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Making Lasers More Colorful

A compact device that extends the range of colors from a laser could be used in portable explosive detectors.

By Neil Savage

Friday, August 03, 2007

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Scientists in Sweden have demonstrated a compact device that, when combined with a laser, can generate a wide range of wavelengths that standard lasers can't achieve on their own. The new laser add-on could lead to compact, inexpensive detectors for explosives or biological and chemical weapons.

Colorful lasers: An atomic-force microscope image (top) shows the electrically alternating regions created in the optical parametric oscillator's crystal. The schematic (bottom) shows how various beams of light with different energies propagate through the crystal.
Credit: Canalias, Pasiskevicius/Nature Photonics

The device, reported in the current issue of Nature Photonics, is a mirrorless optical parametric oscillator (OPO). OPOs, which have been in use for decades, take light from a laser source and convert it into wavelengths that the laser can't generate itself, allowing scientists to pick the best color of light for a particular application. Many organic molecules, for instance, are easiest to identify at certain infrared wavelengths, which is useful when authorities are looking for biological contaminants or explosives.

Traditional OPOs are a combination of crystals, usually made of lithium niobate, and mirrors. But the mirrors pose a problem: they are hard to align, as well as bulky--a typical OPO is nearly as long as the average dining-room table.

Forty years ago, scientists designed an OPO without the mirrors; however, it required new materials or fabrication techniques that weren't available. Now Carlota Canalias and Valdas Pasiskevicius, two researchers in the Applied Physics Department at the Royal Institute of Technology, in Stockholm, have succeeded in making a crystal for a mirrorless OPO.

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In the standard OPO setup, the crystal splits the original light beam into two lower-energy beams with different wavelengths. The mirrors bounce the beams back and forth through the crystal to amplify them until they combine into one stronger beam of light. If the different beams are out of sync--with the peaks and valleys of the light waves not lining up from one beam to the next--then the beams interfere with one another and produce only weak output. To keep the beams in sync with one another, the crystal is engineered into alternating sections with opposite electrical properties. As the beams pass through each section, they are bent slightly in such a way that they stay aligned.

The key to the new OPO is the crystal, made of a combination of potassium and titanium called potassium-titanyl phosphate, and its design, which amplifies the laser light itself, eliminating the need for mirrors. In order to create the electronically different regions, Canalias says, the researchers employed photolithography, the process used to make transistors on computer chips. Using this method, she explains, they laid down a series of aluminum wires and an insulator, then ran an electrical current through the wires. The electrical field generated by the current changed the crystalline structure of the portions of the crystal underneath the wires.

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