Paper
6 December 2010 Results of applying a non-evaporative mitigation technique to laser-initiated surface damage on fused-silica
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Abstract
We present results from a study to determine an acceptable CO2 laser-based non-evaporative mitigation protocol for use on surface damage sites in fused-silica optics. A promising protocol is identified and evaluated on a set of surface damage sites created under ICF-type laser conditions. Mitigation protocol acceptability criteria for damage re-initiation and growth, downstream intensification, and residual stress are discussed. In previous work, we found that a power ramp at the end of the protocol effectively minimizes the residual stress (⪅25 MPa) left in the substrate. However, the biggest difficulty in determining an acceptable protocol was balancing between low re-initiation and problematic downstream intensification. Typical growing surface damage sites mitigated with a candidate CO2 laser-based mitigation protocol all survived 351 nm, 5 ns damage testing to fluences ⪆12.5 J/cm2. The downstream intensification arising from the mitigated sites is evaluated, and all but one of the sites has 100% passing downstream damage expectation values. We demonstrate, for the first time, a successful non-evaporative 10.6 m CO2 laser mitigation protocol applicable to fused-silica optics used on fusion-class lasers like the National Ignition Facility (NIF).
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. J. Adams, M. Bolourchi, J. D. Bude, G. M. Guss, M. J. Matthews, and M. C. Nostrand "Results of applying a non-evaporative mitigation technique to laser-initiated surface damage on fused-silica", Proc. SPIE 7842, Laser-Induced Damage in Optical Materials: 2010, 784223 (6 December 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.867652
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Cited by 15 scholarly publications and 2 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Carbon dioxide lasers

Laser induced damage

National Ignition Facility

Carbon dioxide

Diffraction

Gas lasers

Ultraviolet radiation

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