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Article

In-Band Pumped Thulium-Doped Tellurite Glass Microsphere Laser

by
Elena A. Anashkina
1,*,
Vitaly V. Dorofeev
1,2 and
Alexey V. Andrianov
1
1
Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 46 Ul’yanov Street, 603950 Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
2
G.G. Devyatykh Institute of Chemistry of High-Purity Substances of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 49 Tropinin Street, 603950 Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2021, 11(12), 5440; https://doi.org/10.3390/app11125440
Submission received: 19 April 2021 / Revised: 31 May 2021 / Accepted: 8 June 2021 / Published: 11 June 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fiber Lasers and Glass Photonics: Materials Through Application)

Abstract

:
Microresonator-based lasers in the two-micron range are interesting for extensive applications. Tm3+ ions provide high gain; therefore, they are promising for laser generation in the two-micron range in various matrices. We developed a simple theoretical model to describe Tm-doped glass microlasers generating in the 1.9–2 μm range with in-band pump at 1.55 μm. Using this model, we calculated threshold pump powers, laser generation wavelengths and slope efficiencies for different parameters of Tm-doped tellurite glass microspheres such as diameters, Q-factors, and thulium ion concentration. In addition, we produced a 320-μm tellurite glass microsphere doped with thulium ions with a concentration of 5·1019 cm−3. We attained lasing at 1.9 μm experimentally in the produced sample with a Q-factor of 106 pumped by a C-band narrow line laser.

1. Introduction

Whispering gallery mode (WGM) resonators with high Q-factors and a small mode volume providing efficient light-matter interaction are very attractive photonic elements for obtaining optical frequency combs for different applications [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9], creating optical filters, switches, microlasers, sensors, and other miniature optoelectronic devices [10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. Microlasers in the two-micron range are potentially interesting for extensive application in remote chemical sensing, biomedicine, and atmosphere monitoring. Lasing in the two-micron range is easily achieved in microspheres doped with Tm3+ and/or Ho3+ ions (sometimes with the addition of other co-dopants) [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26]. Due to high gain of Tm3+ ions, lasing is easily achieved in various glass matrices such as silica [17], tellurite [18,19,20], fluorotellurite [21], fluoride [22], and even chalcogenide [23].
Tellurite glasses are of great interest for the development of microlasers in the two-micron range [18]. Current technologies allow producing low-loss tellurite glasses characterized by substantial solubility of rare-earth ions [27], which is beneficial in fabricating such photonic devices. Additionally, a high linear refractive index n~2 for tellurite glasses leads to an emission cross section higher than for silica glass with refractive index n~1.4 [27], since the cross section is proportional to (n2 + 2)2/9n.
Despite a large number of experimental studies on laser generation in thulium-doped microresonators made of different glasses, insufficient attention has been paid to theoretical models and numerical investigations. There are only a few theoretical studies of Tm-doped microlasers. A rather complex theoretical model for lasing at ~2 μm in a Tm-doped tellurite microsphere coupled with an undoped microsphere was proposed and studied in the recent work by M. Saffari et al. [28]. Recently, we investigated theoretically the possibility of single-color and multi-color cascade lasing at wavelengths of about 1.9, 1.5, and 2.3 μm in Tm-doped tellurite microspheres pumped at 792 nm [29]. Diagrams of various regimes were plotted depending on the parameters of the system (such as Q-factors and pump powers) [29]. After that, P. Wang et al. demonstrated experimentally dual-wavelength lasing at 1.9 and 2.3 μm for the first time in a Tm-doped fluorotellurite microsphere [21], thus confirming the performance of our theoretical model [29]. Here, we concentrate on studying laser generation in the 1.9–2 μm range at the 3F43H6 transition of Tm3+ ions with in-band pump in the range of about 1.55 μm, which is highly attractive for many practical applications. Currently, there are plenty of commercially available laser sources at 1.55 μm demanded in telecom applications; therefore, their use for pumping thulium microlasers is a fairly straightforward solution. The simple theoretical model presented here can be used to describe Tm-doped microlasers based on various glass matrices, including tellurite (which is also analyzed in detail in this work), silica, fluorotellurite, fluoride, and others.
Microlasers based on different active rare-earth ions can be described by a system of ordinary differential equations of the first order in time [30,31]. The most common way to analyze such microlasers is numerical solution of a dynamical system (commonly by the Runge–Kutta method). A steady state solution that is of the greatest interest can be found by simulating the laser dynamics over a long time sufficient for relaxation oscillations to decay [31]. However, with a large number of WGMs falling into the gain band of an active ion, the dynamical system contains a very large number of coupled equations, which can take a lot of time to solve, especially for many realizations with varied parameters. When considering continuous wave (CW) generation under CW pump, a solution can be found by solving a system of many nonlinear algebraic equations (of the order of the number of modes) obtained by taking d/dt = 0. However, we have proposed another semi-analytical approach allowing us to solve only a single nonlinear algebraic equation using exhaustive search for each mode (or a combination of modes) and to find stable CW generation regimes [29]. Here, to describe CW lasing in the 1.9–2 μm range in a Tm-doped microsphere, we use the same approach which becomes very simple for in-band pump.

