A programmable beam shaping system for tailoring the profile of high fluence laser beams
Author(s) -
John E. Heebner,
M. Borden,
Phil Miller,
Christopher J. Stolz,
Tayyab Suratwala,
Paul J. Wegner,
M. R. Hermann,
Mark A. Henesian,
Christopher A. Haynam,
Steve L. Hunter,
Kim Christensen,
Nan Wong,
Lynn G. Seppala,
G. Brunton,
Eddy Tse,
Abdul Ahad S. Awwal,
Mark Franks,
E. V. Marley,
K. Williams,
M. J. B. Scanlan,
T. Budge,
Marcus V. Monticelli,
D. Walmer,
S. N. Dixit,
C. Widmayer,
Justin Wolfe,
J. Bude,
Kelly McCarty,
Jean-Michel Di-Nicola
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
proceedings of spie, the international society for optical engineering/proceedings of spie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.192
H-Index - 176
eISSN - 1996-756X
pISSN - 0277-786X
DOI - 10.1117/12.867728
Subject(s) - optics , materials science , liquid crystal on silicon , optoelectronics , spatial light modulator , laser , liquid crystal , physics
Customized spatial light modulators have been designed and fabricated for use as precision beam shaping devices in fusion class laser systems. By inserting this device in a low-fluence relay plane upstream of the amplifier chain, "blocker" obscurations can be programmed into the beam profile to shadow small isolated flaws on downstream optical components that might otherwise limit the system operating energy. In this two stage system, 1920 × 1080 bitmap images are first imprinted on incoherent, 470 nm address beams via pixelated liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) modulators. To realize defined masking functions with smooth apodized shapes and no pixelization artifacts, address beam images are projected onto custom fabricated optically-addressable light valves. Each valve consists of a large, single pixel liquid cell in series with a photoconductive Bismuth silicon Oxide (BSO) crystal. The BSO crystal enables bright and dark regions of the address image to locally control the voltage supplied to the liquid crystal layer which in turn modulates the amplitude of the coherent beams at 1053 nm. Valves as large as 24 mm × 36 mm have been fabricated with low wavefront distortion (<0.5 waves) and antireflection coatings for high transmission (>90%) and etalon suppression to avoid spectral and temporal ripple. This device in combination with a flaw inspection system and optic registration strategy represents a new approach for extending the operational lifetime of high fluence laser optics.
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