laser power measurements (ch. 63) s-108.4010 16.03.2006 tuomas hieta
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![Page 1: Laser power measurements (Ch. 63) S-108.4010 16.03.2006 Tuomas Hieta](https://reader034.vdocument.in/reader034/viewer/2022051516/56649d365503460f94a0ebd6/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Laser power measurements(Ch. 63)
S-108.4010
16.03.2006Tuomas Hieta
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Outline
Why measure laser output power?Laser fundamentals & propertiesDetectors
Thermal detectorsQuantum detectors
Tools & configurationsIntegrating sphereTrap detector
Case: High fiber optic power measurement
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Why measure laser power?
One of the fundamental measurements
Needed in telecommunications, spectroscopy, industry, characterization of light sources(natural, superficial)...Light is widely used in physics, so accurate measurements are needed to verify theories
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Laser fundamentals
LASER = Light Amplification of Stimulated Emission of RadiationConsist from gain medium(1), Resonator(2) and pump(3)
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Gain medium
Is the volume where light interacts with matterIf an electron is exited to a higher energy level, incoming photon with equal energy can stimulate the excited electron and cause stimulated emission → GAIN!Stimulated photon hassame properties with the original photonSpontaneous emissionin all directions
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Optical resonator
Active medium with resonator act as amplifier with feedback → oscillatorResonator provides positive feedback (constructive interference) for certain wavelengthsThough the reflectivities of the mirrors are high, some part of the field always leaks from the end mirror
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Laser pumping
Idea is to create population inversion in the medium i.e. to excite electronsCan be done by using light, current, chemical agent,...Population level in the upper level must be higher than in the ground level (stimulated absorption)
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Laser properties
Monochromatic lightCaused by resonator and discreet photon energy< 1nm linewidths easy to achieve
CoherencePhase difference between points at the wavefront remains zero = spatial coherenceTemporal coherence if the phase doesn’t vary with time
DirectionalityCavity determines the directionDiffraction diverges the beam from ideal
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Laser properties(2)
Brightness or powerEven low power lasers have much greater brightness than conventional sources due to directionalityPower obtained from laser can be from microwatts to terawatts(pulsed)
Short pulsesEven 5-10 fs pulses can be achievedNew opportunities for material processing
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Detectors
The idea of detector is to convert radiation into a measurable quantityOperational principle is one way to categorize optical detectorsThe most common detector is, of course, the eye
Thermal detectors Quantum detectors
Thermocouples & thermopiles Phototubes & photomultipliers
Bolometers & thermistors Photoconductive
Pyroelectric Photographic
Pneumatic & Golay Photovoltaic
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Thermal detectors
Measurable response of a thermal detector is a rise in temperatureAbsorbers are used to absorb the incoming radiation and convert it to heat
Main virtue of thermal detectors is their relatively flat responsivity over a wide wavelength regionDisagvantages are noisiness and slow responsivity compared to quantum detectors, though can be used to measure single-shot pulsed laser
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Thermocouple
Thermocouple is based on voltage generation at junction of two dissimilar metals Usually thermocouple is deposited onto a light absorbing diskWhen the reference junction is held at known temperature, the temperature of another junction can be deduced from voltage difference
reference
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Thermocouple(2)
Response time usually few secondsFlat spectral response from 200nm → 20µmPower range from 1mW → 5kWThermopile consists of thermocouples connected in series → higher voltage
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Bolometers & thermistors
Bulk device that respond to a rise in temperature by significant change in resistanceIt’s sensitive element is either metal (bolometer) or, more commonly, a semiconductor (thermistor)
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Bolometers & thermistors(2)
Incoming radiation heats the metal → Resistance is changed
→ Incident power can be deduced from ΔVThermal reservoir stabilizes the reference voltageMaterial must be well-known
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Pyroelectric
Ferroelectric materials have spontaneous electrical polarization below certain temperature(Curie point)Incident radiation changes this polarizationCharges are induced to electrodes due to this change and it can be to produce measurable voltageOutput only when radiation changes!
