Scientific Reports (Mar 2024)

Effect of THz-bandwidth incoherent laser radiation on bulk damage in potassium dihydrogen phosphate crystals

  • Douglas Broege,
  • Michael Spilatro,
  • Guillaume Duchateau,
  • Christophe Dorrer,
  • Stavros G. Demos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55732-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract The laser-damage performance characteristics of potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KDP) samples under exposure to a distinctive broadband incoherent laser pulse are investigated. A laser system providing such pulses is intended to explore improved energy-coupling efficiency on the target in direct-drive inertial confinement fusion experiments and provides incoherent bandwidths as large as 10 THz in a nanosecond pulse. A consequence of this bandwidth is very rapid fluctuations in intensity capable of reaching maxima much larger than the average intensity within the pulse. A custom damage-test station has been built to perform measurements with broadband incoherent pulses in order to determine what effect these fast and high-intensity oscillations have on laser damage. A set of experiments under different bandwidth and beam configurations shows the effect to be minimal when probing bulk damage in KDP. Modeling indicates this behavior is supported by long electron-relaxation times compared to the source-field fluctuations, following excitation of individual electrons in the conduction band. The results help better understand the laser-induced–damage mechanisms in KDP, and its ability to operate in broadband temporally incoherent high-energy lasers that may be particularly suitable for future laser-fusion energy systems.