2. Theoretical Model

The general scheme of the analyzed system is shown in Figure 1. It consists of a thulium-doped tellurite glass microsphere and a silica fiber taper for both, coupling the CW pump wave and extracting the generated laser wave.
We consider in-band CW pump (3H63F4) at a wavelength of 1.55 μm and lasing in the 2 μm range (3F43H6) as shown in Figure 2a. The cross-relaxation process, which can play an important role for a pump at ~0.79 μm [32], is neglected here, because levels above 3F4 are almost unpopulated under in-band pump. Here, we used the two-level approximation, which is equivalent to the quasi three-level model because the transition from the pump level to the upper laser level (both belong to the 3F4 manifold) is very rapid at a room temperature, so the population of the pump level is almost zero (please see Appendix A for details). Let us define the population densities of the 3H6 and 3F4 levels as n1 and n2. They are normalized to the concentration of Tm3+ ions NTm and satisfy the expression
n 1 + n 2 = 1 .
An important characteristic is a gain function proportional to (σemn2σabsn1), where σem and σabs are the emission and absorption cross sections, respectively. The calculated normalized gain function depending on wavelength is given in Figure 2b. The wavelength corresponding to the maximum of the function depends on n2 and determines the generated wavelength. Note that the emission cross-section at the pump wavelength λp = 1.55 μm is almost zero σem(λp) ≈ 0 for similar tellurite glasses [33,34].
The rate equation for the ground state population is [32,34,35]:
d n 1 d t = W 12 n 1 + ( W 21 + 1 τ 21 ) n 2 .
where τ21 = 3 ms [32] is the lifetime of the 3F4 level and W12,21 are the stimulated absorption and emission rates (assuming σem(λp) ≈ 0)
W 12 = Γ λ p σ a b s ( λ p ) h c S e f f | A p | 2 + Γ h c S e f f l λ s , l σ a b s ( λ s , l ) | A s , l | 2 ,
W 21 = Γ h c S e f f l λ s , l σ e m ( λ s , l ) | A s , l | 2 .
Here, λs,l is the laser wavelength with the mode order l (we consider here only the family of fundamental modes with angular mode order l), h is Planck’s constant, c is the speed of light in vacuum, Seff is the effective mode field area, Γ = 0.95 is the overlap factor (defined in [28]), Ap is the intracavity field amplitude at the pump wavelength, and As,l is the intracavity field amplitude at laser wavelength. For the fundamental mode family, the overlap factor is almost independent on the laser wavelength in the 1.9–2 μm range. We calculated previously that for the fundamental mode family, Seff is almost a linear function of the tellurite microsphere radius changing from Seff ≈ 6 μm2 up to Seff ≈ 20 μm2 when the radius increases from 50 μm to 200 μm [36].
The temporal evolution of the intracavity field amplitudes inside the microsphere can be described by the system of ordinary differential Equations [29,30,31,35]:
d A p d t = 1 2 ( 1 T e f f g p i Δ ω ) A p + i 1 T e x t T R T E p u m p
d A s , l d t = 1 2 ( 1 T e f f g s , l ) A s , l
g p = c Γ N T m ε σ a b s ( λ p ) n 1
g s , l = c Γ N T m ε ( σ e m ( λ s , l ) n 2 σ a b s ( λ s , l ) n 1 ) ,
