Yb-free, SLM EDFA: comparison of 980-, and nm excitation for the core- and clad-pumping

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Yb-free, SLM EDFA: comparison of 98-, 147- and 153-nm excitation for the core- and clad-pumping M. Dubinskii a, V. Ter-Mikirtychev b, J. Zhang a and I. Kudryashov c, a U.S. Army Research Laboratory, AMSRD-ARL-SE-EO, 28 Powder Mill Road, Adelphi, Maryland 2783 b NovaWave Technologies, Inc., 9 Island Dr., Suite 11, Redwood City, CA 9465 c Princeton Lightwave Inc., 2555 US Route 13, Cranbury, New Jersey, 8512 Abstract We present the results of the experimental study and comparison of Yb-free, Erdoped, all-fiber, alignment free, single frequency (SF) fiber amplifiers operating under 98-, 147- and 153-nm pumping for the core- and clad-pumping architectures. In the single-mode core-pumped configuration Er-doped fiber amplifiers demonstrated 52% and 6% pump to output efficiencies for 98 and 148 nm pump wavelength, respectively, producing over 14 mw of SF output power at seed wavelength ~156 nm and over 18 mw at seed wavelength 165 nm for 3 mw of pump power. At the same time, when clad pumped, Er-doped 2/125 DC LMA gain fiber demonstrates laser efficiencies of 22.4% pumped at 98 nm - up to 2 W of fiber-coupled diode laser pumping. The same LMA fiber demonstrates 33% optical-to-optical efficiency (46% slope efficiency versus absorbed power) when cladding-pumped with 152-153-nm fiber coupled laser diode modules. Detailed analysis of these experiments is presented. Keywords: Er-doped; diode-pumped; eye-safe; fiber lasers. Introduction Current developments in the eye-safe ~1.5-um Yb-Er-doped fiber lasers (where Er excitation is accomplished via Yb) are quite impressive. Output power of Er-Yb fiber lasers with diffraction limited beam quality reached ~3 W power level and continue to grow. However, multi-hundred Watt power Yb-Er fiber laser systems already contain in their output a significant fraction of Yb emission (either narrowband or ASE) in the 1-µm spectral range, thus significantly compromising any eye-safe application of this type of fiber laser systems. This problem, as well as pretty limited power conversion efficiency of the Er-Yb laser systems (typically, 35-4%), motivated researchers to go back and reanalyze the potential of introduced in 8 s (approach first demonstrated by E. Snitzer) direct excitation of Er fiber lasers in Yb-free fibers. Our recent successes with resonantly pumped Er:YAG bulk solid-state lasers [1, 2] point to significant advantages of direct resonant pumping of Er compared to pumping Yb-Er co-doped laser materials. In the meantime, very little is done in evaluating direct pumping of Er 3+ in Er-only doped (Yb-free) fiber lasers, especially as it relates to high Laser Source Technology for Defense and Security IV, edited by Mark Dubinskii, Gary L. Wood, Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952, 69525, (28) 277-786X/8/$18 doi: 1.1117/12.78276 Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-1

Report Documentation Page Form Approved OMB No. 74-188 Public reporting burden for the collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to Washington Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports, 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 124, Arlington VA 2222-432. Respondents should be aware that notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person shall be subject to a penalty for failing to comply with a collection of information if it does not display a currently valid OMB control number. 1. REPORT DATE 28 2. REPORT TYPE 3. DATES COVERED --28 to --28 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Yb-free, SLM EDFA: comparison of 98-, 147- and 153-nm excitation for the core- and clad-pumping 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER 5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) U.S. Army Research Laboratory,AMSRD-ARL-SE-EO,28 Powder Mill Road,Adelphi,MD,2783 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 1. SPONSOR/MONITOR S ACRONYM(S) 12. DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT see report 15. SUBJECT TERMS 11. SPONSOR/MONITOR S REPORT NUMBER(S) 16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF: 17. LIMITATION OF ABSTRACT a. REPORT unclassified b. ABSTRACT unclassified c. THIS PAGE unclassified Same as Report (SAR) 18. NUMBER OF PAGES 1 19a. NAME OF RESPONSIBLE PERSON Standard Form 298 (Rev. 8-98) Prescribed by ANSI Std Z39-18

