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- Modeling Laser Cavities using ZEMAX and LASCAD
Modeling Laser Cavities using ZEMAX and LASCAD
- By Christoph Rüttimann
- Published 21 June 2006
- User Articles , Illumination & Stray Light
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Pumping the Laser Rod

A Brewster-angled rod of Nd:YVO4 is placed in an standard hemispherical cavity consisting of a spherical 100% reflective mirror and a plane output coupler (OC on drawing). It is pumped from the side by an array of diodes. The laser rod has a high-reflectivity coating placed on its far side so that pump light which is not absorbed by the rod is reflected back into the rod. Here is the side-pumped model in ZEMAX: 

The system components are as follows:
- The light source is modeled using a Source_File object. It represents a laser diode bar of 10mm in length. The source file was created in Matlab (generating a .dat-file). The Matlab file is based on real intensity profile measurements of the laser diode. For more information on this technique, see this article.
- The light is collimated by a gradient-index glass rod of index given by n(r) = 2 -0.6r2, where r is the radial coordinate. This is set under the GRIN tab of the object properties:

- The Nd:YVO4 material is entered as a new material in a custom glass datalog. Both the refractive and absorption properties are entered.
- A rectangular bar of Nd:YVO4 is co-located with a Detector_Volume. This consists of 100 x 100 x 50 = 500,000 voxels. The Detector_Volume records the absorbed flux in each volume
- The laser rod has a high-reflectivity coating on its last face, so that un-absorbed light is reflected back into the laser rod.
100,000 rays were traced, and the absorbed flux in the laser rod was measured. Here is the data showing the absorved flux in a single slide of the rod:

As the crystal rod is optically dense the absorption as a function of distance can be clearly seen.

The absorption data was exported as a text file, for subsequent analysis by LASCAD.