Abstract

Fibre lasers operating at the mid-IR have attracted enormous interest due to the plethora of applications in defence, security, medicine, and so on. However, no continuous-wave (CW) fibre lasers beyond 4 μm based on rare-earth-doped fibres have been demonstrated thus far. Here, we report efficient mid-IR laser emission from HBr-filled silica hollow-core fibres (HCFs) for the first time. By pumping with a self-developed thulium-doped fibre amplifier seeded by several diode lasers over the range of 1940–1983 nm, narrow linewidth mid-IR emission from 3810 to 4496 nm has been achieved with a maximum laser power of about 500 mW and a slope efficiency of approximately 18%. To the best of our knowledge, the wavelength of 4496 nm with strong absorption in silica-based fibres is the longest emission wavelength from a CW fibre laser, and the span of 686 nm is also the largest tuning range achieved to date for any CW fibre laser. By further reducing the HCF transmission loss, increasing the pump power, improving the coupling efficiency, and optimizing the fibre length together with the pressure, the laser efficiency and output power are expected to increase significantly. This work opens new opportunities for broadly tunable high-power mid-IR fibre lasers, especially beyond 4 μm.

Highlights

  • Laser sources operating at the mid-infrared are of considerable interest due to wide applications in biomedicine, spectroscopy, defence and manufacturing fields

  • Fibre lasers have been favoured in recent years owing to their diffraction-limited beam quality, high conversion efficiency, long interaction length and compact system configuration[1,2]

  • In summary, an optically pumped CW 4 μm HBr gas laser has been demonstrated in hollow-core fibres (HCFs) for the first time

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Summary

Introduction

Laser sources operating at the mid-infrared (mid-IR) are of considerable interest due to wide applications in biomedicine, spectroscopy, defence and manufacturing fields. Among these laser sources, fibre lasers have been favoured in recent years owing to their diffraction-limited beam quality, high conversion efficiency, long interaction length and compact system configuration[1,2]. Due to the high phonon energy at approximately 1100 cm−1, silica-based fibres suffer from strong material absorption in the mid-IR range above 2.2 μm[1]. Extending the emission wavelength coverage of fibre lasers further. Zhou et al Light: Science & Applications (2022)11:15 Power (W).

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