Browsing by Subject "Laser"
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Publication 10 W-Average-Power Single-Frequency Ti:sapphire Laser with Tuning Agility – A Breakthrough in High-Resolution 3D Water-Vapor Measurement(2018) Metzendorf, Simon; Wulfmeyer, VolkerThe differential absorption lidar (DIAL) technique is well suited for measuring the humidity field of the atmosphere with high spatial and temporal resolution as well as accuracy. The water-vapor DIAL of the University of Hohenheim is a mobile, ground-based, scanning system. The DIAL methodology and the application in the Hohenheim-DIAL impose stringent requirements on the laser transmitter. In this thesis, a new laser transmitter was realized and employed. It is a pulsed, actively frequency-stabilized titanium-sapphire laser system, pumped with a Nd:YAG master-oscillator power-amplifier (MOPA) and alternately seeded by two diode lasers. As pump source, two commercially custom-made, diode-pumped, Q-switched, and frequency-doubled Nd:YAG lasers in MOPA architecture were employed. The relevant properties for pumping the Ti:sapphire laser were studied. The second Nd:YAG MOPA provides a considerably higher average output power (up to P = 63 W at 532 nm, or a pulse energy of up to E = 210 mJ at a repetition rate of f = 300 Hz) and an almost ideal top-hat beam profile. Thus, efficient end-pumping of the Ti:sapphire crystal was enabled without any optical damage. The components for injection seeding of the titanium-sapphire laser, making narrowband operation at two alternating frequencies (online and offline) possible, were substantially improved. Now, advanced commercial external-cavity diode lasers (ECDL) are applied. With an analog regulation signal of a wavelength meter, the frequency of an ECDL can be stabilized precisely to a defined value (standard deviation < 1 MHz). Optionally, the frequency can be tuned according to various mathematical functions. The online-offline-switching is accomplished with a fiber switch. The crosstalk is extraordinarily low (< -61 dB), the switching time sufficiently short (~ 1.5 ms), and the spatial overlap of the signals, due to the waveguide, almost perfect. The power of the seeders in front of the resonator is more than sufficient, 17-20 mW. The Ti:sapphire laser consists of a ring resonator with four mirrors in a bow-tie layout. With adequate components, the operation wavelength at 818 nm is pre-selected and unidirectional propagation is ensured. The laser crystal is installed in an in-house-manufactured cooling mount, of which two designs were utilized and compared. The gain-switched Ti:sapphire laser was developed to operate in a dynamically stable state of the thermal lens, which arises in the crystal at high powers. To this end, the resonator was theoretically analyzed beforehand and the focal length of the thermal lens measured. The implementation of a cylindrical lens compensates the stronger contraction of the eigenmode in the tangential plane. By these means, a stable operation with an average output power of P = 10 W (corresponding to E = 33.3 mJ at f = 300 Hz; pulse duration ~ 30 ns) was realized. With a modified configuration of the cylindrical lens a maximum output power of P_max = 11.8 W (E_max = 39.3 mJ) was achieved. These values are the highest which were obtained so far for a laser of this kind, i.e., a laser transmitter whose power originates from a single radiation source (without further amplification or conversion). The laser cavity is actively stabilized to the frequency of the seeder, following a Pound-Drever-Hall technique. This yields permanent single-frequency operation with very high frequency stability (standard deviation < 2 MHz) and a narrow linewidth (< 63 MHz). These results correspond to the resolution limit of the characterizing wavelength meter. Laser emission occurs in the fundamental transverse mode, TEM_00 (M² <= 1.06). The laser system of the Hohenheim-DIAL has been successfully operated on several field campaigns. Its robustness has been demonstrated, for instance, during an uninterrupted operation for over 30 hours and an overseas transport to the USA which the system endured without damage. This work presents a vertical pointing and two scanning water-vapor DIAL measurements, confirming a high resolution and accuracy. The vertical measurement was executed for the first time at 10 W laser operation. Furthermore, two special DIAL measurements are discussed: The measurements on a strongly backscattering target demonstrate a high spectral purity >= 99.97% of the laser transmitter. Finally, an atmospheric measurement with a tuning online wavelength shows the frequency-agility of the laser and allows to determine the water-vapor absorption line experimentally. The comparison with the spectrum of a database shows a very good agreement (~ 5-10 % deviation in the absorption cross sections absolute value).Publication Aircraft air data system based on the measurement of Raman and elastic backscatter via active optical remote-sensing(2012) Fraczek, Michael Darius; Wulfmeyer, VolkerFlight safety in all weather conditions demands exact and reliable determination of flight-critical air parameters. Conventional aircraft air data systems can be impacted by probe failure caused