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Dive into the research topics where F. Tavella is active.

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Featured researches published by F. Tavella.


Optics Letters | 2011

Yb:YAG Innoslab amplifier: efficient high repetition rate subpicosecond pumping system for optical parametric chirped pulse amplification

M. Schulz; R. Riedel; Arik Willner; T. Mans; C. Schnitzler; Peter Russbueldt; J. Dolkemeyer; E. Seise; T. Gottschall; Steffen Hädrich; S. Duesterer; Holger Schlarb; J. Feldhaus; Jens Limpert; B. Faatz; Andreas Tünnermann; J. Rossbach; Markus Drescher; F. Tavella

We report on a Yb:YAG Innoslab laser amplifier system for generation of subpicsecond high energy pump pulses for optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA) at high repetition rates. Pulse energies of up to 20 mJ (at 12.5 kHz) and repetition rates of up to 100 kHz were attained with pulse durations of 830 fs and average power in excess of 200 W. We further investigate the possibility to use subpicosecond pulses to derive a stable continuum in a YAG crystal for OPCPA seeding.


Nature Communications | 2013

Single-shot pulse duration monitor for extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers

R. Riedel; A. Al-Shemmary; M. Gensch; Torsten Golz; M. Harmand; Nikita Medvedev; M. J. Prandolini; Klaus Sokolowski-Tinten; S. Toleikis; U. Wegner; Beata Ziaja; Nikola Stojanovic; F. Tavella

The resolution of ultrafast studies performed at extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers is still limited by shot-to-shot variations of the temporal pulse characteristics. Here we show a versatile single-shot temporal diagnostic tool that allows the determination of the extreme ultraviolet pulse duration and the relative arrival time with respect to an external pump-probe laser pulse. This method is based on time-resolved optical probing of the transient reflectivity change due to linear absorption of the extreme ultraviolet pulse within a solid material. In this work, we present measurements performed at the FLASH free-electron laser. We determine the pulse duration at two distinct wavelengths, yielding (184±14) fs at 41.5 nm and (21±19) fs at 5.5 nm. Furthermore, we demonstrate the feasibility to operate the tool as an online diagnostic by using a 20-nm-thin Si3N4 membrane as target. Our results are supported by detailed numerical and analytical investigations.


Optics Express | 2010

High average and peak power few-cycle laser pulses delivered by fiber pumped OPCPA system

Jan Rothhardt; Steffen Hädrich; Enrico Seise; Manuel Krebs; F. Tavella; Arik Willner; S. Düsterer; H. Schlarb; J. Feldhaus; Jens Limpert; J. Rossbach; Andreas Tünnermann

We report on a high power optical parametric amplifier delivering 8 fs pulses with 6 GW peak power. The system is pumped by a fiber amplifier and operated at 96 kHz repetition rate. The average output power is as high as 6.7 W, which is the highest average power few-cycle pulse laser reported so far. When stabilizing the seed oscillator, the system delivered carrier-envelop phase stable laser pulses. Furthermore, high harmonic generation up to the 33(th) order (21.8 nm) is demonstrated in a Krypton gas jet. In addition, the scalability of the presented laser system is discussed.


Optics Express | 2012

Pulsed operation of a high average power Yb:YAG thin-disk multipass amplifier

M. Schulz; R. Riedel; Arik Willner; S. Düsterer; M. J. Prandolini; J. Feldhaus; Bart Faatz; J. Rossbach; Markus Drescher; F. Tavella

An Yb:YAG thin-disk multipass laser amplifier system was developed operating in a 10 Hz burst operation mode with 800 µs burst duration and 100 kHz intra-burst repetition rate. Methods for the suppression of parasitic amplified spontaneous emission are presented. The average output pulse energy is up to 44.5 mJ and 820 fs compressed pulse duration. The average power of 4.45 kW during the burst is the highest reported for this type of amplifier.


Optics Express | 2010

Fiber-amplifier pumped high average power few-cycle pulse non-collinear OPCPA.

F. Tavella; Arik Willner; Jan Rothhardt; Steffen Hädrich; Enrico Seise; S. Düsterer; Th. Tschentscher; H. Schlarb; J. Feldhaus; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; J. Rossbach

We report on the performance of a 60 kHz repetition rate sub-10 fs, optical parametric chirped pulse amplifier system with 2 W average power and 3 GW peak power. This is to our knowledge the highest average power sub-10 fs kHz-amplifier system reported to date. The amplifier is conceived for applications at free electron laser facilities and is designed such to be scalable in energy and repetition rate.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

Optical laser systems at the Linac Coherent Light Source

Michael P. Minitti; Ryan Coffee; Steve Edstrom; S. Gilevich; James M. Glownia; Eduardo Granados; Philippe Hering; Matthias C. Hoffmann; A. Miahnahri; Despina Milathianaki; Wayne Polzin; Daniel Ratner; F. Tavella; Sharon Vetter; Marc Welch; William E. White; Alan Fry

This manuscript serves as a reference to describe the optical laser sources and capabilities at the Linac Coherent Light Source.