where Δω is detuning of the pump with amplitude Epump from the nearest WGM (further we take Δω = 0); Teff is the effective lifetime 1/Teff = 1/T0 + 1/Text; T0 is the intrinsic lifetime (without allowance for ground state absorption); Text is the coupling lifetime; TRT is the round trip time (circulating time inside the microsphere); ε is the permittivity (the square of the refractive index). We neglect the difference between these lifetimes for different wavelengths and WGMs inside the gain band.
The intracavity laser power is Ps,l = |As,l|2 and the output laser power is
P s , l o u t = | T R T T e x t A s , l | 2 = κ P s , l
where the coupling coefficient κ is
κ = T R T T e x t .
For a steady-state solution, the time derivatives in Equations (2), (5) and (6) are equal to zeros
d n 1 d t = 0 ,
d A p d t = 0 ,
d A s , l d t = 0 .
Therefore, the system of Equations (2), (5) and (6) with (1), (3), (4), (7) and (8) taken into account becomes algebraic, and the number of equations originating from (6) is determined by the number of the considered WGMs in the gain band. However, the solution of a nonlinear system containing a lot of algebraic equations is not a trivial task. Therefore, we use the following semi-analytical approach. First of all, we assume that lasing is single-mode (which is certainly valid near the threshold). We use an exhaustive search for each l in Equation (6) and after that choose only stable physically meaningful solutions (with 0 <n1 <1 and Ps,l > 0). Stability of the solutions is analyzed as follows. If a lasing WGM has the order l*, then for all other WGMs with orders ll* the zero solution As,l = 0 must be stable, that is the increment in Equation (6) must be <0:
1 2 ( 1 T e f f g s , l l * ) < 0 .
Therefore, for the WGM with number l, Equation (6) with allowance for Equation (8) takes the form
1 T e f f c Γ N T m ε ( σ e m ( λ s , l ) n 2 σ a b s ( λ s , l ) n 1 ) = 0 .
Using Equation (1), we find n1 and n2 from Equation (15):
n 1 = σ e m ( λ s , l ) σ e m ( λ s , l ) + σ a b s ( λ s , l ) 1 T e f f ε c Γ N T m 1 ( σ e m ( λ s , l ) + σ a b s ( λ s , l ) ) ,
n 2 = σ a b s ( λ s , l ) σ e m ( λ s , l ) + σ a b s ( λ s , l ) + 1 T e f f ε c Γ N T m 1 ( σ e m ( λ s , l ) + σ a b s ( λ s , l ) ) ,
| A p | 2 = ( 4 / T R T 2 ) κ P p u m p ( 1 T e f f + c Γ N T m ε σ a b s ( λ p ) n 1 ) 2 .
After that, from Equation (2) with Equation (1) and the expressions (3), (4) taken into account, we determine the intracavity power at the laser wavelength
| A s , l | 2 = | A p | 2 λ p σ a b s ( λ p ) n 1 n 2 h c S e f f τ 21 Γ λ s , l ( σ e m ( λ s , l ) n 2 σ a b s ( λ s , l ) n 1 ) .
Therefore, we have obtained the analytical expression (19) for |As,l|2 for each WGM with number l from the gain band, where n1, n2, and |Ap|2 are given by the expressions (16), (17) and (18), respectively. Further, we execute exhaustive search for all l, select only physically meaningful solutions and for them examine the stability using the expression (14). We verified that for any set of parameters, there is only one stable solution resulting in laser generation at a fixed wavelength (or no lasing under the threshold).

