Fiber Optic Cables for Transmission of High Power Laser Pulses in - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

fiber optic cables for transmission of high power laser
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Fiber Optic Cables for Transmission of High Power Laser Pulses in - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Fiber Optic Cables for Transmission of High Power Laser Pulses in Spaceflight Applications William Joe Thomes Jr. Melanie N. Ott Richard F. Chuska Robert C. Switzer Diana E. Blair NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Code 562 Photonics


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SLIDE 1

Fiber Optic Cables for Transmission of High Power Laser Pulses in Spaceflight Applications

William “Joe” Thomes Jr. Melanie N. Ott Richard F. Chuska Robert C. Switzer Diana E. Blair

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Code 562 Photonics Group E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, Melanie.N.Ott@nasa.gov http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov

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SLIDE 2

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Overview

  • Spaceflight Use of High Power Fibers
  • Figures of Merit for High Power Laser Injection
  • Proper Methods of Injecting High Power Laser

Pulses

  • Methods of Improving Fiber’s Optical Damage

Threshold

  • Custom Designed High Power Fiber Connectors
  • Conclusions
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SLIDE 3

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Spaceflight Uses for High Power Fiber Optics

  • Relocate laser and receiver
  • ptics to preferred spacecraft

locations

– Improved shielding – Better thermal management

  • Allows reduction of size,

weight, and power

  • Less mass to manipulate
  • Ruggedization
  • Integration Flexibility

Past Present Future

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SLIDE 4

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

High Power Laser Injection

  • Laser Constraints

– Wavelength, Pulse Width, Energy, and Spot Size

  • Laser Beam Mode Structure
  • Laser to Fiber Injection Optics

Design

  • Injection Optics Alignment
  • Fiber Endface Preparation
  • Fiber Routing and Fixturing

BEAM FROM Q-SWITCHED LASER FIBER INJECTION OPTICS CONNECTOR

"ENTRY" DAMAGE REAR FACE DAMAGE FRONT FACE DAMAGE DAMAGE IN A BEND FRONT FACE BREAKDOWN AIR BREAKDOWN FRONT FACE BREAKDOWN

Control of these parameters determines the

  • ptical damage threshold of the fiber optic cable

Image courtesy of Sandia National Labs

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SLIDE 5

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Laser to Fiber Injection Optics

  • Minimize peak fluence in air before fiber
  • Minimize peak fluence on fiber endface
  • Align fiber axis to incident beam axis
  • Minimize laser “hot spots”
  • Prevent conditions that lead to focusing

within fiber

  • Broaden initial mode power distribution

within fiber

Mode Power Distribution Peak to Average Power

Intensity Position Average Peak Skew Ray Generator LOCATION OF ENTRY DAMAGE SITES PERIODIC REFOCUSING @ INJECTION NA LENSLET ARRAY PRIMARY LENS OPTICAL FIBER

Images courtesy of Sandia National Labs

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SLIDE 6

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

High Power Fiber Optic Cables

  • Fiber Selection and Endface Preparation are Key
  • Bare Fiber versus Connectorized
  • Endface Terminations

– Cleaved Fiber – Polished Fiber – Laser Polished Fiber

  • Proper materials selection, preparation, and

termination are still essential for spaceflight use

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SLIDE 7

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Cleaved Fiber

  • Fiber placed in slight tension and scored (usually

with a diamond blade)

  • Crack propagation across fiber
  • Angled cleave is possible
  • Good for fiber permanently packaged with a device

– Such as mounted on a v-block

  • Sharp edges are prone to chipping
  • Extreme care must be taken to avoid residual

damage from cleave

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SLIDE 8

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

High Power Mechanical Polish

  • Start with small grit

– Initial polish 3 µm or less

  • Polishing takes much

longer than normal

  • Experience and very

good procedures determine final geometry

  • Scratch free at 400x

Fiber Polishing Grit diameter Subsurface damage to 3 x grit diameter

Initial subsurface damage by polishing with a large grit will not be removed during subsequent polishing steps

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SLIDE 9

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Laser Polishing

  • Start with mechanical

polish for high power

  • Finish with laser polish
  • Due to laser wavelength,

laser energy is absorbed at fiber endface and causes heating

  • Stop when fiber has just

started to reflow

  • Requires control of laser

beam parameters and exposure conditions

–CO2 laser at 10.6 µm –Multiple systems to stabilize output power –Measure beam profile and power –Electronic shutter control of exposure duration

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SLIDE 10

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Know When to Quit

Bare Fiber

Surface tension will cause edges to pull back Lensing of fiber tip leads to refocusing inside the fiber

Fiber in Connector

Heat flow into and out of the connector will determine fiber endface heating profile Surface irregularities cause poor beam quality inside fiber Strict control of laser polishing process implemented to avoid these issues

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SLIDE 11

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

40 60 80 100 120 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1

MAXIMUM TRANSMITTED ENERGY BEFORE DAMAGE - mJ CUMULATIVE DAMAGE PROBABILITY

NORMAL DISTRIBUTION MEAN: 88.9 mJ STANDARD DEVIATION: 11.5 mJ WEIBULL DISTRIBUTION SLOPE: 8.90 SCALE PARAMETER: 93.9 mJ NORMAL DISTRIBUTION MEAN: 74.4 mJ STANDARD DEVIATION: 12.2 mJ WEIBULL DISTRIBUTION SLOPE: 7.29 SCALE PARAMETER: 79.3 mJ

STATISTICAL FUNCTIONS ARE FIT TO DAMAGE DATA TO ASSESS

MECHANICALLY POLISHED FIBERS MECHANICALLY POLISHED FIBERS WITH CO -LASER CONDITIONING

2

DAMAGE PROBABILITIES AT LOWER LASER ENERGIES

Laser Polishing Improves Damage Threshold Energy

Data courtesy of Bob Setchell and Dante Berry, Sandia National Labs

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SLIDE 12

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

New High Power Fiber Ferrules

  • New connectors designed, manufactured, and

undergoing testing

  • Information will be available at our website

http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov once approval for public release is obtained

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SLIDE 13

Joe Thomes, E-mail: Joe.Thomes@nasa.gov, http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov To be presented at International Conference on Space Optics (ICSO), Rhodes Island, Greece, October 4-8, 2010.

Conclusions

  • Techniques for each laser power range

– Below 1 GW/cm2 – standard flight termination + simple injection – 1-3 GW/cm2 – high power implementations necessary – 3-9 GW/cm2 – Extreme care to ensure reliable operation – 9-12 GW/cm2 – Very difficult to implement outside of lab environment – Above 12 GW/cm2 – Start exceeding inherent damage limit of fused silica glass

  • New laser polishing setup and connector designs enable

coupling of high power laser energy for future spaceflight designs

  • All aspects of the laser system design need to be considered

For additional information please see our website http://photonics.gsfc.nasa.gov

For Reference: 80 mJ , 12 ns pulse width, 300 µm fiber core → 5.3 GW/cm2