was set between the AO chopper and the pulse shaping unit. Therefore, the spectrum broadened laser was transmitted along more than 50 m of single-mode fiber before entering into the -glass regenerative amplifier. For the polarization dependent discrepancy, the worst AM can be greater than 20%, but this can be reduced to less than 5% using polarization control.
The FM-to-AM effect was tested using a high current photoelectric tube and an oscillator (4G, DPO70404) at the output of a regenerative amplifier, as shown in Figure
At first, there was concern that the gain narrowing and the polarization optics of the pre-amplifier and main amplifier would cause or deteriorate the FM-to-AM effect. The output waveforms of the pre-amplifier and the main amplifier were both tested as shown in Figure
In the 1990s, the 46th Research Institute of China Electronics Technology Group Corporation began to produce single-polarized fiber. In 2016, a home-made single-polarized fiber was adopted to produce intensity modulators, AO choppers, couplers, wavelength division multiplexers, isolators, filters and other single polarization fiber devices. For the first time in China, a front-end system was built based on single polarization transmission fibers[54]. The spectrum output from this system is spectrally broadened by both the phase modulation at 3 GHz and the phase modulation at 22 GHz. The widened spectrum is shown in Figure
Fig. 20. (a) The output waveform of the polarization-maintaining front-end system; (b) the output waveform of the single polarization front-end system.
For comparison, we also built a front-end system based on a polarization-maintaining fiber[54]. The AM of this fiber front-end system approaches 20%. In addition, the single polarization front-end AM is 2.3%, as shown in Figure
Fig. 21. Phase modulation-to-amplitude modulation real-time monitoring software interface.
Using automatic FM-to-AM detection technology[55], single polarization transmission and seed source output AM changes are monitored in real time, as shown in Figure
Fig. 22. FM-to-AM changes of single polarization front-end system (a) for 5 minutes and (b) for 3 hours.
At this point, the front-end system based on a single polarization transmission fiber was used to verify the inhibition of the polarization dispersion and can achieve long-term stability. At the same time, the home-made single polarization fiber device processing technique was also verified.
As such the front end of SG-II with a single polarization transmission fiber can be implemented.
4.3 Near-field spatial shaping technology
The spatial shaping system has three functions: the first is to produce a soft aperture to avoid Fresnel diffraction and to act as the initial object surface of the entire laser system; the second is to pre-compensate the spatial dependent gain of the amplifiers; and the third is to pre-block the hot spot of the laser or the damage sites of the large aperture optics. The advancement in near-field spatial shaping technology was used to improve the operating flux level of the high power laser system and to decrease both the construction and the operational cost.
There are several technical difficulties associated with near-field spatial intensity control devices which include: high-resolution spatial intensity control resolution, low wavefront distortion, high transmittance and high damage threshold.
NIF and OMEGA both use serrated masks to act as soft-edge apertures and binary masks in order to pre-compensate for the spatial dependent gain of the amplifiers[56–59]. The serrated and binary masks used was the chromate coat, which has a low damage threshold ()[56]. Depending on the binary pixelated arrays of metal pixels[56, 57] and the high-frequency filtering of the spatial filter, accurate spatial intensity distribution can be maintained. In addition, an optically addressed spatial modulator is used to pre-block the defect or damage site of the large aperture optics[60–62].
Given that the damage threshold of the binary mask with the chromate coat is low, we developed high damage threshold binary masks using dielectric films[63]. An optical addressed spatial modulator was also developed to control the spatial distribution in real time[64–67].
4.3.1 High damage threshold binary masks
The pixel size of the chromate coat binary mask can be as large as . If needed, the pixel size can be reduced to , which can be readily achieved using lithography techniques. However, the damage threshold is approximately , which is too low in most cases for a high power laser system.
The top-hat and super-Gaussian serrated apertures[68–70] made of highly reflecting films have been proposed and fabricated[68–70]. In fact, the serrated aperture, as shown in Figure
As shown in Figure
The primary function of the soft-edge mask which includes more accurate and arbitrary intensity distribution control can be accomplished using a binary mask with the unit pixel arrangement design shown in Figure
Fig. 25. The experimental results of the uniform intensity distribution (a) after shaped by anti-Gauss beam mask and the parabola distribution after shaped by pre-compensating binary mask of which the peak/center transmission ratio is 5 : 1. (b) The elliptical near-field distribution using binary mask.
