P.W. Turner
University of Southampton
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Featured researches published by P.W. Turner.
Optics Letters | 2000
J.A. Alvarez-Chavez; Herman L. Offerhaus; Johan Nilsson; P.W. Turner; W.A. Clarkson; David J. Richardson
We report on a Q -switched, cladding-pumped, ytterbium-doped large-mode-area fiber laser operating at 1090 nm that is capable of generating 2.3 mJ of output pulse energy at a 500-Hz repetition rate and more than 5 W of average output power at higher repetition rates in a high-brightness beam (M(2) = 3) . Using a similar fiber with a smaller core, we generated >0.5-mJ pulses in a diffraction-limited beam. Our results represent a threefold increase in pulse energy over previously published values for Q-switched fiber lasers and firmly establish fiber lasers as compact, multiwatt, multimillijoule pulse sources with large scope for both industrial and scientific applications.
Optics Letters | 2002
W.A. Clarkson; N. P. Barnes; P.W. Turner; Johan Nilsson; D.C. Hanna
A high-power double-clad Tm-doped silica fiber laser, pumped by two beam-shaped and polarization-coupled diode bars at 787 nm, was wavelength tuned by use of an external cavity containing a diffraction grating. The Tm fiber laser produced a maximum output power of 7 W at 1940 nm for 40 W of incident diode power and was tuned over a wavelength range of 230 nm from 1860 to 2090 nm, with >5-W output power over the range 1870-2040 nm. The prospects for further improvement in performance and extension of the tuning range are discussed.
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2001
C.C. Ranaud; Herman L. Offerhaus; J.A. Alvarez-Chavez; C.J. Nilsson; W.A. Clarkson; P.W. Turner; David J. Richardson; A.B. Grudinin
We theoretically and experimentally analyze Q-switched cladding pumped ytterbium-doped fiber lasers designed for high pulse energies. We compare the extractable energy from two high-energy fiber designs: (1) single- or few-moded low-NA large mode area (LMA) fibers and (2) large-core multimode fibers, which may incorporate a fiber taper for brightness enhancement. Our results show that the pulse energy is proportional to the effective core area and, therefore, LMA fibers and multimode fibers of comparable core size give comparable results. However, the energy storage in multimode fibers is mostly limited by strong losses due to amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) or even spurious lasing between pulses. The ASE power increases with the number of modes in a fiber. Furthermore, spurious feedback is more difficult to suppress with a higher NA, and Rayleigh back-scattering increases with higher NA, too. These effects are smaller in low-NA LMA fibers, allowing for somewhat higher energy storage. For the LMA fibers, we found that facet damage was a more severe restriction than ASE losses or spurious lasing. With a modified laser cavity, we could avoid facet damage in the LMA fiber, and reached output pulse energies as high as 2.3 mJ, limited by ASE. Theoretical estimates suggest that output pulse energies around 10 mJ are feasible with a larger core fiber, while maintaining a good beam quality.
