Abstract

Poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and Rhodamine 6G (Rh6G) were first dissolved in chloroform, then dried and milled into powdery preform for fabrication into rectangular thin slabs (<1mm) by a hot-press molding technique. Aluminum was coated on two surfaces of dye-doped PMMA thin slabs as reflectors. Conversion efficiency, peak lasing wavelength and spectral bandwidth of dye laser emissions from these slabs, which were transversely pumped by a nitrogen laser, were measured as a function of the dye concentration, slab thickness, and aluminum coatings. Re-absorption of back-scattered fluorescence due to aluminum coating on the opposite surface increased the conversion efficiency from 10.5% to 15% while that on the back surface further increased it to 17.5%. The operation lifetime of 3000 pulses at 50% reduction in the dye laser output, as compared to earlier work on thicker slabs (5mm), suggested that re-absorption of fluorescence did not cause significant photo-degradation of Rh6G. As the dye laser action was confirmed in a thin slab, the operation lifetime may represent a more realistic photostability of Rh6G in PMMA matrix.

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