In Figure
In Figure
Fig. 26. (a) The distribution of the binary mask. (b) The distribution of the four-pass amplifier without pre-compensation mask. (c) The output near-field distribution of the four-pass amplifier with pre-compensation mask.
Since the binary mask has a high damage threshold, it can be used to pre-compensate the damage site at the position of a large optical component with a high-energy flux.
As shown in Figure
Fig. 27. (a) The near-field distribution of SG-II-upgrade when operated at 8000 J without the second near-field binary shaping mask. (b) The design graphics of the 2nd near-field binary shaping mask. (c) The near-field distribution of SG-II when operated at 17,600 J with the second near-field binary mask.
Though the binary mask can accurately define the near-field intensity distribution, it cannot control this distribution in real time for long processing cycles. In that case, a spatial modulator is a good choice[59]. However, commercial spatial modulators are limited by their low-energy availability. Optically addressed spatial modulator can achieve high-energy availability without interferometric strips[60–62, 64–67].
4.3.2 Optically addressed spatial modulator[60 –62 , 64 –67 ]
As a transmission and amplitude type spatial light modulator, the optically addressable spatial light modulator has the advantages of high transmittance, high filling factor, no black gate and no diffraction spots in the follow-up optical path, compared with the existing TFT type transmission liquid crystal spatial light modulator. In high power laser systems, the use of modulators can optimize beam quality in real time. In particular, they can block the damage sites or hot spots over time, to enhance the life of the optical components and the operating system flux level of the laser system, thereby enhancing the system cost ratio[60–62].
Fig. 28. (a) Working principle and (b) the inner structure of the integrated optically addressed spatial modulator.
As shown in Figure
Through optimization of the liquid crystal mode, the liquid crystal box technology of the crystal substrate, the design and integrated design of the photosensitive optical imaging system, the following specifications of the optically addressed spatial modulator were achieved. These included a transmission rate of approximately 85% (for 1053 nm), a wavefront deviation of (for ), a damage threshold of , an aperture of the optical valve of and an on–off ratio of 100 : 1[67].
The physical map of the optically addressed modulator is shown in Figure
Fig. 29. (a) Optical addressing liquid crystal spatial light modulator physical map. (b) Near-field spatial intensity distribution control demonstration.
Fig. 30. Near-field intensity distribution control strategy (OALAV: optically addressed liquid addressed valve).
Optically addressed spatial modulators have been used in SG-II series facilities to accurately control the near-field intensity distribution in real time without affecting other parameters of the laser, such as the far field and laser spectrum[67]. A high transmittance renders this kind of transmissive amplitude-mode spatial modulator very useful in many high power/energy laser systems.
Up to now, our laboratory has achieved a flexible near-field intensity control technology, which facilitates both high damage threshold static near-field control components, and online real-time control of the transmission-type spatial light modulator technology. At present, the above two types of devices are used in the SG-II series device. As such, the following near-field intensity distribution control strategy (Figure
The first near-field control component is a binary mask. It is used to produce the soft-edge aperture to avoid Fresnel diffraction and to define the laser beam profile. The second component is an optically addressed spatial modulator, which is used to pre-compensate the spatial dependent gain of the amplifiers. It is also used to pre-block the hot spot of the laser or the damage sites of the large aperture optics. The third component is also a high damage binary mask, which is used to sharpen the near-field intensity edge distribution to improve the system energy utilization and the entire output energy.
In fact, because the size of the filter holes of the spatial filter influences the near-field intensity control resolution, high resistance to damage and flexible near-field spatial intensity distribution control components are needed. We are currently developing high damage threshold liquid crystal spatial light modulators in order to achieve more flexible near-field intensity control.
4.4 Pre-amplifier technology
4.4.1 High gain and high stability : glass regenerative amplifier
To amplify the nanojoule laser to a higher level, we previously adopted a :YLF double-stage amplifier for amplification up to for the eight beams of the SG-II as shown in Figure
Fig. 32. (a) The regenerative amplifier; (b) the output near-field spot; (c) the energy stability of the regenerative amplifier for one day; (d) the square-pulse distortion of the regenerative amplifier.
