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Development of New Mid‑Infrared
Ultrafast Laser Sources for Compact X‑ray Sources--Kapteyn‑Murnane Laboratories, Inc., 1855 S. 57th Court,
Boulder, CO 80301; 303‑544‑9068;
www.kmlabs.com
Dr. Hsiao‑hua
Liu, Principal Investigator, hliu@kmlabs.com
Dr. Sterling Backus, Business Official, sbackus@kmlabs.com
DOE Grant No. DE‑FG02‑07ER84841
Amount:
$748,596
Bright coherent
light sources in the soft x-ray region of the spectrum are useful for a variety
of applications of interest to the DOE.
However for many applications, such as nanometer-scale microscopy in the
“water window” region of the soft x-ray spectrum (300-500 eV),
only large-scale synchrotron facilities are currently capable of generating the
required flux. Yet, the implementation
of small-scale, tabletop sources of bright coherent soft x-rays would greatly
expand the potential impact of the technologies developed at synchrotrons,
allowing the source to be brought to applications in science and industry. One promising approach to addressing this
need involves the coherent upconversion of laser
light to short wavelengths through the process of high-order harmonic
generation. The basic physics of the
high-order harmonic generation process makes it easier to generate and
phase-match shorter-wavelength harmonics when the process is driven by longer
wavelength light. This project will
develop an ultrafast laser amplifier that operates at wavelengths ~3x longer
than current generation ultrafast lasers.
This mid-infrared ultrafast laser will be integrated with a new set-up
for high-order harmonic generation. In
Phase I, the temperature dependence of the absorption and emission spectra was
measured for two gain materials, which could serve as the driving source for
generating soft x-ray light through the high-order harmonic generation
process. The most promising gain
material was selected, and a two-stage multipass
amplifier system was designed. In Phase
II, the design will be implemented in the construction of the mid-infrared
laser amplifier system, and the amplified pulses will be used to generate
efficient high-order harmonic light at 13nm and 4nm, with sufficient flux for
applications.
Commercial Applications and Other Benefits as described by
the awardee: The development of these lasers should
directly translate into brighter tabletop soft x-ray sources for applications
in control, diagnostics, and metrology. Currently,
a $7B global laser market exists for ultraviolet, visible, and infrared laser
systems.