1 / 25

Introduction to Optical Electronics

Semiconductor Photon Detectors (Ch 18). Semiconductor Photon Sources (Ch 17). Lasers (Ch 15). Photons in Semiconductors (Ch 16). Laser Amplifiers (Ch 14). Photons & Atoms (Ch 13). Quantum (Photon) Optics (Ch 12). Resonators (Ch 10). Electromagnetic Optics (Ch 5). Wave Optics (Ch 2 & 3).

harlow
Download Presentation

Introduction to Optical Electronics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Semiconductor Photon Detectors (Ch 18) Semiconductor Photon Sources (Ch 17) Lasers (Ch 15) Photons in Semiconductors (Ch 16) Laser Amplifiers (Ch 14) Photons & Atoms (Ch 13) Quantum (Photon) Optics (Ch 12) Resonators (Ch 10) Electromagnetic Optics (Ch 5) Wave Optics (Ch 2 & 3) Ray Optics (Ch 1) Optics Physics Optoelectronics Introduction to Optical Electronics

  2. Output light Amplifier Input light Laser Amplilfiers

  3. Gain & Phase CoefficientsLorentzian Lineshape

  4. Exercise 13.1-1Attenuation and Gain in a Ruby Laser Amplifier • Consider a ruby crystal with two energy levels separated by an energy difference corresponding to a free-space wavelength 0 = 694.3 nm, with a Lorentzian lineshape of width  = 60 GHz. The spontaneous lifetime is tsp = 3 ms and the refractive index of ruby is n = 1.76. If N1 + N2 = Na = 1022 cm-3, determine the population difference N = N2 – N1 and the attenuation coefficient at the line center (0) under conditions of thermal equilibrium (so that the Boltzmann distribution is obeyed) at T = 300 K. • What value should the population difference N assume to achieve a gain coefficient (0) = 0.5 cm-1 at the central frequency? • How long should the crystal be to provide an overall gain of 4 at the central frequency when (0) = 0.5 cm-1 ?

  5. 2 1 Rate Equations Understanding Lifetimes • 1 and 2 are overall lifetimes for atomic energy levels 1 and 2. • Lifetime of level 2 has two contributions (where rates are inversely proportional to decay times) and • Population densitiesN1 and N2 will vanish unless another mechanism is employed to increase occupation

  6. 2 2 1 1 Rate Equations Absence of Amplifier Radiation • Pumping Rates – R1 & R2 defined • Rate Equations: • Steady-State Conditions

  7. Exercise 13.2-1Optical Pumping Assume that R1 = 0 and that R2 is realized by exciting atoms from the ground state E = 0 to level 2 using photons of frequency E2 / h absorbed with a transition probability W. Assume that 2≈tsp, and 1 << tsp so that in steady state N1≈ 0 and N0 ≈ R2tsp. If Na is the total population of levels 0, 1, and 2, show that R2 ≈ (Na – 2N0)W, so that the population difference is N0 ≈ NatspW / (1 + 2 tsp W)

  8. Rate Equations Presence of Amplifier Radiation • Pumping Rates • Four Case Studies (Homogeneous Broadened Transitions) • I = 0, R2(t) = R20u(t), R1(t) = 0 • 1 = 0, R2(t) = R20u(t) • 1 = 0, R2(t) = R20, I = Pulse • Steady State - 2 1

  9. Case 1I = 0, R1(t) = 0, R2(t) = R20u(t)

  10. Solving Differential Equations • Obtain Forms • General Form • Particular Form • Homogeneous (Natural) and Particular (Forced) Response • Particular Solution • Note: initial conditions not set • Homogeneous • Use initial conditions (removes the effect of the particular solution’s i.c.)

  11. Case 1I = 0, R1(t) = 0, R2(t) = R20u(t)

  12. Case 21 = 0, R2(t) = R20u(t)

  13. Case 21 = 0, R2(t) = R20u(t)

  14. Case 31 = 0, R2(t) = R20, I = Pulse

  15. Case 31 = 0, R2(t) = R20, I = Pulse

  16. Approach to Case 4Steady-State Rate Equations Rate Equations describe the rates of change of the population densities N1andN2as a result of pumping, radiative, and nonradiative transitions. • Determine rate equations in the absence of Amplifier Radiation (i.e., no stimulated emission or absorption) • Find steady-state population difference N0 = N2 – N1 • Determine rate equations in the presence of Amplifier Radiation (non-linear interactions) • Find steady-state population difference N = f(N0) • Determine the saturation time constant s

  17. 2 1 Case 4: Steady State • Pumping Rates • Steady State • Steady-state Population Differences • N = N2-N1 • N0 = N2-N1 w/o amp. rad. • s – Saturation Time Constant

  18. 3 Short-lived level Rapid decay Long-lived level 2 Laser Short-lived level Pump 1 Rapid decay 0 Ground state 3 Short-lived level Rapid decay Long-lived level 2 Pump Laser 1 Ground state Rate Equations in the Absence of Amplifier Radiation • Four-Level Pumping Schemes • Three-Level Pumping Schemes

  19. 3 Short-lived level Rapid decay Long-lived level 2 Laser Short-lived level Pump 1 Rapid decay 0 Ground state 3 Short-lived level Rapid decay Long-lived level 2 Pump Laser 1 Ground state Rate Equations in the Absence of Amplifier Radiation • Four-Level Pumping Schemes • Three-Level Pumping Schemes

  20. Population Inversion *What is the small-signal approximation?

  21. Exercise 13.2-3Pumping Powers in Three- and Four-Level Systems • Determine the pumping transition probability W required to achieve a zero population difference in a three- and a four-level laser amplifier • If the pumping transition probability W = 2 / tsp in the three-level system and W = 1 / 2 tsp in the four-level system, show that N0 = Na / 3. Compare the pumping powers required to achieve this population difference.

  22. Amplifier Nonlinearity Gain Coefficient Note: 0() is called the small-signal gain coefficient. Why?

  23. Amplifier Nonlinearity Gain

  24. Saturable Absorbers

  25. Gain CoefficientInhomogeneously Broadened Medium Gain Coefficient  

More Related