| Literature DB >> 29497110 |
Tengfei Kong1,2, Hongde Liu3,4, Xinyu Ge1, Da Qu1,2, Shiguo Liu1, Shaolin Chen2, Ling Zhang2, Yongfa Kong5,6,7, Romano Rupp2,8, Jingjun Xu9,10,11.
Abstract
Laser has been widely used in many aspects, by now it is difficult to get each frequency that we want, and frequency conversion is an effective way to obtain different frequency laser through a nonlinear optical crystal. MgO-doped LiNbO3 (Mg:LN) crystal has usually been used for second harmonic generation (SHG) through temperature-matching configuration with a stove, till now a room temperature 90° phase-matching is still lacking. Here we find that the SHG of Nd:YAG laser is achieved at 26.1 °C while the optical damage resistance is higher than 6.5 MW/cm2 in the ZrO2 and MgO co-doped LiNbO3 (Zr,Mg:LN) crystal. Moreover, the monotonic decrease of phase-matching temperature is firstly found with the increase of doping concentration. These unusual properties may be attributed to the formation of [Formula: see text] + [Formula: see text] defect pairs. Our work suggests that Zr,Mg:LN crystal may be an attractive candidate for nonlinear optical applications.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29497110 PMCID: PMC5832752 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-22205-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Phase-matching temperature TPM versus the doping concentration in the melt of (a) Zr,Mg:LN and (b) Mg:LN crystals. The dotted symbols represent the experimental data, and the red guided line is a function fitting.
Figure 2Normalized temperature-tuning curve for 90° phase-matching at 1064 nm in Zr1.7,Mg5.0:LN crystal. The dots are the measured second harmonic output at 532 nm, and the solid curve is fitted to . The noncritical phase matching occurs at 26.1 °C with a FWHM of 1.2 °C.
Figure 3Power conversion efficiency of 90° phase-matched Zr1.7,Mg5.0:LN crystal as a function of the incident 1064 nm peak-power density. The solid curve is the guide to the eye.
Figure 4Transmitted laser beam spots after 5 min of irradiation. (a) Mg5.0:LN, (b) Zr0.5,Mg5.0:LN, (c) Zr1.0,Mg5.0:LN, (d) Zr1.5,Mg5.0:LN, (e) Zr1.7,Mg5.0:LN, (f) Zr2.0:LN. The light intensities are (a) 4.1 × 105 W/cm2 and (b)–(f) 6.5 × 106 W/cm2. The arrow direction represents the c-axis of the crystal.
Figure 5The change of refractive index Δn and photoconductivity σph as a function of the ZrO2 concentration in the melt for Zr,Mg:LN crystals. The open symbols represent the data of Zr2.0:LN for comparison.
Figure 6The OH− absorption spectra of Zr,Mg:LN crystals. For comparison, that of CLN is also drawn. The dashed arrow marks the position of absorption peaks.
The position of component peaks of the OH− absorption spectra.
| Sample | Position of peaks (cm−1) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| CLN | 3468 | 3481 | 3490 |
| Mg5.0:LN | 3535 | ||
| Zr2.0:LN | 3475 | 3485 | 3495 |
| Zr0.5,Mg5.0:LN | 3476 | 3484 | 3493 |
| Zr1.0,Mg5.0:LN | 3477 | 3485 | 3493 |
| Zr1.5,Mg5.0:LN | 3478 | 3486 | 3495 |
| Zr1.7,Mg5.0:LN | 3478 | 3487 | 3495 |
Figure 7The UV-visible absorption spectra of Zr,Mg:LN crystals and of CLN and Mg5.0:LN for comparison.