Understanding Lasers

Chapter 9.5.3: Multistripe Laser Arrays

9.5.3 Multistripe Laser Arrays

Laser power from a single laser stripe is inherently limited, even from a broad-area laser. To obtain higher powers, many parallel laser stripes can be fabricated on the same monolithic semiconductor substrate, as shown in Figure 9-13. The combined output power can be much higher than from any single laser, although the beam quality is inevitably lower.

Multistripe diode lasers can produce the highest available power from any semiconductor lasers; they can be assembled into stacks of many wafers to multiply that high-power output. Repetitively pulsed arrays can generate the highest average powers, but continuous-wave versions also generate high powers. Although multistripe lasers efficiently convert input electric power into output light, they also produce comparable amounts of waste heat, which must be dissipated to avoid damage to the lasers.

Multistripe lasers are used to generate raw optical power. A primary application is pumping solid-state lasers, as described in Chapter 8. Although diode laser output can be used directly in some materials-working applications, their beam quality does not match that of diode-pumped solid-state lasers.

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