Excitation processes and relaxation rates in the pulsed water vapor laser

Applied Optics
W J SarjeantE Brannen

Abstract

This paper presents an experimental study of time-resolved gain in H(2)O, H(2)O-He, and H(2)O-H(2) mixtures as a function of gas composition and excitation current. Utilizing the fast rising (~70 nsec) pulse from H(2)O-He laser as a probe, the amplifier gain was measured with a time resolution of about 100 nsec. The gain was observed to follow the excitation current pulse rather closely indicating that population inversion was established in times less than 100 nsec. This suggested that excitation was most likely by means of rapid cascading from higher levels and/or by direct electron impact. The gain was found to be describable by a two-level rate equation model containing one dominant relaxation rate and assuming immediate excitation of the levels involved by inelastic collisions with electrons. With pure H(2)O, the relaxation rate was proportional to pressure to within 10%, indicating that the upper level was de-excited primarily by c llisions with other H(2)O molecules. At a pressure of 1 Torr the relaxation rate in pure H(2)O was 0.35 +/- 0.05 for the 28-microm transition. The addition of small amounts of foreign gases was observed to increase this relaxation rate, consistent with the measured decrease in the amplifier gai...Continue Reading

References

Feb 1, 1970·Applied Optics·W M Houghton, C J Jachimowski
Mar 1, 1970·Applied Optics·B W McCaul
Sep 1, 1971·Applied Optics·Z KucerovskyE Brannen

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Citations

Nov 1, 1986·Applied Optics·P A RochefortZ Kucerovsky

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