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2003
Johan Nilsson; S.-U. Alam; J.A. Alvarez-Chavez; P.W. Turner; W.A. Clarkson; A.B. Grudinin
We describe erbium-ytterbium co-doped fiber lasers in different free-running and tunable configurations. The lasers were cladding-pumped by high-power multimode diode sources. We compare pumping at 915 and 980 nm. With a free-running laser, we obtained slope efficiencies of up to 50% with 915-nm pumping and 38% with 980-nm pumping, with respect to absorbed pump power. We reached a double-ended output power of 16.8 W from the free-running laser. Thanks to a high rare-earth concentration and a small inner cladding area (possible with the high-brightness pump sources we used), the operating pump absorption of the fiber reached 8 dB/m. With such high absorption, short fibers with high nonlinear thresholds are possible even with cladding pumping. The tunable fiber laser had a tuning range from 1533 to 1600 nm and emitted 6.7 W of output power at 1550nm in a high-brightness, single-polarization, narrow linewidth beam.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 1999
Cyril C. Renaud; Romeo Selvas-Aguilar; Johan Nilsson; P.W. Turner; A.B. Grudinin
We describe a compact Q-switched diode pumped double-clad ytterbium-doped fiber laser. The fiber laser was bidirectionally pumped by two laser diodes (2 W of output power each) via two side-injecting pump-couplers. We used a large multimode core of 15 /spl mu/m diameter to increase the laser gain volume and thus to achieve higher pulse energy. Experimentally this laser produced pulses with energy up to 170 /spl mu/J with a peak power of 2 kW (at a low repetition rate of 500 Hz) and was tunable from 1060 to 1100 nm.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 1999
J.A. Alvarez-Chavez; A.B. Grudinin; Johan Nilsson; P.W. Turner; W.A. Clarkson
Summary form only given. Cladding pumped fibre lasers are undoubtedly becoming the most attractive source of high power radiation in the near IR region. The small overlap between the pump and the rare-earth-doped core leads to a small pump absorption, e.g., 1 dB/m. Larger core and absorption is often desirable, especially if (transversally) single-mode operation can be maintained. Thus, single-mode operation following selective excitation of the fundamental mode of large-core multimode fiber amplifiers was recently demonstrated in short fibres. In this paper, we use a simple fiber taper inside a laser cavity with a multimode gain fibre to suppress higher-order modes.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2005
D.N. Payne; Yoonchan Jeong; Johan Nilsson; J.K. Sahu; D.B.S. Soh; C. Alegria; P. Dupriez; Christophe A. Codemard; Valery Philippov; V. Hernandez; R. Horley; L.M.B. Hickey; L. Wanzcyk; C.E. Chryssou; J.A. Alvarez-Chavez; P.W. Turner
We discuss the dramatic development of high-power fiber laser technology in recent years and the prospects of kilowattclass single-frequency fiber sources. We describe experimental results from an ytterbium-doped fiber-based multihundred-watt single-frequency, single-mode, plane-polarized master-oscillator power amplifier (MOPA) operating at 1060 nm and a similar source with 0.5 kW of output power, albeit with a degraded beam quality (M2 = 1.6) and not linearly polarized. Experiments and simulations aimed at predicting the Brillouin limit of single-frequency system with a thermally broadened Brillouin gain are presented. These suggest that single-frequency MOPAs with over 1 kW of output power are possible. In addition, the power scalability of a simple single-strand fiber laser to 10 kW is discussed.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2003
Kalle Ylä-Jarkko; Christophe A. Codemard; J. Singleton; P.W. Turner; I. Godfrey; Shaif-ul Alam; Johan Nilsson; J.K. Sahu; Anatoly Borisovich Grudinin
We present results on a low-cost cladding-pumped L-band amplifier based on side pumping (GTWave) fiber technology and pumped by a single 980-nm multimode diode. We show that simultaneous noise reduction and transient suppression can be achieved by using gain clamping by a seed signal (/spl lambda/=1564 nm). In the gain-clamping regime, the amplifier exhibits 30-dB gain over 1570-1605-nm spectral band with noise figure below 7 dB. The noise figure can be further reduced to below 5 dB by utilizing a low power single-mode pump at 980 nm. The erbium-doped fiber amplifier is relatively insensitive to input signal variations with power excursions below 0.15 dB for a 10-dB channel add-drop.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 1999
Herman L. Offerhaus; J.A. Alvarez-Chavez; Johan Nilsson; P.W. Turner; W.A. Clarkson; David J. Richardson
Using a large mode area, ytterbium-doped cladding-pumped fiber and a novel cavity configuration we obtain 2.3 mJ Q-switched pulses, a record pulse energy for a fiber laser. Average powers in excess of 5 W were achieved.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2000
A.B. Grudinin; Johan Nilsson; P.W. Turner
Summary form only. We discuss recent developments in high power fibre lasers and amplifiers. Particular attention is paid to pump launching schemes and methods to minimise nonlinear distortion in fibre amplifiers.