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Kinetics of Metastable Argon Optical Excitation and Gain in Ar/He Microplasmas.

Wilson T RawlinsAlan R HoskinsonKristin L Galbally-KinneySteven J DavisJeffrey A HopwoodJiande HanMichael C Heaven
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2023)
The optically pumped rare-gas metastable laser is capable of high-intensity lasing on a broad range of near-infrared transitions for excited-state rare gas atoms (Ar*, Kr*, Ne*, Xe*) diluted in flowing He. The lasing action is generated by photoexcitation of the metastable atom to an upper state, followed by collisional energy transfer with He to a neighboring state and lasing back to the metastable state. The metastables are generated in a high-efficiency electric discharge at pressures of ∼0.4 to 1 atm. The diode-pumped rare-gas laser (DPRGL) is a chemically inert analogue to diode-pumped alkali laser (DPAL) systems, with similar optical and power scaling characteristics for high-energy laser applications. We used a continuous-wave linear microplasma array in Ar/He mixtures to produce Ar(1s 5 ) (Paschen notation) metastables at number densities exceeding 10 13 cm -3 . The gain medium was optically pumped by both a narrow-line 1 W titanium-sapphire laser and a 30 W diode laser. Tunable diode laser absorption and gain spectroscopy determined Ar(1s 5 ) number densities and small-signal gains up to ∼2.5 cm -1 . Continuous-wave lasing was observed using the diode pump laser. The results were analyzed with a steady-state kinetics model relating the gain and the Ar(1s 5 ) number density.
Keyphrases
  • high speed
  • high intensity
  • energy transfer
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  • oxidative stress
  • room temperature
  • mass spectrometry
  • dna damage response
  • carbon dioxide
  • aqueous solution