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Pyroelectric(2)
Used to measure pulsed laser powerThe process is independent of wavelength → flat spectral responsivityWindow material used in housing limits the the wavelength region
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Pneumatic & Golay
Golay cell detector is based on thermal expansion of gasIncident radiation heats absorer, which causes pressure in airtight chamberOptics can be used to detect the pressureSensitive to vibrations
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Pneumatic & Golay(2)
Chamber
Membrane
Laser
Detection unit
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Quantum detectors
Detected signal is proportional to the incident photons per unit timePlanck’s constant h relates photon frequency and its energy
QDs are fast and compatible with external electrical circuitryMain disadvantage is the frequency dependancy
hc
hfE
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Phototube & photomultiplier
Are so called photoemissive detectors
Surface absorbs photons and some electrons escape from the surface if they can overcome the work function
When anode is collecting these electrons, the device is called a phototube
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Phototube & photomultiplier(2)
Photomultiplier accelerates electronsPrimary electron hits the first electrode and after that it is accelerated towards the second electrode with higher voltage→ High energy electron causes more emitted low energy electrones
→ cascade stucture leads to greatly amplified effect
Amplification can be several orders of magnitudeWell-suited for low powerapplications
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Photoconductive
Are used for wavelengths over 1 µmToo low energy to overcome work function
Are based on electron-hole pair creation, which changes the material conductivityAre very common
Cheap, easy to fabricate and small
Wavelengths from visible to far IF can be used by choosing proper semiconducting compounds
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Photoconductive(2)
Incident radiation changes the conductivity, which leads to different photocurrent
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Photographic
Obviously the film of a conventional camera is a detector tooAdvantage is light signal integration
long exposure time can compensate weak signal
Disadvantage is that the chemical reaction is irreversible…
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Photovoltaic
Most common photovoltaic detector is a p-n junction, the semiconductor photodiodeIncident photon causes electron-hole pair in the depletion region
Due to bias, electrons and holes drift to different electrodes, which creates photocurrent
Wider depletion region makes photodiode more sensitive and slower
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Photovoltaic(2)
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Photovoltaic(3)
Shunt resistance of the photodiode plays a major role in determining the SNRSome part of the photocurrent allways flows through the shunt resistance
High shunt resistanceis preferred as it causes only small noise currentIt can vary from few hundreds ohms to 10 GΩ
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Photovoltaic(4)
Application determines the semiconductor material to be used
Certain material has certain noise, spectral properties, price, temperature dependency, etc.
200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
Re
spo
nsi
vity
[A
/W]
Wavelength [nm]
Si
Ge
InGaAs
Ideal
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Photovoltaic(5)
Pin photodiodes have undoped i-region between p and n regions
Lower speed, but higher bandwidth
Avalanche photodiodes are used at low power levels
Primary carriers are accelerated with bias and when they collide with other atoms, new carriers are formedGains up to ~200
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Integrating sphere
Integrating sphere is a versatile tool used in many optical measurementsIts function is to angularly and spatially integrate the incoming radiationIn pratice, it acts as a diffuser and an attenuatorIt consists of input and output ports and reflective cavity coating
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Integrating sphere(2)
The operational principle is simple;highly reflective and diffusive coating causes multiple reflections inside the sphere and eventually some part of it end up at the active area of the photodiode
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Integrating sphere(3)
Used in power measurements to attenuate (and integrate) signal→ cheaper detectors can be ussed when power is lower!
Comes in many sizesApplication determines the size
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Trap detector
Trap consists of number of photodiodes with certain geometry to reduce backreflectionMultiple reflections cause more photon absorption→ greater QEWell-suitable for applications that are sensitive to inter-reflections
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Case: High fiber optic power measurement
One major problem of fiber power measurement is geometryOther issue is to find accurate detector with traceability to standard for optical power near 1.55 µmGenerally, several types of detectors can be used for power measurement
A 1
A 2
D etector surface
a)
b)
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Geometry
Problem with geometry is that the calibration is usually done with laser beam rather than beam out of fiber output
-2 -1 0 1 2
2
1
0
-1
-2
X/mm
Y/m
m
-10 0 100.00
0.04
0.08
0.12
0.16
Rel
. ang
ular
pow
er d
ensi
ty [1
/deg
]
Angle in degrees
Spatial responsivity of
photodetector is
non-uniform!
Gaussian distribution of the
output beam
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Geometry(2)
Integrating sphere is a solution to the geometry problemThe sphere collect almost all the ligth from the fiber output and delivers it to the detector
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15-50 %
-40 %
-30 %
-20 %
-10 %
0 %
-8 -4 0 4 8
-0.1 %
0.0 %
0.1 %
Cha
nge
from
resp
onsi
vity
at 0
-deg
ree
Angle in degrees
Integration ”range” of ISP
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Detector
High quality InGaAs photodetector was used in this setupOnly major problem was that it can measure only up to 8 mWTailored sphere with high attenuation in front of it can solve this problem (~0.7% in this case)Detector was calibrated against pyroelectric detector, which was calibrated against cryogenic absolute radiometer (primary standard)
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Detector(2)
With high power levels, nonlinearity must allways be studiedSo called AC/DC method was used to find out weather the ISP configuration is nonlinearNonlinearity was found and one probable cause is overillumination
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The end!
Questions? Comments?
Death star with
high power laser