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2019
Conference Paper
Titel
51 W, multi-GW few-cycle laser spanning 1.2 - 2.2 µm wavelength
Abstract
Summary form only given. High-power few-cycle laser systems enable table-top coherent XUV and soft X-ray sources via high harmonic generation (HHG) and, consequently, subsequent applications in advanced spectroscopy and imaging [1, 2]. As a result of the application-driven demand for bright, laser-like soft X-ray sources with spectral coverage up to the water window (280-530 eV), the community is developing ultrafast lasers at carrier wavelengths beyond the emission bands of Yb- or Ti:Sa-based gain media. The reason for this wavelength shift is the fundamental upscaling of the HHG-driving laser's ponderomotive force and with it, the photon energy cut-off. However, the increased cut-off comes at the cost of conversion efficiency, which is why the long-wavelength driving lasers must deliver pulses as short as possible to allow for optimizing the phase-matched peak intensity (and therefore the efficiency [3]). Additionally, high repetition rates are aspired to increase the overall yield. In this contribution, we report on the generation of intense two-cycle pulses (10 fs FWHM duration) carrying 130 mJ of pulse energy at 392 kHz repetition rate, which corresponds to an average power of 51 W. With a central wavelength of 1733 nm, this represents the most powerful short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) few-cycle laser source reported to date. As an alternative to broadband optical parametric chirped pulse amplification [4-6], our approach is based on the combination of two average power scalable concepts: ultrafast Tm-doped fiber chirped pulse amplification systems (Tm:FCPAs) [7] and subsequent nonlinear pulse compression (NPC) [8].