Paper
8 August 1996 Materials for high-power laser optics: the thermal lensing issue
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
High-power/high-energy laser (HEL) systems include an optical train consisting of mirrors and windows, which must be capable of transporting and directing the beam without seriously degrading the nominal performance. Since catastrophic failure modes are not a major threat at beam-power levels of current interest, the system's performance as measured in terms of achievable target irradiances may degrade as a result of thermal lensing, that is, the wavefront distortion caused by thermally induced phase aberrations. The purpose of this paper is to review and update analytical investigations that address the problem of evaluating die nature of laser-driven mirror/window distortions; in this context, it is shown how to obtain simple figures of merit (FoM) for rating the thermal lensing performance of mirror-substrate materials as well as window-material candidates. The performance of cooled HEL mirrors reflects their ability to minimize irradiance-mapping wavefront distortions, which leads to defining a thermal distortion coefficient % that controls the out-of-plane growth of the faceplate. It is then straightforward to derive equations for characterizing the RMSsed surface deformation and to assess the merit of mirror-faceplate materials in a pulsed or a CW environment. Since state-of-the-art heat exchangers exhibit relatively modest Biot numbers, the thermal conduction is not a critical parameter but the modulus of elasticity must be properly factored into the FoM for CW operation. Window-induced wavefront deformations require special attention because they involve not only position-dependent variations of the window thickness but also position- and polarization-dependent variations of the refractive index. This situation leads to introducing a symmetric and an anti-symmetric distortion coefficient, which can be combined into an effective optical distortion coefficient x that specifies the relative weight of birefringence compared to all other sources of distortion and shows that zero distortion can only be achieved with stress-birefringence free material having a negative dn/dl'. As in the case of mirror-faceplate materials, FoM’s for the pre-diffusion and the steady-state regimes emerge in a direct manner and demonstrate that fluoro-zirco-aluminate glass by far outperforms other window-material candidates in implementing the zero-distortion goal.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Claude A. Klein "Materials for high-power laser optics: the thermal lensing issue", Proc. SPIE 10286, Inorganic Optical Materials: A Critical Review, 102860D (8 August 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.245188
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Adaptive optics

High power lasers

Laser optics

Thermography

Wavefront distortions

Mirrors

Continuous wave operation

RELATED CONTENT

Diode Lasers, Their Characteristics And Control
Proceedings of SPIE (April 20 1987)
Active Optics For High Power Lasers
Proceedings of SPIE (March 28 1989)
Effects Of Flow Fields In Optical Systems
Proceedings of SPIE (December 30 1981)

Back to Top