power applications (multi-watts of output laser power and more), and very few results on scalable in nature cladding-pumped operation of Er-only doped fiber lasers were reported. Because of quite high power density required for bleaching the ground-state absorption loss in the three-level Er-doped systems, most efforts were focused on core pumping geometry using either high brightness 98-nm dye or diode lasers [3] or Raman shifted fiber lasers [4] operating in the 148-nm spectral range. To the best of our knowledge, the only efforts aimed at non-telecom power level scaling of resonantly cladding-pumped Yb-free Er fiber lasers were reported in [6] and [7]. While in both these cases output power level of ~1W was achieved, neither of these efforts was targeting ultimate power scaling by also addressing generation (or amplification) of the singlefrequency laser radiation most suitable for further power scaling, e.g., via beam combining. Of the two mentioned efforts only one ([7]) was actually targeting the most scalable LMA fiber case. Here we present the detailed comparative study of the two fundamentally different Er fiber amplifier systems, core-pumped and cladding-pumped, under 98-, 147-, and 153-nm fiber coupled laser diode excitation, which corresponds to either higher energy manifold (~975-nm pumping into 4 I 11/2 manifold of Er 3+ ion) excitation or direct 4 I 15/2 -> 4 I 13/2 Er 3+ ion excitation into its lowest absorption band at 147 nm and 153 nm. In all experiments described below we used either commercially available (COTS, OFS) MP98, single mode, 5 m long, Er only doped fiber (core pumped case) or COTS (Liekki) Er6-2/125DC double clad, Er only doped LMA fiber. All experiments were carried out at room temperature and in a CW operational mode. Diffraction limited beam quality of the LMA gain fiber output was monitored by M2 measurements and numerical aperture of the output laser radiation. 1. Yb-free Er fiber amplifier: CORE pumping geometry a) 98 nm pumping An experimental set-up of core pumped Er only doped fiber laser MOPA system was based on a low power fiber coupled master oscillator (butterfly-package fiber coupled DFB diode laser) amplified in MP98 Er-doped fiber amplifier. All diode lasers including master oscillator (MO) and pump diodes were fiber coupled and spliced with the rest of system fiber components and were, therefore, alignment free. MO was separated from fiber amplifier by a single-stage fiber coupled optical isolator. MO used was a 156 nm single longitudinal mode, fiber coupled, DFB diode laser with over 3 mw of CW output power. A 98/156 WDM was used as a pump power coupler. As seen from Fig. 1, the core-pumped fiber amplifier - when pumped at 98 nm - exhibits over 5% pump to laser conversion efficiency. The core-pumped fiber laser output spectral distribution was measured using Ando AQ6315E optical spectrum analyzer (Fig. 2). As seen from Fig. 2, the laser exhibits single longitudinal mode operation and over 3 db signal to ASE contrast ratio. Because of the limited Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-2

spectrometer resolution we were unable to measure the actual laser bandwidth. We observed no nonlinearities which could challenge the fiber laser power scaling. Single Frequency 156nm Fiber Laser (Core Pumped with 976nm MP98 5m) CW 156nm Power, mw 16 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 5 1 15 2 25 3 CW 976nm Pump Power, mw Series1 Figure 1. Output versus input for core-pumped at 98 nm MP98 fiber amplifier. SPECTRL WIDTH <RMS> THRESH LUL 5.dB AlL.25nm K 2. AC 156.OS9nm Figure 2. Fiber laser output spectral distribution measured by Ando AQ6315E optical spectrum analyzer Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-3

The laser demonstrates diffraction limited beam quality and shows no sign of output power saturation versus pump power and therefore is considered to be in a pump limited high efficiency regime. b) 148 nm pumping Core pumped 148nm fiber laser has been constructed using the same MP98 OFS COTS, 5 m long fiber amplifier. The only difference with the design for the case of 98 nm pump was that the different WDM (148/156) and different pump diode laser were used. The output power versus pump power for 148 nm pumping is shown in Fig. 3. For convenience of comparison, experimental results with 148 nm pump source are shown overlaid with the results presented in Fig.1. As can be seen from Fig. 3, the 148- nm core pumped fiber laser demonstrates over 6% power conversion efficiency. That is about 2% higher slope than was observed with the 98-nm pumping in the same amplifier configuration. It is necessary to note that the length of active fiber was not optimized. Much better results are expected after optimization. SLM lssonm CW Fiber LaserPeltorTnance (Red: l4bonm pump; Blue: 98nm pump. 5n1 of 1VF98 OFS core pumped Er only Iber) 2 18 E 16 14 12 r 1 o 4 2 _ xz - V V 2 7Th I 5 1 15 2 25 3 35 CW Pump Power, mw Seriesl Series2 Linear(Seriesl) Linear (Series2) Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-4

