Research Terms
Nonlinear Optical Materials Physical Sciences Nonlinear Optics Laser Physics Laser Spectroscopy
Keywords
Chromium Lasers Infrared Lasers Iron Lasers Quasi Phasematching Solid-State Lasers
Industries
Advanced Materials & Products Photonics/Optics
Optical Society of America, Member; 1982 - present
The course covers fundamental principles of transition-metal ion spectroscopy, semiconductor host materials, transition-metal infrared lasers and their applications. Performance of transition-metal infrared lasers such as Cr2+:ZnSe/S and Fe2+:ZnSe will be reviewed including cw, gain-switched, and modelocked operation. Recent advances in waveguide operation will also be reviewed. Broadband tunability and operation in a multitude of formats leads to applications which encompass infrared spectroscopy, sensing, imaging, free-space communications, infrared countermeasures and high-field effects.
Subject Areas:
Keywords:
Audience:
Adults
Duration:
2-3 hours
Fee:
Expenses Only
Researchers at the University of Central Florida have invented a low loss optical nanocomposite material made of glass and high concentrations of nanocrystals (NCs). Unlike conventional crystal laser media, the new glass ceramic medium can be drawn into fiber, coated onto films, deposited as waveguides or formed as bulk optical elements. The new material has better index-matched and viscosity-tuned attributes than other doped glass/NC-containing materials, enabling high NC loading levels. Though similar materials may exhibit luminescence or random lasing in bulk form, they fail to maintain optical function like the new nanocomposite can when formed into a fiber or planar film. Well-suited for laser sources operating in wavelengths of 2 µm or greater, the material can be used for applications such as molecular spectroscopy, non-invasive medical diagnostics and atmospheric sensing.
The invention comprises an optical nanocomposite material and a process for producing said material, which is made of glass and active NCs (rare earth or transition metals). The material creates a matrix which is index-, dispersion-, and thermo-optically matched, enabling the creation of a glass ceramic with unique optical properties. By further tuning the viscosity of the composite, it can be drawn into fiber form, dissolved into a solution and deposited as a thin film, or used as a bulk optical component.
One example use of the invention blends nanosized crystalline powders (NCs) with multicomponent chalcogenide glass (ChG) to form an optical nanocomposite of glass/NCs with matching optical properties (index, dispersion, dn/dT). Specialized methods ensure homogeneous physical dispersion of NCs within the glass matrix during preparation, while minimizing agglomeration and any mismatch in the coefficient of thermal expansion.