scholarly journals Effect of Turbulence on the Wavefront of an Ultrahigh Intensity Laser Beam

2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Morgane Bellec ◽  
Alain Girard ◽  
Guillaume Balarac ◽  
Ulrich Bieder ◽  
François Millet ◽  
...  

Abstract Ultrahigh intensity lasers face thermal management issues that limit their repetition rates. The key challenge is to efficiently evacuate the heat deposited in the amplifier by the optical pumping without impacting the output laser beam quality. The amplifier can have a multislab geometry where the laser beam crosses successive amplifying slabs and the cooling channels that separate them. This work investigates numerically how a cryogenic cooling of the amplifier by turbulent channel flows may affect the wavefront of the laser beam. To this end, large eddy simulations (LESs) representative of the amplifier cooling are performed using TrioCFD, a code developed by the CEA. First, validation simulations are carried out for heated channel flows, allowing comparisons to direct numerical simulation (DNS) results from the literature. Then, LESs of an open turbulent channel flow cooling two slabs are conducted using conjugated heat transfer between the solid and the fluid. The phase distortions, mean and fluctuations, induced by the inhomogeneous and turbulent temperature field are computed directly from the LES. A moderate although non-negligible effect of the turbulence on the laser wavefront was found. This optical effect increases when the slab heating increases. A comparison to the Sutton model, widely used in aero-optic studies, was performed, and its applicability was found limited for this problem. For the first time, TrioCFD is used to address the question of the beam impact of the cooling of laser amplifiers, and it has proven to be a valuable tool for such application.

2010 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
pp. 670-674
Author(s):  
Xia Ye ◽  
Hong Bing Yao ◽  
Yan Qun Tong ◽  
Yong Kang Zhang ◽  
Ruo Xi Cao ◽  
...  

For high power and repetitive Nd:Glass laser, there would appear serious thermal effect due to the significantly-enhanced pumping optical power density in laser rod, which would induce thermal double refraction, phase distortion, thermal focusing, thermal depolarization, etc. Thus, the laser output power and beam quality would be influenced severely. Influence of thermal lens effect and depolarization effect caused by thermal stress double refraction on laser beam were studied in this paper for high power and repetitive laser. In the experiment of thermal lens effect, change of the laser spot by thermal lens effect was recorded after a TEM00 He-Ne laser beam passing through the Nd:Glass rod pumped by Xe lamp, and the corresponding optical compensator was applied to eliminate the thermal lens effect to improve the beam quality. Configuration of polarizer was designed in our experiment to research the depolarization effect caused by thermal stress double refraction. First, emergent light distribution and loss factor caused by double refraction was calculated according to the theoretical model. Then the exiting cone-shaped polarized light intensity distribution was obtained through the experiment. It could be obtained from the experiments that thermal lens effect and depolarization effect caused by thermal double refraction would reduce the output laser beam quality to varied extents. As the number of laser pulses increased, thermal effects began to emerge and the output laser energy apparently decreased; when the thermal effects steadied, the output energy would be tending towards stability.


2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael R. Duparre ◽  
Carsten Rockstuhl ◽  
Andreas Letsch ◽  
Siegmund Schroeter ◽  
Vladimir S. Pavelyev

2007 ◽  
Vol 78 (7) ◽  
pp. 073103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Kwee ◽  
Frank Seifert ◽  
Benno Willke ◽  
Karsten Danzmann

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