
Proceedings Paper
Temperature-stable lithium niobate electro-optic Q-switch for improved cold performanceFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
Lithium niobate (LN) is commonly used as an electro optic (EO) Q-switch material in infrared targeting lasers because
of its relatively low voltage requirements and low cost compared to other crystals. A common challenge is maintaining
good performance at the sub-freezing temperatures often experienced during flight. Dropping to low temperature causes
a pyro-electric charge buildup on the optical faces that leads to birefringence non-uniformity and depolarization resulting
in poor hold-off and premature lasing. The most common solution has been to use radioactive americium to ionize the
air around the crystal and bleed off the charge, but the radioactive material requires handling and disposal procedures
that can be problematic. We have developed a superior solution that is now being implemented by multiple defense
system suppliers. By applying a low level thermo-chemical reduction to the LN crystal optical faces we induce a small
conductivity that allows pyro-charges to dissipate. As the material gets more heavily treated, the capacity to dissipate
charges improves, but the corresponding optical absorption also increases, causing insertion loss. Even though typical
high gain targeting laser systems can tolerate a few percent of added loss, the thermo-chemical processing needs to be
carefully optimized. We describe the results of our process optimization to minimize the insertion loss while still giving
effective charge dissipation. Treatment is performed at temperatures below 500°C and a conductivity layer less than
0.5mm in depth is created that is uniform across the optical aperture. Because the conductivity is thermally activated, the
charge dissipation is less effective at low temperature, and characterization needs to be performed at cold temperatures.
The trade-off between optical insertion loss and potential depolarization due to low temperature operation is discussed
and experimental results on the temperature dependence of the dissipation time and the optical loss are reported.
Paper Details
Date Published: 7 October 2014
PDF: 11 pages
Proc. SPIE 9251, Technologies for Optical Countermeasures XI; and High-Power Lasers 2014: Technology and Systems, 92510F (7 October 2014); doi: 10.1117/12.2066667
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 9251:
Technologies for Optical Countermeasures XI; and High-Power Lasers 2014: Technology and Systems
David H. Titterton; Willy L. Bohn; Harro Ackermann; Mark A. Richardson; Robert J. Grasso, Editor(s)
PDF: 11 pages
Proc. SPIE 9251, Technologies for Optical Countermeasures XI; and High-Power Lasers 2014: Technology and Systems, 92510F (7 October 2014); doi: 10.1117/12.2066667
Show Author Affiliations
Dieter H. Jundt, Gooch & Housego, Palo Alto (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 9251:
Technologies for Optical Countermeasures XI; and High-Power Lasers 2014: Technology and Systems
David H. Titterton; Willy L. Bohn; Harro Ackermann; Mark A. Richardson; Robert J. Grasso, Editor(s)
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