3. Theoretical Results and Discussion

We consider critical coupling when an intrinsic Q-factor is equal to a coupling Q-factor: Q0 = Qext (in other words when Teff = T0/2 = Text/2). We set σabs(λp) = 0.05·10−20 cm2 and the emission/absorption cross sections at laser wavelengths as in the paper [34]. We varied Tm3+ ion concentrations, microsphere diameters, Q-factors, and pump powers. The calculated coefficients κ as functions of the total Q-factor for different diameters of a tellurite microsphere ranging from 40 μm to 400 μm are plotted in Figure 3a as well as expected laser wavelengths (Figure 3b), slope efficiencies (Figure 3c), threshold pump powers (Figure 3d–f), and threshold values of coupling coefficients multiplied by pump powers (Figure 3g–i) as functions of the varied parameters of the system. Figure 3d demonstrates that for a Tm3+ ion concentration of 1·1019 cm−3, lasing is possible only if the Q-factor exceeds 106. For lower Q-factors, losses are too large and the gain cannot compensate them; the laser threshold is not reached. With an increase in active ion concentrations to NTm = 5·1019 cm−3 and NTm = 1 1020cm−3, the gain according to Equation (8) grows, and the minimum Q-factors required for generation become equal to 3·105 and 2·105, respectively (Figure 3e,f). Figure 3d–f also demonstrate that for a certain active ion concentration, the larger the microsphere diameter, the higher the threshold pump power is.
Figure 3d–f show that with an increase in the Q-factor, the threshold pump powers first decrease, then reach a minimum, and then begin to increase. This has the following explanation. At low Q-factors, a large intracavity pump power is required to overcome losses and reach the lasing threshold. As the Q-factor increases, less losses need to be compensated, so the threshold power decreases. However, at high Q-factors, the coupling coefficient is rather small (see Figure 3a), because κ is inversely proportional to the total Q-factor for the critical coupling. The intracavity pump power becomes lower than for medium Q-factors, which explains the non-monotonic behavior of the curves in Figure 3d–f. For a clearer demonstration, we plot the dependence of the threshold values of coupling coefficients multiplied by pump powers on Q-factor (Figure 3g–i). These curves are monotonic: the higher the Q-factor, the lower intracavity power is required to attain lasing.
Let us go back to the expected lasing wavelength. We found that in the used model, it does not depend on the diameter of the microsphere and the pump power, but depends on Q-factor and active ion concentration. At low Q-factors, a higher pump power is required, so the population n2 of the level 3F4 is rather high, so the maximum gain is achieved at shorter wavelengths near the maximum of the emission cross section (see Figure 2b). With an improved Q-factor, the laser wavelength grows smoothly. Knowing experimental λs and NTm, it is possible to compare the measured value of the Q-factor with the calculated one or even estimate the effective Q-factor (if it is not measured experimentally).
The slope efficiencies calculated for pump powers above the threshold are plotted in Figure 3c. They do not depend of microsphere diameters. There is an optimal Q-factor to attain maximum efficiency, which coincides with the general laser theory according to which there is an optimal value of transmission coefficient of a laser resonator (or optical losses) to obtain the maximum output laser power [35].
Our semi-analytical model, which allows fast simulation of a steady-state solution unlike dynamical models used previously, makes it possible to perform a scan over a broad range of laser parameters. The obtained results may serve as a guide for designing Tm-doped microlasers pumped by readily available pump sources at a telecommunication wavelength. The model describing single-mode laser generation works well for not very high excess of pump power over the threshold. To describe multi-mode laser generation in different mode families, which is observed for high excess over the threshold, the model can be modified.

