Search
Menu
Gentec Electro-Optics Inc   - Measure With Gentec Accuracy LB

Frequency-Doubled Nd:YAG Generates 200 W

Facebook X LinkedIn Email
Breck Hitz

A high-power green Nd:YAG laser has been developed at Mitsubishi Electric Corp.'s Advanced Technology R&D Center in Amagasaki, Japan, and is being studied for the crystallization of amorphous silicon films into polycrystalline silicon films during the fabrication of thin-film transistor display screens. The laser's 200-W second-harmonic average output power apparently sets a world record and is at least a factor of two greater than any commercial competitor.

Frequency-Doubled Nd:YAG Generates 200 W
Figure 1. A wedge lens coupled the pump power from the diode stacks into the Nd:YAG laser rods.

Tetsuo Kojima, who described the laser at CLEO in San Francisco in May, provided additional details in a discussion after the conference. He explained that each Nd:YAG rod in the laser is pumped by six individual diode stacks and that the diodes' output is coupled into the rods with a wedge lens (Figure 1). The laser comprises four rods, with a 90° polarization rotator between each pair of rods to alleviate thermal birefringence (Figure 2).

Frequency-Doubled Nd:YAG Generates 200 W
Figure 2. The ~1 kW of 1.06-µm output of the four-rod Nd:YAG laser was frequency-doubled in an external crystal aligned for Type II phase-matching.


Vescent Photonics LLC - Lasers, Combs, Controls 4/15-5/15 MR
The team first developed a burst-mode version of the laser pumped by 400-µs pulses from the diodes at a 250-Hz repetition frequency (i.e., a 4-ms period). An acousto-optic modulator Q-switched the laser at a repetition frequency of 70 kHz. The laser's output beam, containing ~1 kW of average 1.06-µm power, had an M2 of approximately 9. It was frequency-doubled in a 15-mm-long LiB3O5 crystal aligned for Type II phase-matching, to produce 200 W of 532-nm power.

Frequency-Doubled Nd:YAG Generates 200 W
Figure 3. The 200-W green output of the frequency-doubled laser was converted into a top-hat intensity distribution for annealing thin-film transistor display screens.

The burst-mode behavior -- with a 10 percent duty cycle -- was not optimal for the application, so the engineers refined the design for continuous pumping. The laser was Q-switched at a significantly lower rate, 4 kHz. Although it produced lower infrared power, the laser's conversion efficiency was greater because of its higher peak power, so it again produced 200 W of average green power. This second-harmonic output was stable for many hours, and the beam was shaped into a top-hat intensity distribution for annealing thin-film transistor screens (Figure 3).

Although laser annealing of these display screens has traditionally relied on ultraviolet excimer lasers, Kojima and his co-authors conclude that frequency-doubled Nd:YAG is a viable alternative that requires less daily maintenance.

Published: July 2004
Glossary
nd:yag laser
Nd:YAG laser refers to a solid-state laser that utilizes neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:Y3Al5O12) as the gain medium. This type of laser emits light at a wavelength of 1064 nanometers (nm) in the infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Here's a breakdown of the components and operation of an Nd:YAG laser: Gain medium: The active medium of the laser is a crystal made of yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG) doped with neodymium ions (Nd3+). When pumped with energy, typically...
amorphous silicon filmsMitsubishi Electric Corp.Nd:YAG laserpolycrystalline silicon filmsResearch & TechnologyTech Pulsethin-film transistor display screensLasers

We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our Privacy Policy. By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies unless you have disabled them.