This amplifier has three advantages which include high gain, high stability and wide spectrum amplification. A high stability is beneficial to maintaining the power balance of the high power laser system. The wide spectrum amplification supports the beam smoothing technologies for the focal spot.
A regenerative amplifier consists of an optical cavity with a gain medium, into which a low-energy seed optical pulse is injected, amplified by several orders of magnitude, and then switched out of the cavity[72, 73].
The configuration of a :glass regenerative amplifier is shown in Figure
The high gain and high stability : glass regenerative amplifier has been in operation in the SG-II series facility for about 7 years.
4.4.2 Single-shot 10 J pre-amplifier
The traditional pre-amplifier system uses a single-shot technical solution; the goal is to provide an appropriate energy, the time waveform, and the appropriate near-field beam distribution of laser pulses. The pre-amplifier system’s program is gradually transitioning from an earlier single-pass cascade amplification regime to a new multi-pass configuration represented by the NIF: regenerative amplifier spatial shaping off-axis quad-pass amplifier[10].
The four-pass amplifier has a simple structure, reliable performance, and small size compared to the multi-stage amplifier. We have completed the prototype development of an off-axis four-pass amplifier as shown in Figure
The total gain is 12,500 with a 0.8 mJ injection laser pulse energy. The near-field distribution of the output beam is square flattened as shown in Figure
Fig. 34. Four-pass amplifier near-field beam spatial distribution. (b) is the one-dimensional distribution of (a).
4.4.3 Repetitive frequency joule neodymium glass amplifier
In high power laser devices, real-time monitoring of time waveforms, spectra, etc. is critical due to the laser beam control of the injection laser system. The output energy of the pre-amplifier section in the case of repetition will effectively improve the efficiency of the system’s automatic collimation and target aiming.
The key technologies of the repetitive frequency joule neodymium glass amplifier include: an appropriate gain medium[75], gain uniformity control, laser head thermal lens effect and thermal backoff effect suppression and compensation, output beam quality control, suppression of ghost image point and self-oscillation within the cavity and so on.
Fig. 35. Four-pass pre-amplifier output focal spot distribution. (a) Two-dimensional distribution; (b) surrounding energy distribution.
Since the neodymium glass gain medium emission cross-sectional area is small, the single-pass small signal gain is low. The use of appropriate multi-pass amplification configuration can reduce the requirements of a single-pass small signal gain.
Based on the transmittance of the spatial shaping unit and the basic output capacity of the regenerative amplifier, which is 10 mJ, the four-pass amplifier only needs to achieve 30 dB gain. This would greatly reduce the system’s design difficulty and thermal effects. The joule-class repetition neodymium glass pre-amplifier system uses a ‘regenerative amplification near-field intensity distribution control four-pass amplification’ as the basic technical configuration. A 1 J @ 1 Hz neodymium glass amplifier using a coaxial four-pass amplifier is shown in Figure
Fig. 37. Near-field intensity distribution (a) without pre-compensation and (b) with pre-compensation.
The amplifier achieved a 1 Hz operation with a 1.2 J output capacity. The main technical indicators include the following[76].
(1) Near-field intensity distribution
The beam size is , and the near-field modulation is 1.2 as shown in Figure
(2) Far-field distribution
In Figure
(3) Output energy and the stability
The output energy is 1.2 J; the stability is 6.6% (PV) and 1.2 (rms) for 30 minutes as shown in Figure
4.5 High signal-to-noise ratio picosecond pulsed light source technology
The OPCPA has the advantages of wide gain bandwidth, high-energy conversion efficiency, good beam quality, short working medium, low heat deposition, low phase distortion and high signal-to-noise ratio. It is the key front-end technology for the future development of high-energy PW laser systems and EW ( W) ultra-high power laser systems[77, 78]. The high gain, high signal-to-noise ratio picosecond OPCPA seed source was developed to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of the entire high power laser system. It was considered from the perspective of the system’s noise, which limited the parametric fluorescence to the picosecond time domain window. Simultaneously, the gain of the following nanosecond field OPCPA is decreased, which can reduce the noise intensity in the nanosecond window. This is currently one of the main ways to improve the signal-to-noise ratio.