Figure 3. Output power versus pump power for the 147 and 98 nm pump wavelength for core pumped Er-doped fiber amplifier. 2. Yb-free Er fiber amplifier: CLAD pumping geometry a) 98nm pumping Experimental setup used in our clad-pumped experiments is shown in Fig. 4. It includes the semiconductor single frequency DFB ( ν<1khz) laser diode at 156 nm, single-mode fiber pre-amplifier based on a standard (COTS) polarization maintaining PM EYDF-7/13 fiber (Nufern) and, finally, Er-only doped fiber booster amplifier based on a standard (COTS) Er6-2/125DC Liekki LMA fiber. Standard two 4W fiber-coupled laser diode pumps were used to pump pre-amplifier. Fiber-coupled optical isolators were used to isolate pre-amplifier and fiber laser-booster amplifier. 11W 976 imi fiber QP*$ PM -c PM EYDF-711 3 fiber preamplifier coupled diode laser 3.5W Sngle Frequency 156 nm laser beam Figure 4. Optical layout of the 156-nm Master Oscillator-Power Amplifier (MOPA) system used for testing of Er-only doped Er6-2/125 LMA fiber amplifier. Booster amplifier was cladding-pumped (co-pumped only) by the two 11-W 976- nm fiber-coupled (15/125, NA.22) diode lasers (JDSU). Experimental results (output power at 156 nm versus pump power) for Er-only doped Er6-2/125DC booster amplifier are shown in Fig. 5. The slope efficiency of about 22% was achieved. As can be seen from Fig. 5, the booster amplifier works well beyond the saturation (pre-amplifier output launched into the booster after the optical insulator was measured at about 1W, while the power required for booster saturation was estimated to be ~13 mw, which is enough to produce 9% of the booster output power, even without careful system optimization. This cladding pumped fiber laser demonstrated diffraction limited beam quality when the fiber was coiled to ~35 mm diameter, shows no sign of output power saturation versus pump power and therefore is considered a pump limited, high efficiency amplifier. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-5

The laser exhibits single longitudinal mode operation. Good correspondence of the experimental energy parameters with that of theoretical modeling has also been observed (see Fig. 5). r C C,. Co -J 1 1 F') F') 1 p Fiber output power, W P r!" 9) 9) cn Cfl Cfl Cfl I I I I I I I Figure. 5. Er-only doped Er6-2/125DC booster amplifier single-frequency/ Single-mode output power at 156 nm versus pump power (976 nm) with the fixed incoming pre-amplifier power of 1 W. Green simulation, blue - experiment Presented laser characterization results of an all-fiber cladding-pumped Er-only doped Er6-2/125 LMA amplifier with 976 nm pumping are indicating diffraction-limited, single-frequency output of 3.5 W, which is believed to be the highest reported to-date power out of this type of amplifier. b) 153nm pumping The cladding pumped fiber laser amplifier clad-pumped at 153 nm with high power laser diode modules consists of tunable seed laser, C-band power pre-amplifier and Er6-2/125DC fiber based power booster (Fig. 6). Power level of pre-amplified seed laser was about 4 mw. The longest wavelength for this setup was 157 nm. The maximum Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-6

power, as well as the longest wavelength, in this experiment were both limited by the available C-band amplifier. The co-pump configuration was utilized for the booster section. Pump power was delivered by the 6 laser diode pump modules via 6-port pump combiner. About 5-6 W, coupled into the 15/125 um multimode fibers with.15 numerical aperture, pump radiation was launched into each pump port. 1. Seed Laser 2. Pre-Amplifier 3. Isolator 5. Pump Diode 153-nm 4. Pump Combiner 6+1x1 6. Er doped Double- Clad LMA Fiber 153-nm Pump Diode Single frequency Laser, 6dBm output.5 W C-band EDFA OFR 5W 155nm optical isolator 6+1x1 SIFAM MM pump combiner (loss ~11-12% at 153 nm) Six 152-153 nm 5-6 W pump diode lasers, 1um core.15na pigtail Liekki Er6-2/125DC, 9 meters Figure 6. Experimental set-up of 153 nm cladding pumped Er-doped LMA fiber amplifier. The measured pump combiner loss for the power launched into its ports was about 11%. This allowed delivering up to 3W of CW pump power into the clad of the gain fiber (see Fig. 7). All pump diode modules were mounted on a common cold plate without active stabilization of their temperature. The individual pump diode lasers were not pre-selected for a very specific spectral position. As a result, the collective spectral width of pumping radiation was about 2 nm. Typical combined 6-module spectrum after the combiner is shown in Fig. 8. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-7

