Abstract

Ultrafast lasers concentrate the energy in a short pulse with a duration of several tens to hundreds of femtoseconds. The resulting high peak power induces various nonlinear optical phenomena that find use in many different fields. However, in practical applications, the optical dispersion broadens the laser pulse width and spreads the energy in time, thereby reducing the peak power. Accordingly, the present study develops a piezo bender-based pulse compressor to compensate for this dispersion effect and restore the laser pulse width. The piezo bender has a rapid response time and a large deformation capacity and thus provides a highly effective means of performing dispersion compensation. However, due to hysteresis and creep effects, the piezo bender is unable to maintain a stable shape over time and hence the compensation effect is gradually degraded. To address this problem, this study further proposes a single-shot modified laterally sampled laser interferometer to estimate the parabolic shape of the piezo bender. The curvature variation of the bender is then sent as a feedback signal to a closed-loop controller to restore the bender to the desired shape. It is shown that the steady-state error of the converged group delay dispersion is around 530fs2. Moreover, the ultrashort laser pulse is compressed from 1620fs in the original condition to 140fs in the compressed condition, corresponding to a 12-fold improvement.

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