1989
DOI: 10.1007/bf00659481
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Effect of addition of water vapor on the operation of a chemical CO laser

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…2. Dudkin and co-workers reported that the oscillation ceased at a H 2 O content of 3.3%,14 whereas in our experiment the laser oscillation ceased at a H 2 O content about 1/50 of that. They measured the output spectrum and showed that the H 2 O deactivation rate increased with increasing vibrational level of a CO molecule; for example, the deactivation rate on v…”
contrasting
confidence: 53%
“…2. Dudkin and co-workers reported that the oscillation ceased at a H 2 O content of 3.3%,14 whereas in our experiment the laser oscillation ceased at a H 2 O content about 1/50 of that. They measured the output spectrum and showed that the H 2 O deactivation rate increased with increasing vibrational level of a CO molecule; for example, the deactivation rate on v…”
contrasting
confidence: 53%
“…The most detrimental effects on the laser's active medium are caused by water vapors having a high rate constant for V-T relaxation in collisions with vibrationally excited CO molecules. Data on the influence of H20 on the spectra of lasing and on the gain bandwidth of a chemical CO laser were reported in [39]. A comparative analysis of the influence of various additives (nitrogen monoxide, water vapors, iodine vapors, etc.)…”
Section: Lasers Based On a Mixture Of Carbon Disulfide With Airmentioning
confidence: 99%