4.8 Article

Ultrafast MHz-Rate Burst-Mode Pump-Probe Laser for the FLASH FEL Facility Based on Nonlinear Compression of ps-Level Pulses from an Yb-Amplifier Chain

Journal

LASER & PHOTONICS REVIEWS
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/lpor.202100268

Keywords

high-power lasers; lasers for facilities; pulse compression; pump-probe; spectral broadening; synchronization; ultrafast lasers

Funding

  1. DFG [SFB 925 -170620586]
  2. Projekt DEAL

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The study reports a novel FEL facility laser that combines high average power output and pulse compression for studying ultrafast processes. Compared to other lasers, this new system has improved noise figures, compactness, simplicity, and power efficiency. It provides high-energy, short-duration pulses that can be adjusted through computer control.
The Free-Electron Laser (FEL) FLASH offers the worldwide still unique capability to study ultrafast processes with high-flux, high-repetition rate extreme ultraviolet, and soft X-ray pulses. The vast majority of experiments at FLASH are of pump-probe type. Many of them rely on optical ultrafast lasers. Here, a novel FEL facility laser is reported which combines high average power output from Yb:YAG amplifiers with spectral broadening in a Herriott-type multipass cell and subsequent pulse compression to sub-100-fs durations. Compared to other facility lasers employing optical parametric amplification, the new system comes with significantly improved noise figures, compactness, simplicity, and power efficiency. Like FLASH, the optical laser operates with 10-Hz burst repetition rate. The bursts consist of 800-mu s long trains of up to 800 ultrashort pulses being synchronized to the FEL with femtosecond precision. In the experimental chamber, pulses with up to 50-mu J energy, 60-fs full-width half-maximum duration and 1-MHz rate at 1.03-mu m wavelength are available and can be adjusted by computer-control. Moreover, nonlinear polarization rotation is implemented to improve laser pulse contrast. First cross-correlation measurements with the FEL at the plane-grating monochromator photon beamline are demonstrated, exhibiting the suitability of the laser for user experiments at FLASH.

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