4. Experimental Results and Discussion

An experimental microsphere was made of TeO2-ZnO-La2O3-Na2O glass doped with thulium ions with concentration NTm = 5·1019 cm−3. This glass was similar in composition and method of preparation to the core of the fiber used for laser generation earlier [34]. The glass was prepared by melting the initial high-purity oxides and sodium carbonate Na2CO3 in platinum crucible inside sealed a silica chamber in the atmosphere of purified oxygen. After several hours melting at 800 °C, the melt was poured into a mold of silica glass and annealed at a glass transition temperature. A glass sample was cut, ground, and polished (see a photo in Figure 4a). The sample did not contain noticeable point scattering defects and striae in the glass volume. A polished parallelepiped was examined in a red laser beam to determine point defects. He-Ne laser beam scanning did not reveal bubbles and scattering inclusions in the volume of the samples (see Figure 4b). A single-index fiber was produced from the prepared glass (see Figure 4c). Next, we fabricated a microsphere with diameter d = 320 μm by softening the tapered end of this tellurite single-index fiber using a resistive micro-heater [36].
Coupling of the pump wave at 1.55 μm to the tellurite microsphere and outcoupling of the generated laser wave at ~1.9 μm were realized with a silica fiber taper as schematically shown in Figure 1. Despite the significant refractive index difference between silica and tellurite glasses, it is possible to achieve large (critical and even overcritical) coupling in the experiment. This is evident from the fact that at small distances between the taper and the microsphere the measured fraction of absorbed power near the resonance can be more than 0.5.
For an in-band pump and Q-factor measurements, we used a standard telecommunication C-band laser based on a micro-integrable tunable laser assembly (Pure Photonics, PPCL550-180-60, line width 10 kHz, tuning range 190.3–197.9 THz). The measured Q-factor at a wavelength of 1.52 μm was ~106. To measure the Q-factor, we chose the wavelength shorter than the pump wavelength to mitigate the impact of ground state absorption of thulium ions on effective Q-factor. Note that our value Q = 106 agrees well with the Q-factors of tellurite microspheres reported previously by other researches [20,24].
The experiment was conducted in an acrylic glove box to protect the microsphere and fiber taper against dust and airflows from the conditioning system [37]. The fiber taper was made of a telecommunication fiber SMF28e [38]. Coarse adjustment of relative position of the microsphere and fiber taper was done manually using two CCD cameras recording images in perpendicular planes. An example of images from CCD cameras is given in Figure 4d,e, where one can also see near-IR light (“pink belt” in the equatorial plane) that is explained by very weak (neglected in simulation) energy transfer up-conversion processes in thulium ions (the pump light at 1.55 μm is invisible to our CCD cameras). Sub 0.1-μm adjustment of the relative position between the microsphere and the silica taper was implemented with a 3-axis translation stage with precision piezo actuators (Thorlabs MAX312D). The output spectrum of the transmitted pump light was recorded by Telecom OSA (Optical Spectrum Analyzer) Yokogawa AQ6370D (600–1700 nm). To record the spectrum of laser generation beyond the spectral boundary of Telecom OSA, we used a scanning grating monochromator (MS2004i, SOL Instruments Ltd., Minsk, Belarus) and an amplified PbSe detector (PDA20H, Thorlabs) integrated into the computer controlled setup.
Figure 5 demonstrates a composite spectrum of the transmitted pump wave (in dB scale) and the generated laser wave (in linear scale). The pump power launched to the taper is about 5 mW. The laser wavelength is about 1.9 μm, which agrees with the numerical results shown in Figure 3b, where for NTm = 5·1019 cm−3 and Q-factor of the order of 106, the expected laser wavelength is the same. We estimated the threshold power absorbed in the resonator as 0.5 mW. The slope efficiency estimated by modulating the pump power and measuring the response of the generated laser signal was about 10%, which also agrees with theoretical predictions (see Figure 3c, where for NTm = 5·1019 cm−3 and Q factor of 106, the calculated value is 11%). Note that measurements of dependencies of the laser output characteristics on the pump power are complicated because changes in the pump power result in changes of the heat dissipated in the microresonator and the corresponding shift of WGM resonance [36], thus changing the pump coupling conditions.
Note, despite the fact that lasing in Tm-doped tellurite microspheres was achieved in several works listed in Table 1, an in-band pump was used only in [20]. In [20], at a Tm3+ concentration of 4.2 × 1020 cm−3 for a microsphere with a Q factor of 2 × 106, the central lasing wavelength was 1975 mn, which agrees with the results of our theoretical prediction. Therefore, we believe that our experimental and theoretical work can be useful in the development of relatively simple Tm-doped in-band pumped microlasers.

