Abstract

A novel method is proposed for the fabrication of polarizing laser mirrors for compact solid-state lasers using glancing angle deposition. Changing the inclination angle and the azimuthal orientation of the substrate during deposition allows one to create and control in-plane birefringence of a deposited thin film by changing its nanostructure. Principal refractive indices of tungsten trioxide films were determined for various deposition angles using transmission and reflection ellipsometry. High-reflectance contrast between orthogonal linear polarization directions was obtained using a single material without any additional processing steps. These birefringent films were the building blocks of a Bragg mirror that was tested as an output coupler of a (Yb0.1Y0.9)3Al5O12 ceramic laser in a laser-diode end-pumped configuration. Continuous-wave, linearly polarized, transverse single-mode laser emission was obtained at a wavelength of 1030 nm with a polarization extinction ratio higher than 973 (30 dB).

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