DETAILS OF THE ACHIEVEMENT
All-fiber passively Q-switched fiber lasers |
Pavel Peterka, Ph.D. |
Year: 2011 |
Fiber lasers are one of the most spectacular achievements of modern
optics and laser physics. Applications of fiber lasers are versatile,
ranging from lasers of brute force for industrial cutting and welding
to delicate devices currently being developed for the most precise
measurement of time and frequency. The researchers in UFE have been
investigating novel types of all-fiber pulsed laser in Q-switched
regime of operation. In collaboration with researchers from the
University of Nice in France we have shown that a chromium-doped fiber
stabilizes an otherwise spontaneously chaotically self-pulsing
ytterbium-doped fiber laser. This original passively Q-switched
all-fiber laser produces sustained and relatively stable trains of
smooth pulses at a high repetition rate [5]. In addition, we have
proposed an all-fiber Q-switched fiber laser in which the optical
switch exploits an interplay between resonant nonlinearity of a
section of ytterbium-doped fiber and transmission of a combination of
fiber gratings [6]. Both types of these fiber lasers may find
applications in various fields, e.g. in fiber lasers for material
processing or in medical laser systems. In the course of the research
of the pulsed fiber laser we have observed a spectacular effect of the
periodic drift of the laser line in a wide range of almost 10 nm and
time period of about 2 s. It is the first published observation of the
effect that is now known as self-induced laser line sweeping (SLLS) in
fiber lasers [7]. Although the SLLS is an undesired effect in
ytterbium-doped fibre lasers intended for the continuous mode of
operation, this effect may find useful applications, e.g., in
interrogation of optical fiber sensor systems.
![]() Wavelength self-sweeping observed in free-running fibre lasers. |
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