Tunable laser
A tunable laser is a laser whose wavelength of operation can be altered in a controlled manner. While all laser gain media allow small shifts in output wavelength, only some types of lasers allow continuous tuning over a significant wavelength range.
There are many types and categories of tunable lasers. They exist in the gas, liquid, and solid states. Among the types of tunable lasers are excimer lasers, gas lasers, dye lasers, transition-metal solid-state lasers, semiconductor crystal and diode lasers, and free-electron lasers. Tunable lasers find applications in spectroscopy, photochemistry, atomic vapor laser isotope separation, and optical communications.
Types of tunability
Single-line tuning
No real laser is truly monochromatic; all lasers can emit light over some range of frequencies, known as the linewidth of the laser transition. In most lasers, this linewidth is quite narrow. Tuning of the laser output across this range can be achieved by placing wavelength-selective optical elements into the laser's optical cavity, to provide selection of a particular longitudinal mode of the cavity.Multi-line tuning
Most laser gain media have a number of transition wavelengths on which laser operation can be achieved. For example, as well as the principal nm output line, Nd:YAG has weaker transitions at wavelengths of nm, nm, nm, nm, and a number of other lines. Usually, these lines do not operate unless the gain of the strongest transition is suppressed, such as by use of wavelength-selective dielectric mirrors. If a dispersive element, such as a prism, is introduced into the optical cavity, tilting the cavity's mirrors can cause tuning of the laser as it "hops" between different laser lines. Such schemes are common in argon-ion lasers, allowing tuning of the laser to a number of lines from the ultraviolet and blue through to green wavelengths.Narrowband tuning
For some types of lasers, the laser's cavity length can be modified, and thus they can be continuously tuned over a significant wavelength range. Distributed feedback semiconductor lasers and vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers use periodic distributed Bragg reflector structures to form the mirrors of the optical cavity. If the temperature of the laser is changed, then the index change of the DBR structure causes a shift in its peak reflective wavelength and thus the wavelength of the laser. The tuning range of such lasers is typically a few nanometres, up to a maximum of approximately 6 nm, as the laser temperature is changed over ~50 K. As a rule of thumb, the wavelength is tuned by 0.08 nm/K for DFB lasers operating in the 1,550 nm wavelength regime. Such lasers are commonly used in optical communications applications, such as DWDM-systems, to allow adjustment of the signal wavelength. To get wideband tuning using this technique, some such as Santur Corporation or Nippon Telegraph and Telephone contain an array of such lasers on a single chip and concatenate the tuning ranges.Widely tunable lasers
Sample Grating Distributed Bragg Reflector lasers have a much larger tunable range; by the use of vernier-tunable Bragg mirrors and a phase section, a single-mode output range of > 50 nm can be selected. Other technologies to achieve wide tuning ranges for DWDM-systems are:- External cavity lasers using a MEMS structure for tuning the cavity length, such as devices commercialized by Iolon.
- External cavity lasers using multiple-prism grating arrangements for wide-range tunability.
- DFB laser arrays based on several thermal tuned DFB lasers, in which coarse tuning is achieved by selecting the correct laser bar. Fine tuning is then done thermally, such as in devices commercialized by Santur Corporation.
- Tunable VCSELs, in which one of the two mirror stacks is movable. To achieve sufficient output power out of a VCSEL structure, lasers in the nm domain are usually either optically pumped or have an additional optical amplifier built into the device.
, there is no widely tunable VCSEL commercially available any more for DWDM-system application.
It is claimed that the first infrared laser with a tunability of more than one octave was a germanium crystal laser.