5. Conclusions

We have developed a simple theoretical model to describe thulium-doped glass microlasers generating in the 1.9–2 μm range with in-band CW pump at 1.55 μm. We have obtained an analytical expression for laser power assuming single-mode generation and further performed exhaustive search for each WGM from the gain band and after that chose the wavelength corresponding to a stable physically meaningful solution. This model can be used for microspheres made of different glasses such as silica, tellurite, fluorotellurite, fluoride, chalcogenide, and others. To describe the system, the following parameters are required: emission and absorption cross sections for the 3F43H6 energy transition, the lifetime of the 3F4 level, linear refractive index, Tm3+ ion concentration, Q-factor, coupling coefficient, microsphere diameter, and pump power. We have performed a theoretical analysis for tellurite glass microspheres promising for lasing in the two-micron range. It has been shown that laser generation is possible if the Q-factor exceeds a certain value depending on active ion concentration. The expected laser wavelength depends on thulium ion concentration and Q-factor. The higher the concentration and Q-factor, the longer the laser wavelength is. There is an optimal Q-factor to attain the maximum slope efficiency for a certain thulium ion concentration. Additionally, we have fabricated a 320-μm tellurite glass microsphere doped with thulium ions with a concentration of 5·1019cm−3. We have attained laser generation at 1.9 μm experimentally in the produced sample with a Q-factor of 106 pumped by a C-band CW narrow line laser at 1.55 μm. The observed laser wavelength and slope efficiency agree with the theoretical calculation for the same Q-factor.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, E.A.A. and A.V.A.; methodology, E.A.A., V.V.D. and A.V.A.; software, E.A.A. and A.V.A.; validation, E.A.A. and A.V.A.; investigation, E.A.A. and A.V.A.; resources, A.V.A. and V.V.D.; data curation, E.A.A.; writing—original draft preparation, E.A.A.; writing—review and editing, A.V.A.; visualization, E.A.A.; project administration, E.A.A.; funding acquisition, E.A.A. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The work was funded by the Russian Science Foundation, Grant No. 20-72-10188.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Here, we show the equivalence of the two-level and quasi three-level models for our system. Let us define in the three-level model: the ground state 3H6 as “1”, the upper laser level as “2” and the pump level as “3”. Note that level 2 and level 3 belong to the same 3F4 manifold. For glass matrices, intra-band transitions 3→2 are very rapid at a room temperature (τ32 →0), so the population of level 3 is close to zero (n3 → 0). Therefore, the expression for three-level model n1 + n2 +n3 = 1 reduces to n1 + n2 = 1, which coincides with Equation (1).
Figure A1. Simplified scheme of laser levels for the two-level and three-level models.
Figure A1. Simplified scheme of laser levels for the two-level and three-level models.
Applsci 11 05440 g0a1
Further, the stimulated absorption and emission rates for the three-level model (see Figure A1) are
W * 12 = Γ h c S e f f l λ s , l σ a b s ( λ s , l ) | A s , l | 2
W * 21 = Γ h c S e f f l λ s , l σ e m ( λ s , l ) | A s , l | 2 ,
W * 13 = Γ λ p σ a b s ( λ p ) h c S e f f | A p | 2
W * 31 = Γ λ p σ e m ( λ p ) h c S e f f | A p | 2 = 0
The rate equation for the ground state population for the three-level model:
d n 1 d t = W * 12 n 1 W * 13 n 1 + ( W * 21 + 1 τ 21 ) n 2 = ( W * 12 + W * 13 ) n 1 + ( W * 21 + 1 τ 21 ) n 2
Recalling expressions for W12, W21 (Equations (3) and (4)), we obtain:
W 12 = Γ λ p σ a b s ( λ p ) h c S e f f | A p | 2 + Γ h c S e f f l λ s , l σ a b s ( λ s , l ) | A s , l | 2 = W * 13 + W * 12
W 21 = W * 21
and the rate Equation (A5) for the ground state population for the three-level model becomes
d n 1 d t = W 12 n 1 + ( W 21 + 1 τ 21 ) n 2
Therefore, Equation (A8) coincides with Equation (2). The expressions for gp and gs,l for the three-level model coincide with expressions (7) and (8). Therefore, the two-level and quasi three-level models give the same results for in-band pumped Tm-doped tellurite glass microlasers.

