Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7128266 | Optics & Laser Technology | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Damage growth in optical components is a bottleneck problem of large solid state laser, which limits the system operating energy, interrupts the use and increases the maintenance cost dramatically. A spot-shadowing technique aimed to obscure damage pits in downstream optics in high-power laser is investigated in this work, whose goal is decreasing local fluence to mitigate damage growth upon subsequent laser shots exposure by shadowing small, isolated flaws on downstream optical components. The method to determine the quantity, geometrical shape, size, and spatial location of blockers is discussed in detail, which is applicable to other large solid lasers in principle. We also find that the local fluence around flaw sites decreases dramatically from â¼5.87â¯J/cm2 to â¼1.10â¯J/cm2 (far below laser-induced damage growth threshold â¼4.50â¯J/cm2) after spot-shadowing is deployed, which proves the feasibility of spot-shadowing for mitigating damage growth.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Authors
YinBo Zheng, RongSheng Ba, XinDa Zhou, Jie Li, Lei Ding, HongLei Xu, Jin Na, YaJun Li, Jing Yuan, Huan Ren, XiaoDong Tang, Liqun Chai,