Paper
20 June 2024 Nd3+ and Yb3+ simultaneous laser operation coupled by energy transfer in Nd3+,Yb3+,Gd3+:CaF2 crystals
Simone Normani, Cesare Meroni, Cédric Maunier, Sébastien Montant, Patrice Camy, Alain Braud
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Co-doped laser materials with two active ions coupled by energy transfer is an interesting case where both ions can take part in the laser output intensity. Depending on the concentration of both co-dopants, the strength of the energy transfer coupling them or even the pumping rate, a competition between the two ions can take place which will affect the laser characteristics such as the laser wavelength. This competition between two emitting ions is illustrated here in the case of CaF2 co-doped with neodymium and ytterbium ions. The advantage of Nd3+ is that its absorption cross-section around 791nm is higher than that of Yb3+ at ~980nm, enabling an efficient excitation of Yb3+ by pumping Nd3+ with a subsequent Nd3+-to-Yb3+ energy transfer (ET). Combining Nd3+ and Yb3+ with Gd3+ buffer ions further enables breaking up opticallyquenched Nd3+ clusters. Nd3+,Yb3+,Gd3+:CaF2 crystals exhibit broadband emission, extending the Yb3+ spectrum via the Nd3+ contribution at longer wavelengths. Before addressing the laser gain competition between Nd3+ and Yb3+ ions, the Nd3+⟶Yb3+ ET efficiency was estimated using two approaches based on luminescence intensity and lifetimes, showing its dependency on Yb3+ doping. We achieved an ET efficiency of 80% in 0.5%Nd,3%Yb,2%Gd:CaF2. CW laser action using different Nd,Yb,Gd:CaF2 crystals resulted in a 17% slope efficiency versus absorbed pump power and a 200mW laser threshold. The expected laser gain competition between Nd3+ and Yb3+ ions leads to a change of the laser wavelength within the 1045-1067nm range depending on the Yb3+ concentration and output coupler transmission. These results are clearly explained by investigating the respective contribution of Nd3+ and Yb3+ to the gain cross-section and its dependence on Yb3+ doping concentration and Nd3+ population inversion. The gain cross-section profile is either dominated by one of the Nd3+ emission peaks (1065nm, 1048nm), or flat across 1045-1067nm, in which case the laser oscillates randomly within this spectral range. We show how a large Nd3+ inversion ratio leads to depletion of the Yb3+ 2F7/2 ground state through ET, resulting in two main effects: the saturation of the ET, as the ground-state Yb3+ acceptor concentration diminishes, and a shift of the laser line towards shorter wavelengths, due to weaker Yb3+ reabsorption.
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Simone Normani, Cesare Meroni, Cédric Maunier, Sébastien Montant, Patrice Camy, and Alain Braud "Nd3+ and Yb3+ simultaneous laser operation coupled by energy transfer in Nd3+,Yb3+,Gd3+:CaF2 crystals", Proc. SPIE 13003, Fiber Lasers and Glass Photonics: Materials through Applications IV, 130030V (20 June 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3017092
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Neodymium

Ytterbium

Ions

Crystals

Emission wavelengths

Energy transfer

Absorption

Back to Top