Experimental demonstration of ozone gratings created by interfering ultraviolet lasers

ORAL

Abstract

The final optics in a laser-driven inertial fusion energy (IFE) plant would face significant neutron, x-ray, and debris fluxes from the target for extended periods of continuous operation. Manufacturing optics that can properly operate while enduring this harsh environment is a non-trivial challenge. To address this issue, we can create optics in gas by using interfering ultraviolet lasers to induce substantial density modulations in an ozone-oxygen mixture via periodically heating the gas in space. The spatially modulated gas will then act as a volume diffraction grating. These transient optics are debris-resistant and feature much higher damage thresholds than traditional solid-state optics, providing a promising method towards efficiently manipulating high-energy laser beams. In this work, we created an ozone grating experimentally using the 4th harmonic of an Nd:YAG laser. We demonstrated the efficient diffraction of a nanosecond probe beam by a gas grating and characterized several key properties of the system, including its lifetime and the impact of energy deposition on the temporal evolution of the gas response. The experimental results support a theoretical model of the process that includes the heat deposition mechanism, gas dynamics, and the resultant optical response, suggesting parameters that allow the efficient creation of gas gratings.

*This work was partially supported by NNSA Grant DE-NA0004130, NSF Grant PHY-2308641, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory LDRD program (24-ERD-001).

Publication: P. Michel, L. Lancia, A. Oudin, E. Kur, C. Riconda, K. Ou, V. M. Perez-Ramirez, J. Lee, and M. R. Edwards, "Photochemically-induced acousto-optics in gases," arXiv:2402.05219 (2024).

Presenters

  • Ke Ou

    • Stanford University

Authors

  • Ke Ou

    • Stanford University
  • Victor Perez-Ramirez

    • Stanford University
  • Sida Cao

    • Stanford University
  • Caleb Redshaw

    • Stanford University
  • Michelle Mei Wang

    • Princeton University
  • Pelin Dedeler

    • Stanford University
  • Ben Lees

    • Stanford University
  • Livia Lancia

    • LULI – CNRS, CEA, Sorbonne Universit´e, Ecole Polytechnique
  • Albertine Oudin

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Eugene Kur

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Caterina Riconda

    • Sorbonne University
  • Pierre A Michel

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Matthew R Edwards

    • Stanford University