OSE Seminar Series by Dr. Angel Flores on High Power All-Fiber Lasers at the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL)

Departmental News

Dr. Angel Flores

Posted: March 20, 2019

Date: Thursday, March 28, 2019 

Time:  11:00 AM to Noon

Location:

Physics and Astronomy Building, Room. 190

Map to Physics and Parking Information click on the link:

http://physics.unm.edu/findpanda/

ADA Accommodations are available. Please send us an email in advance for any special accommodations.

Speaker:

Dr. Angel Flores

Air Force Research Laboratories

Abstract:

For industrial and directed energy (DE) applications, fiber lasers have the advantages of reduced size, weight, and power consumption compared with their bulk solid-state and chemical counterparts. However, while multimode fiber lasers with powers as high as 100kW are now commercially available, these have poor beam quality. They are suitable for material processing but not DE applications, which require fiber lasers with near diffraction limited beam quality, and are much more challenging to build. As such, to scale overall power and brightness, researchers have pursued multiple beam combining techniques; with spectral beam combining (SBC) and coherent beam combining (CBC) being the most prevalent architectures. Specifically, for efficient beam combining narrow optical linewidths are preferred for both architectures. Thus, to further scale the power of beam combinable fiber amplifiers, we have theoretically and experimentally investigated pseudo-random bit sequence (PRBS) phase modulation. Consequently, we have demonstrated kW class fiber amplifiers at significantly reduced optical linewidths. In this work, we present results from two ~1.5 kW Yb-doped fiber amplifiers with comparable optical efficiencies and linewidths. Furthermore, five pseudo-random modulated kW-class fiber amplifiers were coherently combined with a diffractive optical element (DOE). Overall, an output of power of ~5 kW and 82% combining efficiency was attained and multi-kW beam combining of pseudo-random modulated fiber amplifiers was demonstrated for the first time.

Biography:

Angel Flores received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Miami (FL). He is currently a senior research scientist in the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) Laser Division leading research on power scaling and beam combination of high-energy fiber lasers. Other research interests include novel 2µm fiber lasers for high atmospheric transmission and remote sensing applications, and nonlinear frequency conversion. To date he has authored or co-authored over 40 technical publications including peer-reviewed journal articles, conference proceedings, and three book chapters. Overall, he has won several laboratory awards for his contributions to fiber laser research.