Optics Express | 2014

Thermal properties of borate crystals for high power optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification

R. Riedel; Jan Rothhardt; Kolja Beil; B. Gronloh; Arno Klenke; H. Höppner; M. Schulz; U. Teubner; Christian Kränkel; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; M. J. Prandolini; F. Tavella

The potential of borate crystals, BBO, LBO and BiBO, for high average power scaling of optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifiers is investigated. Up-to-date measurements of the absorption coefficients at 515 nm and the thermal conductivities are presented. The measured absorption coefficients are a factor of 10-100 lower than reported by the literature for BBO and LBO. For BBO, a large variation of the absorption coefficients was found between crystals from different manufacturers. The linear and nonlinear absorption coefficients at 515 nm as well as thermal conductivities were determined for the first time for BiBO. Further, different crystal cooling methods are presented. In addition, the limits to power scaling of OPCPAs are discussed.


Optics Express | 2013

Long-term stabilization of high power optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifiers

R. Riedel; M. Schulz; M. J. Prandolini; A. Hage; H. Höppner; Thomas Gottschall; Jens Limpert; Markus Drescher; F. Tavella

The long-term stability of optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifiers is hindered by thermal path length drifts affecting the temporal pump-to-signal overlap. A kilowatt-pumped burst amplifier is presented delivering broadband 1.4 mJ pulses with a spectral bandwidth supporting sub-7 fs pulse duration. Active temporal overlap control can be achieved by feedback of optical timing signals from cross-correlation or spectral measurements. Using a balanced optical cross-correlator, we achieve a pump-to-signal synchronization with a residual jitter of only (46 ± 2) fs rms. Additionally, we propose passive pump-to-signal stabilization with an intrinsic jitter of (7.0 ± 0.5) fs rms using white-light continuum generation.


Optics Express | 2014

Design considerations for a high power, ultrabroadband optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifier.

M. J. Prandolini; R. Riedel; M. Schulz; A. Hage; H. Höppner; F. Tavella

A conceptual design of a high power, ultrabroadband optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifier (OPCPA) was carried out comparing nonlinear crystals (LBO and BBO) for 810 nm centered, sub-7.0 fs pulses with energies above 1 mJ. These amplifiers are only possible with a parallel development of kilowatt-level OPCPA-pump amplifiers. It is therefore important to know good strategies to use the available OPCPA-pump energy efficiently. Numerical simulations, including self- and cross-phase modulation, were used to investigate the critical parameters to achieve sufficient spectral and spatial quality. At high output powers, thermal absorption in the nonlinear crystals starts to degrade the output beam quality. Strategies to minimize thermal effects and limits to the maximum average power are discussed.


Nature | 2017

In situ X-ray diffraction measurement of shock-wave-driven twinning and lattice dynamics

Christopher Wehrenberg; David McGonegle; C. A. Bolme; Andrew Higginbotham; A. Lazicki; Hae Ja Lee; B. Nagler; H.-S. Park; B. A. Remington; Robert E. Rudd; Marcin Sliwa; Matthew Suggit; Damian C. Swift; F. Tavella; Luis A. Zepeda-Ruiz; J. S. Wark

Pressure-driven shock waves in solid materials can cause extreme damage and deformation. Understanding this deformation and the associated defects that are created in the material is crucial in the study of a wide range of phenomena, including planetary formation and asteroid impact sites, the formation of interstellar dust clouds, ballistic penetrators, spacecraft shielding and ductility in high-performance ceramics. At the lattice level, the basic mechanisms of plastic deformation are twinning (whereby crystallites with a mirror-image lattice form) and slip (whereby lattice dislocations are generated and move), but determining which of these mechanisms is active during deformation is challenging. Experiments that characterized lattice defects have typically examined the microstructure of samples after deformation, and so are complicated by post-shock annealing and reverberations. In addition, measurements have been limited to relatively modest pressures (less than 100 gigapascals). In situ X-ray diffraction experiments can provide insights into the dynamic behaviour of materials, but have only recently been applied to plasticity during shock compression and have yet to provide detailed insight into competing deformation mechanisms. Here we present X-ray diffraction experiments with femtosecond resolution that capture in situ, lattice-level information on the microstructural processes that drive shock-wave-driven deformation. To demonstrate this method we shock-compress the body-centred-cubic material tantalum—an important material for high-energy-density physics owing to its high shock impedance and high X-ray opacity. Tantalum is also a material for which previous shock compression simulations and experiments have provided conflicting information about the dominant deformation mechanism. Our experiments reveal twinning and related lattice rotation occurring on the timescale of tens of picoseconds. In addition, despite the common association between twinning and strong shocks, we find a transition from twinning to dislocation-slip-dominated plasticity at high pressure (more than 150 gigapascals), a regime that recovery experiments cannot accurately access. The techniques demonstrated here will be useful for studying shock waves and other high-strain-rate phenomena, as well as a broad range of processes induced by plasticity.

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R. Riedel

Helmholtz Institute Jena

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B. Nagler

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Arik Willner

Helmholtz Institute Jena

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Hae Ja Lee

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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B. Dromey

Queen's University Belfast

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Hauke Höppner

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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