by mechanical damage or impairment due to different environmental influences. In this thesis, a novel measurement concept for optically measuring the air temperature, density, pressure, moisture and particle backscatter for aircrafts is presented. The detection of volcanic ash is possible as well. This concept is independent from assumptions about the atmospheric state and eliminates the drawbacks of conventional aircraft probes. The measurement principle is based on a laser emitting pulses into the atmosphere from inside the aircraft and a receiver detecting the light signals backscattered from a defined region just outside the disturbed area of the fuselage air flow. With four receiver channels, different spectral portions of the Raman backscatter of dry air and water vapor, as well as the elastic backscatter are extracted. Measurements at daytime and in any atmospheric condition, including very dense clouds, are possible. In the framework of this thesis, a first laboratory prototype of such a measurement system using 532 nm laser radiation was developed, comprising all relevant theoretical and experimental studies. These were notably the comparative feasibility assessment of the measurement methodology, the computational modeling of the measurement concept, the laboratory setup and the experimental validation. Detailed and realistic performance and optimization calculations were made based on the parameters of the first prototype. The impact and the correction of systematic errors due to solar background and elastic signal cross-talk appearing in optically dense clouds were analyzed in computational simulations. The simulations supplement the experimental results for measurement scenarios that are not generable in the laboratory. The laboratory experiments validate the predictions from the simulations with regard to systematic errors and statistical measurement uncertainties. Where possible, the experimental setup and the signal and data analysis were optimized. Residual differences between the experimental and the model results were analyzed in detail. Concrete further hardware optimizations were suggested. The resulting experimental systematic measurement errors at air temperatures varying from 238 K to 308 K under constant air pressure are < 0.05 K, < 0.07 % and < 0.06 % for temperature, density and pressure, respectively. The systematic errors for measurements at air pressures varying from 200 hPa to 950 hPa under constant air temperature are < 0.22 K, < 0.36 % and < 0.31 %, respectively. The experimentally achieved 1-σ statistical measurement uncertainties for the analysis of each single detected signal pulse range from 0.75 K to 2.63 K for temperature, from 0.43 % to 1.21 % for density, and from 0.51 % to 1.50 % for pressure, respectively, for measurement altitudes from 0 m to 13400 m. In order to meet measurement error requirements specified in aviation standards, minimum laser pulse energies were experimentally determined to be used with the designed measurement system. With regard to 100-pulse-averaged temperature measurements, the pulse energy at 532 nm has to be larger than 11 mJ (35 mJ), when regarding 1-σ (3-σ) uncertainties at all measurement altitudes. For 100-pulse-averaged pressure measurements, the laser pulse energy has to be respectively larger than 95 mJ (355 mJ). Based on these experimental results, the laser pulse energy requirements were extrapolated to the ultraviolet wavelength region as well, resulting in much lower laser pulse energy demand. The successful results of this thesis do not only prove the viability of the concept implementation, but also demonstrate its high potential for aircraft air data system application.Publication Development of an eye-safe solid-state tunable laser transmitter around 1.45 my m based on Cr 4+:YAG crystal for lidar applications(2008) Petrova-Mayor, Anna; Wulfmeyer, VolkerA gain switched tunable Cr4+:YAG laser was developed using a Q-switched flashlamp?pumped Nd:YAG pump laser at 10 Hz. A vacuum spatial filter (VSF) was designed in order to filter the ?hot spots? of the pump beam profile. As a result of applying the VSF, a nearly Gaussian-shaped beam profile was achieved which enabled safe pumping of the Cr4+:YAG crystal with pulse energies in excess of 100 mJ. An extensive experimental optimization of the efficiency of the wavelength converter was performed. A maximum output energy of ~7 mJ at 1430?1450 nm, corresponding to ~7% conversion efficiency (with regard to absorbed pump energy), and a pulse duration of 30?35 ns were obtained with a 25-cm-long stable resonator. Tunability in the range 1350?1500 nm and spectral linewidth of ~200G Hz were demonstrated using a 3-plate birefringent filter. The laser was multimode with a flat-top profile and sufficiently good M2~4. The performance and size of the laser are acceptable for use in a laboratory based non-scanning lidar system if a narrow-band birefringent filter is installed. In order to employ a scanning mobile lidar, high pulse frequency (>100 Hz) of the pump laser for the Cr4+:YAG laser is required. The tunability permits the improvement of the laser transmitter for water-vapor DIAL measurements at on-line wavelengths of approximately 1459 nm or 1484 nm if injection-seeding is applied.