4.6 Article

Performance studies of high-average-power picosecond optical parametric generation and amplification in MgO:PPLN at 80 MHz

Journal

OPTICS EXPRESS
Volume 28, Issue 26, Pages 39189-39202

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group
DOI: 10.1364/OE.411276

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Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [TEC2015-68234-R]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya (CERCA Programme)
  3. Fundacion Cellex (Fundacion Cellex)
  4. Fundacio Mir-Puig
  5. State Research Agency (AEI)
  6. European Social Fund [RYC2019-027144-I/10.13039/501100011033]
  7. Severo Ochoa [CEX2019000910-S]

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We report on performance studies of high-average-power single-pass picosecond optical parametric generation (OPG) and amplification (OPA) tunable near 2 mu m in MgO:PPLN pumped by an Yb-fiber laser at 1.064 mu m and 80 MHz pulse repetition rate. The simple setup based on two identical crystals, and without the need for an intermediate delay line for synchronization, delivers up to 6.3 W of average power at an overall conversion efficiency of similar to 50% and is tunable across 1902-2415 nm. We present systematic characterization of OPG and OPA stages to compare their performance and investigate the effect of parametric generation in the high-gain limit, enabling high output power and full-width-half-maximum (FWHM) spectral bandwidths as large as 189 nm. The OPG-OPA output exhibits excellent passive power stability better than 0.3% rms and central wavelength stability better than 0.03% rms over 1 hour, in high spatial beam quality with M-2<2. The OPG output pulses have duration of 5.2 ps with a FWHM spectral bandwidth of 117 nm at 2123 nm, resulting in a time-bandwidth product of Delta tau Delta nu similar to 40, indicating similar to 4 times temporal compression compared to the input pump pulses. Theoretical simulations confirm the effect of pump beam divergence on the observed shift in wavelength tuning with respect to temperature, while the exponential gain in the parametric process is identified as playing a key role in the resulting pulse compression. (C) 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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