English

Breakthrough of German team in cooling scheme for 2 μm thulium fiber laser

54
2025-12-11 10:59:36
See translation

The thulium fiber laser operating at a wavelength of 2 microns has shown significant application prospects in fields such as healthcare, material processing, and national defense. Compared with mainstream 1-micron ytterbium lasers, its longer wavelength helps reduce the damage caused by stray light. However, despite this advantage, the output power of thulium lasers has not been able to break through the bottleneck of about 1 kilowatt in the past decade, mainly due to nonlinear effects and heat accumulation.

One promising route to break this barrier is in-band pumping — switching from diode pumping at 793 nm to laser pumping at 1.9 µm. This approach improves efficiency and reduces heat, but it introduces new challenges for fiber components, especially the cladding light stripper (CLS). CLS devices remove unwanted light traveling in the fiber’s outer cladding, which otherwise degrades beam quality and can damage components.

For in-band-pumped thulium lasers, CLS must handle high powers at long wavelengths. Conventional polymer-based CLS designs fail here: Most polymers absorb strongly at 2 µm, causing intense localized heating and rapid burnout at just a few watts. Alternatives like etched or laser-processed fibers can withstand higher powers but struggle to remove low-angle light — a critical issue for pump lasers. Multimaterial CLS designs exist, aligning layers with increasing refractive index along the fiber to spread heat, but they are complex and hard to implement.

 


Cladding light stripper (CLS) technology addresses a major challenge in scaling thulium fiber lasers beyond their long-standing 1-kW power limit. A self-adapting CLS design distributes heat along the CLS as input power increases (top to bottom in the thermal image), without meaningfully increasing in maximum temperature. By spreading heat along the fiber, the design prevents damage and enables record performance: over 20 W of stripped signal light at 2 µm and 675 W at 793 nm. Courtesy Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF (Fraunhofer IOF), Jena/T. Lühder,.

Researchers at Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF (Fraunhofer IOF) in Germany have developed a simpler solution: a single-material CLS with self-adapting behavior. The material’s refractive index starts slightly above that of glass and decreases as temperature rises, thanks to a strongly negative thermo-optical coefficient. At low power, the CLS strips light efficiently. As power increases, the heated sections become less effective, passing remaining light to cooler regions. This spreads heat along the fiber length instead of concentrating it at the start, preventing catastrophic overheating.

“This is a game-changer for quick lab experiments at medium powers,” said study lead author Tilman Lühder.

Backed by simulations and experiments, the team demonstrated the concept on fibers of 125-µm and 400-µm diameter for all relevant thulium wavelengths. Results show >20 W of stripped signal light at 2 µm and up to 675 W at 793 nm, setting what the researchers call a record for single-material CLS designs. Bending the fiber further boosts performance, achieving stripping efficiencies above 40 dB. Although designed for thulium lasers, the approach is adaptable: by tuning the refractive index, it can serve other systems, including erbium (1.5-µm) and ytterbium (1-µm) lasers. 

Source: photonics

Related Recommendations
  • Laser beam combined with metal foam to produce the brightest X-ray

    According to the Physicists' Network, scientists from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in the United States ingeniously combined the high-power laser emitted by the National Ignition Facility (NIF) with the ultra light metal foam to create the brightest X-ray ever. These ultra bright high-energy X-rays play an important role in many research fields, including imaging of extremely dens...

    01-18
    See translation
  • IPG opens office and manufacturing plant in Huntsville

    Laser technology company IPG has officially announced that its defense focused subsidiary, IPG Defense, has completed and opened a new office and manufacturing base in the Redstone Gateway Park in Huntsville. The headquarters facility covers an area of 14000 square feet and will be dedicated to developing and producing advanced laser defense solutions for both military and civilian fields. IPG P...

    11-22
    See translation
  • University of Science and Technology of China Reveals High Precision Planarity Measurement of Cryogenic Arrays

    Professor Wang Jian, Deputy Chief Designer of the Low Temperature Array High Precision Planeness Survey Wide Area Sky Survey Telescope (WFST) announced by the University of Science and Technology of China, and teacher of the State Key Laboratory of Nuclear Detection and Nuclear Electronics, School of Physics, University of Science and Technology of China, is a research team of the Chinese Academy ...

    2023-08-14
    See translation
  • NUBURU Announces Second Next Generation Blue Laser Space Technology Contract with NASA

    NUBURU, the leading innovator of high-power and high brightness industrial blue laser technology, announced today that it has been awarded a second phase contract worth $850000 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to advance blue laser power transmission technology as a unique solution that significantly reduces the size and weight of equipment required for lunar and Martian...

    2024-05-13
    See translation
  • LPKF 2024 H1 revenue up 15% year-on-year

    Recently, LPKF Laser, a leading supplier of innovative laser solutions in Germany, released its performance report for the first half of the 2024 fiscal year as of June 30, demonstrating the company's steady performance and forward-looking layout in a complex market environment. According to the financial report, LPKF Laser&Electronics SE achieved significant growth in comprehensive revenue ...

    2024-07-31
    See translation