NJ a,, Power, W NJ NJ C.) th th Q N \ N N N N \ N Figure 7. Total pump power at the pump combiner output versus laser diode pump current. C C 1. 149 15 151 152 153 154 1. Wavelength, nm Figure 8. Typical spectrum of the six 153nm diode lasers combined in clad pumping experiments. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-8

9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 5 1 15 2 25 Absorbed Power, W Figure 9. Performance of the cladding-pumped LMA fiber amplifier for the three different seed laser wavelength. Pump wavelength - 153nm, wideband (2 nm). The performance of the amplifier was tested at seed wavelengths 156, 1565 and 157 nm. Output power versus absorbed power dependences are demonstrated in Fig. 9. The conversion efficiency was measured in a range of pump powers where absorption coefficient does not depend on pump power. With the seed wavelength of 157 nm the fiber amplifier demonstrates the highest conversion efficiency of 46% with respect to absorbed pump power (33% optical to optical efficiency). The maximum output power at this wavelength was over 9.3 W. We observed no output power saturation with increasing pump power. We could detect neither nonlinear effects nor ASE power, which limit the amplifier performance. Obtained diffraction-limited, single-frequency output of 9.3 W is believed to be the highest reported to-date power out of this type of amplifier. Conclusions We performed comparative experimental study of both the core and the cladding pumped Yb-free Er-doped fiber amplifiers for the non-resonant (98nm) and the resonant (148-153nm) pumping. In the case of core-pumped geometry without any optimization of the amplifier we demonstrated optical efficiency about 2% higher for the resonant 147 nm pumping wavelength compared with the 98 nm pumping. For the case of cladding-pump geometry diffraction-limited, single-frequency, output of 3.5 W for 976 nm pumping and 9.3 W for 153nm pumping were obtained, and are both believed to be the highest reported to-date powers out of these types of amplifiers based on Yb-free Erdoped fiber. For the resonant pumping, the Yb-free Er-doped high power amplifier with Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-9

pump wavelength of 153 nm exhibits optical-to-optical conversion efficiency of ~ 33% (46% slope efficiency versus absorbed power). Acknowledgment: Part of this work was supported by the High Energy Laser Joint Technology Office. References [1] D. Garbuzov, I. Kudryashov and M.A. Dubinskii, Resonantly diode laser pumped 1.6-µm-erbium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet solid-state laser, Appl. Phys. Lett. 86, 131115 (25) [2] D. Garbuzov, I. Kudryashov and M.A. Dubinskii, 11 W (.9 J) pulsed power from resonantly diode-laser-pumped 1.6-µm Er:YAG laser - Appl. Phys. Lett. 87, 12111 (25) [3] W.H.Loh, and J.P.de Sandro, Suppression of self pulsing behavior in erbium doped fiber lasers with resonant pumping: experimental results, Opt.Letts, vol.21, 1996, pp1475-1477. [4] J.C.Jasapara, M.J.Andrejco, A.D.Yablon, J.W.Nicholson, C.Headley and D.DiGiovanni Picosecond pulse amplification in a core-pumped large mode- area erbium fiber, Opt.Letts, vol.32, 27, pp.2429-2431. [5] P. Bousselet, M. Bettiati, L. Gasca, P. Lambelet, F. Leplingard, D. Bayart. +3 dbm output power from a cladding-pumped Yb-free EDFA for L-band applications, In Optical Amplifiers and Their Applications Confrerence 21, Conference Digest, Pap. OWC-3. [6] D.Walton, L.Zenteno, A.Ellison, J.Anderson, X.Liu, L.Hughes, C.Caneau and C.Zah Resonantly pumped double clad erbium-doped fiber laser CLEO 23 Conference Proceedings, OSA, CMK-5. [7] J.D.Minelly, V. Stasyuk, J.P. de Sandro, E. Gagnon, S. Chatigny, Yb-free high energy double-clad Er fiber amplifier - Optical Amplifiers and their Applications (OAA 24), June 27 3 24, San Francisco, CA, Postdeadline paper: PD4-1. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 6952 69525-1