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Figure 1. A simplified scheme of the considered system. Ppump is a pump power and κ is a coupling coefficient.
Figure 1. A simplified scheme of the considered system. Ppump is a pump power and κ is a coupling coefficient.
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Figure 2. (a) A simplified scheme of laser levels for in-band pump. (b) Normalized gain function proportional to (σemn2σabsn1).
Figure 2. (a) A simplified scheme of laser levels for in-band pump. (b) Normalized gain function proportional to (σemn2σabsn1).
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Figure 3. (a) Calculated coupling coefficients κ as functions of the total Q-factor for different diameters of tellurite microspheres indicated in the legend. Calculated laser wavelengths (b) and slope efficiencies (c) above the threshold pump power as functions of the total Q-factor for different thulium ion concentrations NTm. Threshold pump powers for different microsphere diameters d for thulium ion concentration of 1·1019 cm−3 (d), 5·1019 cm−3 (e), and 1·1020cm−3 (f). Threshold values of κPThr (pump powers multiplied by coupling coefficients) for different microsphere diameters d for thulium ion concentration of 1·1019 cm−3 (g), 5·1019 cm−3 (h), and 1·1020cm−3 (i). The legend shown in subplots (d,g) is the same as for subplots (di).
Figure 3. (a) Calculated coupling coefficients κ as functions of the total Q-factor for different diameters of tellurite microspheres indicated in the legend. Calculated laser wavelengths (b) and slope efficiencies (c) above the threshold pump power as functions of the total Q-factor for different thulium ion concentrations NTm. Threshold pump powers for different microsphere diameters d for thulium ion concentration of 1·1019 cm−3 (d), 5·1019 cm−3 (e), and 1·1020cm−3 (f). Threshold values of κPThr (pump powers multiplied by coupling coefficients) for different microsphere diameters d for thulium ion concentration of 1·1019 cm−3 (g), 5·1019 cm−3 (h), and 1·1020cm−3 (i). The legend shown in subplots (d,g) is the same as for subplots (di).
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Figure 4. (a) A photography of the polished thulium-doped tellurite glass parallelepiped with dimensions of 8 × 8 × 44 mm. (b) A photography of He-Ne laser beam in this sample. (c) A microphotography of single-index fiber produced from the synthesized glass. (d,e) The images of the experimentally produced tellurite glass microsphere in perpendicular planes from two CCD cameras. The coordinate axes in (d,e) correspond to the axes in Figure 1.
Figure 4. (a) A photography of the polished thulium-doped tellurite glass parallelepiped with dimensions of 8 × 8 × 44 mm. (b) A photography of He-Ne laser beam in this sample. (c) A microphotography of single-index fiber produced from the synthesized glass. (d,e) The images of the experimentally produced tellurite glass microsphere in perpendicular planes from two CCD cameras. The coordinate axes in (d,e) correspond to the axes in Figure 1.
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Figure 5. The experimental spectra of the transmitted pump wave (green, left axis, recorded by Telecom OSA in dB scale) and the generated laser wave (red, right axis, obtained using monochromator and PbSe detector in a linear scale).
Figure 5. The experimental spectra of the transmitted pump wave (green, left axis, recorded by Telecom OSA in dB scale) and the generated laser wave (red, right axis, obtained using monochromator and PbSe detector in a linear scale).
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Table 1. Performance of Tm3+-doped tellurite glass microsphere lasers.
Table 1. Performance of Tm3+-doped tellurite glass microsphere lasers.
Thulium Ion
Content
Diameter of Microsphere, μmPump Source; Wavelength, μm Laser Wavelength, μmReference
5·1019 cm−3320Telecommunication laser, 1.55~1.9Present study
4.2·1020 cm−3 (1mol% Tm2O3)30Tunable laser source, 1.504–1.629Centered at ~1.975[20]
0.15% Tm2O3104Ti: sapphire, 0.8~1.5&1.9[39]
0.5wt% Tm2O3Not reportedTi: sapphire, 0.793~1.5&1.9[40]
5wt%25Ti: sapphire, 0.793~2.0[19]
1mol% Tm2O3~60Laser diode, 0.793~1.92&2.35; ~1.90[21]
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Anashkina, E.A.; Dorofeev, V.V.; Andrianov, A.V. In-Band Pumped Thulium-Doped Tellurite Glass Microsphere Laser. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 5440. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11125440

AMA Style

Anashkina EA, Dorofeev VV, Andrianov AV. In-Band Pumped Thulium-Doped Tellurite Glass Microsphere Laser. Applied Sciences. 2021; 11(12):5440. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11125440

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Anashkina, Elena A., Vitaly V. Dorofeev, and Alexey V. Andrianov. 2021. "In-Band Pumped Thulium-Doped Tellurite Glass Microsphere Laser" Applied Sciences 11, no. 12: 5440. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11125440

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