The use of capacitive Radio-Frequency discharges for the excitation of thin diffusion cooled regions of gas has caused a remarkable breakthrough in the establishment of new CO2 laser sources. Indeed this technique allows specific power loadings more than one order of magnitude higher than those of conventional slow-now lasers. At the same time it enables efficient laser operation in sealed or quasi-sealed conditions determining an enormous advantage of these sources over fast-now ones. Advantages are also determined by the potentiality of pulsing this kind of discharge at high repetition rates, in the range 1-10 kHz. Triggered by these considerations a lot of R&D efforts have been made in this field during the last decade, giving rise to rugged and extremely compact CO2 laser sources in the 100-2000 W power segment, useful in medical as well as in low-power industrial applications. To obtain this result several problems had to be faced such as the attainment of a uniform plasma excitation in large area discharges or the extraction of a good quality beam from nonconventional gain region formats.

Diffusion-cooled Radio-frequency excited CO2 lasers

Lapucci Antonio
1998

Abstract

The use of capacitive Radio-Frequency discharges for the excitation of thin diffusion cooled regions of gas has caused a remarkable breakthrough in the establishment of new CO2 laser sources. Indeed this technique allows specific power loadings more than one order of magnitude higher than those of conventional slow-now lasers. At the same time it enables efficient laser operation in sealed or quasi-sealed conditions determining an enormous advantage of these sources over fast-now ones. Advantages are also determined by the potentiality of pulsing this kind of discharge at high repetition rates, in the range 1-10 kHz. Triggered by these considerations a lot of R&D efforts have been made in this field during the last decade, giving rise to rugged and extremely compact CO2 laser sources in the 100-2000 W power segment, useful in medical as well as in low-power industrial applications. To obtain this result several problems had to be faced such as the attainment of a uniform plasma excitation in large area discharges or the extraction of a good quality beam from nonconventional gain region formats.
1998
Istituto Nazionale di Ottica - INO
0-8194-2878-7
lasers (CO2)
diffusion-cooled lasers
rf-discharge lasers
slab lasers
slab laser resonators
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/141814
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