4 research outputs found

    Simulation Analysis of a Wavefront Reconstruction of a Large Aperture Laser Beam

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    In order to solve the problem of atmospheric influence on the far-field measurement of the quality of a laser beam, we proposed a direct wavefront measurement system based on the Hartmann detection principle, which can measure large apertures and high-power laser beams. The measuring system was composed of a lens array and a detector. The wavefront detection of a large aperture laser beam could be realized by controlling the distance between the lenses and the size of the lens. The influence of different duty cycle factors on the accuracy of the wavefront reconstruction under the same arrangement and different arrangement conditions was simulated and analyzed. The simulation results showed that when the sub-lenses of the system were not in close contact, the reconstruction accuracy of the duty factor of 0.8 was close to that of the case of the duty factor of 1. Within a certain detection range, the hexagonal arrangement of 19 lenses and the arrangement of 8 × 8 lens arrays had a high wavefront restoration accuracy; both were lower than 0.10 λ. The system proposed in this paper was suitable for measuring a large aperture laser beam, providing a new idea for measuring and analyzing the quality of large aperture laser beams. It also has an important significance for improving the measurement accuracy of the beam quality

    Study on Laser Parameter Measurement System Based on Cone-Arranged Fibers and CCD Camera

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    This paper proposes a new laser parameter measuring method based on cone-arranged fibers to further improve the measurable spot size, allowable incident angle range, and spatial sampling resolution. This method takes a conical array composed of flexible fibers to sample and shrink the cross-section spot of the laser beam, facilitating low-distortion shooting with a charge-coupled diode (CCD) camera, and adopts homogenized processing and algorithm analysis to correct the spot. This method is experimentally proven to achieve high-accuracy measurements with a decimeter-level spot-receiving surface, millimeter-level resolution, and high tolerance in order to incite skew angle. Comparing the measured spot under normal incidence with the real one, the root mean square error (RMSE) of their power in the bucket (PIB) curves is less than 1%. When the incident angle change is between −8° and 8°, the RMSE is less than 2% and the measurement error of total power is less than 5% based on the premise that the fiber’s numerical aperture (NA) is 0.22. The possibility of further optimizing the measurement method by changing the fiber parameters and array design is also reported
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