The high-gain high signal-to-noise ratio picosecond OPCPA seed source achieves high signal-to-noise ratio under output energy condition, and on this basis, the picosecond joule multi-function experimental platform was realized as shown in Figure
Its main technical indicators include the following.
(1) Output energy and stability
The output energy of parametric amplifier is , the energy stability is 1.35% (rms) for 5000 shots as shown in Figure
(2) Output spectrum and compressed pulse
The full width at half-maximum of the output spectrum of the injection and the output of the parametric amplifier is 6 nm (Figure
(3) Signal-to-noise ratio
The signal-to-noise ratio at 200 ps before the main pulse is shown in Figure
(4) Beam quality
The magnification of the output light is 3 mm, the near-field light spot is shown in Figure
Fig. 44. (a) The near-field light spot. (b) The near-field wavefront. (c) Far-field ambient energy.
4.6 Nanosecond joule OPCPA pump source technology
In order to obtain better OPCPA output stability, a high-quality OPCPA pump source requires a square-pulse waveform, a flat-top near-field distribution, and a stable output energy, and the synchronization between the seed source and the pump source should be accurate. We constructed a set of high stability joule-class OPCPA pump sources with a single-longitudinal-mode laser and waveguide modulator pulse shaping system, an LD pumped Nd:YAG regenerative amplifier, a binary mask for near-field control, a xenon lamp-pumped Nd:YAG traveling wave amplifier and frequency doubling. The nanosecond OPCPA pump source setup is shown in Figure
Fig. 45. The OPCPA pump source includes: Nd:YAG regenerative amplifier, beam expander, soft-edge iris, spatial filter, three-stage Nd:YAG rod amplifier and frequency multiplier.
Fig. 46. (a) The output time waveform of the front end and (b) final output of the OPCPA pump source.
The main technical indicators are as follows: output energy (@532 nm): output energy stability: synchronization accuracy: output wavelength: 532 nm, single-longitudinal mode; waveform: beam diameter: near-field light intensity spatial distribution: approximately flat; repetitive operating frequency: 1 Hz.
The highly stable joule-level OPCPA pump source is a key technological platform for the OPCPA high-performance output.
5 Summary
The injection laser system is the source for the entire high power laser system. The control ability of the injection laser system determines the control ability of the laser system to some extent. Although the injection laser system of the SG-II series can control the laser in the time domain, spatial domain, and the frequency domain, temporal computer control and feedback control require further work.
Ignition has not been achieved yet. It is known that the uniformity of the focal spot will influence the capsule’s compression effect. In order to improve the focal spot smoothness, smoothing by spectral dispersion was adopted. The smoothing time should ideally be less than the interaction time of the laser and plasma to avoid nonlinear effects. However, the smoothing time depends on the bandwidth of the phase modulator. That means that if the interaction time of the laser and plasma is about 10 ps, the bandwidth of the phase modulator should be greater than 100 GHz, which cannot be achieved using current technology. In addition, the wider the bandwidth of the phase modulator, the wider the broadened spectrum, which must be considered for uniform amplification. Another concept involves spike trains of uneven delay and duration (STUD) pulses and was investigated at Trident. In this approach, the laser on and off time is ps-scaled, which may be less than the relaxation time of the LPI[80, 81]. STUD pulses may minimize the long-term accumulation of parametric growth and plasma disruption. Therefore, the issue of controlling the laser characteristics to decrease the LPI and acquire implosion symmetry is the key problem which must be addressed for current injection laser systems of ICF high power laser drivers.
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Article Outline
Wei Fan, Youen Jiang, Jiangfeng Wang, Xiaochao Wang, Dajie Huang, Xinghua Lu, Hui Wei, Guoyang Li, Xue Pan, Zhi Qiao, Chao Wang, He Cheng, Peng Zhang, Wenfa Huang, Zhuli Xiao, Shengjia Zhang, Xuechun Li, Jianqiang Zhu, Zunqi Lin. Progress of the injection laser system of SG-II[J]. High Power Laser Science and Engineering, 2018, 6(2): 02000e34.