The effect of transverse mode instability (TMI) is currently the main limitation for the further average-power scaling of fiber laser systems with diffraction-limited beam quality. In this work a main driving force for TMI in fiber amplifiers is identified. Our experiments and simulations illustrate that the performance of fiber laser systems in terms of their diffraction-limited output power can be significantly reduced when the pump or seed radiation exhibit intensity noise. This finding emphasizes the fact that the TMI threshold is not only determined by the active fiber but, rather, by the whole system. In the experiment an artificially applied pump intensity-noise of 2.9% led to a reduction of the TMI threshold of 63%, whereas a similar seed intensitynoise decreased it by just 13%. Thus, even though both noise sources have an impact on the TMI threshold, the pump intensity-noise can be considered as the main driver for TMI in saturated fiber amplifiers. Additionally, the work unveils that the physical origin of this behavior is linked to the noise transfer function in saturated fiber amplifiers. With the gained knowledge and the experimental and theoretical results, it can be concluded that a suppression of pump-noise frequencies below 20 kHz could strongly increase the TMI threshold in high-power fiber laser systems.
In this work we present a novel way to manipulate the effect of transverse mode instability by inducing traveling waves in a high-power fiber system. What sets this technique apart is the fact that it allows controlling the direction of the modal energy flow, for the first time to the best of our knowledge. Thus, using the method proposed in this work it will be possible to transfer energy from the higher-order mode into the fundamental mode of the fiber, which mitigates the effect of transverse mode instability, but also to transfer energy from the fundamental mode into the higher-order mode. Our simulations indicate that this approach will work both below and above the threshold of transverse mode instability. In fact, our model reveals that it can be used to force a nearly pure fundamental mode output in the fiber laser system almost independently of the input coupling conditions. In this context, this technique represents the first attempt to exploit the physics behind the effect of transverse mode instability to increase the performance of fiber laser systems.
We present the first experimental realization of a new mitigation strategy for TMI based on controlling the phase shift between the modal intensity pattern and the thermally induced refractive index grating. If specific modulation parameters are applied while pulsing the seed and/or pump radiation, the direction of energy transfer is forced from the higher-order modes into the fundamental mode. In this way, the fiber amplifier can operate at an average output power significantly higher than the TMI threshold with a diffraction-limited beam profile. A stable beam profile is observed at an average output power that is 83% higher than the TMI threshold of the free-running system, with an intra-burst average power that is 4.15 times higher than the TMI threshold.
Both transverse mode instability (TMI) and non-linear effects hinder the power scaling in fiber laser amplifiers with a diffraction-limited beam profile. In this context core size scaling is a key design parameter to counteract nonlinear effects and, therefore, it is of outmost importance to understand the impact of this parameter on the TMI threshold. In this work we present the first systematic experimental studies that investigate the impact of core size scaling on TMI characteristics. In this study, the unique characteristics of large pitch photonic crystal fibers is exploited to ensure comparability between fibers with different core sizes. This has been done by manufacturing a set of test fibers (Ytterbium-doped LPFs) with different core sizes which maintain their modal characteristics when operated under the same conditions. Furthermore, our experiments reveal a TMI power threshold of 570 W, the highest ever reported in a rod-type fiber with a very large core diameter.
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