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    Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser

    Sub-Table of Contents



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    Basic Home-Built HeNe Laser Information

    Introduction to Home-Built HeNe Laser

    The HeNe laser was the first one presented in the Scientific American Amateur Scientist columns only a couple of years after the invention of the laser and less than this after the invention of the HeNe laser! At least this one is designed to operate at the common visible 632.8 nm (orange-red) wavelength like that of common HeNe lasers found in high school physics labs and barcode scanners. (The original HeNe laser's output was in the IR portion of the E/M spectrum and quite invisible.) It is a very basic design as gas lasers go but due to the need for extremely low amounts of contaminants in the gas fill does require a decent vacuum system and some use of nasty chemicals (at least as described) including fuming nitric acid for cleaning the glass laser tube before evacuation and dry ice/acetone slurry for the cold trap!

    Although one of the simplest in basic structure, given these requirements, the HeNe laser may not be the best home-built laser for the novice. In fact, it is deceptively simple and yet one of the most difficult gas lasers to construct from scratch. However, later in this chapter, we present a number of alternatives to the HeNe laser fully built from the ground up using beach sand and copper ore. Therefore, it is still possible to experiment with partially home-built HeNe lasers (beyond just wiring together a HeNe tube and power supply) using various proportions of your own ingredients without doing everything from scratch. :)

    Home-Built HeNe Laser Safety

    There are two areas of safety considerations for the home-built HeNe laser (and other similar lasers, for that matter):

    Provide proper warning signs for both the laser radiation and high voltage. Keep pets and small children out of the area and make sure everyone present is instructed as to the dangers. The use of proper laser safety goggles for the specific wavelength(s) of your laser are highly recommended.

    See the section: HeNe Laser Safety for more info. However, the home-built HeNe laser uses a different sort of power supply than CW commercial types (unless you are attempting something similar to one of these) so some of the specific details may not apply,)

    For more information, see the chapter: Laser Safety and the more specific information in the section: HeNe Laser Safety. Sample safety labels which can be edited for this laser can be found in the section: Laser Safety Labels and Signs.

    HeNe Laser Construction References and Links

    Finally, I have an excellent description with photos of a successful home-built HeNe laser constructed by John S. Rubacha while at Purdue University Calumet. This short paper covers the technical aspects as well as trials and tribulations of undertaking this project:

    If anyone reading this has built (or even attempted) a HeNe laser from scratch, please send me mail via the Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Email Links Page!

    Home-Built HeNe Laser Description

    Although the helium-neon laser is one of the simpler gas lasers in existence, it is probably in the middle of the range of difficulty of home-built lasers discussed in this document and "Light and its Uses".

    Refer to Typical Home-Built Helium-Neon Laser Assembly for a simplified diagram of the overall glasswork and power supply electronics.

    Guidelines to Assure a Successful Home-Built HeNe Laser

    These set of guidelines should be followed during construction of your first home-built HeNe laser. The factors below will greatly influence the ultimate output power, beam quality, and whether it produces any coherent light at all! Once you have a working laser, feel free to make modifications - one at a time. Thanks to George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com) for his comments.

  • The small capillary in the larger tube approach as presented in the SciAm article may be a bad idea for two reasons:

    1. Any gap between the inner and outer tubes will result in structural instability.

    2. The discharge may bypass the inner capillary entirely (particularly with a narrower bore) which would be bad news indeed.

    I would recommend a one piece approach instead, with a thick-walled capillary fused directly to glass extensions (as used in the Vander Sluis et. al. paper) if your glass working skills and/or budget are up to it (or glued to metal extensions if using the no glass working approach).

  • Obtain good quality glass optical flats for the Brewster windows. They should be at least 1 mm thick to minimize distortion from the vacuum (not microscope cover slips!). These don't have to be expensive - plenty of low cost surplus optics is available. While some microscope slides might work, there is no real way to be sure before your entire laser is assembled and then it is too late to change. Any candidate Brewster window should pass the following tests:

    1. When viewed edgewise, it must NOT have a greenish (or other color) tint.

    2. When you hold it at arm's length and view something across the room through it, there should be no detectable magnification or minification.

    3. When viewed against a black background in a concentrated light beam (such as sunlight passing through an f/4 concentrating lens) it should show very little scattering of light (from incomplete cleaning or incomplete polishing).

    No other aspect of the laser tube assembly itself is as important as the quality of the Brewster windows to the ultimate outcome of this project! While, certain types of distortion won't prevent lasing (some may even make it more exciting with complex mode structures), this is a complicating factor your first laser can do without.

    The author of the SciAm article suggests the use of quartz instead of glass to minimize heat losses but that material has a high transmittance at the 3.391 um IR wavelength which interferes with operation at 632.8 nm (and other visible wavelengths). If you insist on quartz (perhaps to have the option of 3.391 um operation in the future), also obtain a pair of glass flats to add outside the tube to kill that line. If you do try lasing at 3.391 um, aluminum mirrors should be fine. This line will even lase with no mirrors (superradiantly) in a long enough tube.

  • Cut the ends of the laser tube to accept the Brewster windows only >after all glass working (including annealing) has been performed as these steps may affect the angles enough to increase losses. Take care that the angle is close to the correct value for your window material (33.3 to 34.2 degrees from the beam axis for most window materials) with their perpendiculars as close to parallel as possible. (An error of up to 1/2 degree is acceptable in both cases. The ball-and-socket approach of the SciAm pulsed Ar/Kr ion laser can be used instead to provide some adjustment range but this really isn't needed.) Use the /===\ arrangement, not /===/ (which will shift the optical axis). Make sure the inside surfaces of the windows are immaculately clean before installation! They can't really be cleaned properly once attached to the tube.

  • Mount the electrodes in side-arms well away from and with no line-of-sight to the Brewster windows. This will minimize the deposit of a metallic film on the Brewster windows due to sputtering (particularly at the negative electrode).

  • Don't skip the essential cleaning step before final assembly of the Brewster windows to the laser tube. This will greatly reduce the amount of bake-out required once you are under vacuum. It will still be necessary to pass a high current through the tube in both directions for some time as well as running a low temperature torch over areas that aren't heated enough by the discharge. However, the amount of outgassing and required time will be greatly reduced.

    CAUTION: Apparently, it is possible for an electron beam to be produced from the positive electrode during the high current bake-out step which can quickly melt a hole through the tube wall opposite the side-arm if left running for more than a few seconds. The visual effect will first be a spot of bright yellow sodium light from the point of impact. Use lower current and/or make that area of the tube (the outside of the turn) much thicker.

  • Obtain proper laser resonator mirrors. Sorry, you can't make these in your basement. Don't even bother to try silvered or aluminized mirrors (e.g., from barcode scanners), at least not until you have the laser working with real mirrors.

  • Mount everything on a stable base and make sure your mirror mounts have adequate precision! No amount of fiddling will compensate for mirrors that change position on their own. Yes, it may be possible to assemble a working laser mounted on wobbly stands but this isn't recommended!

  • Unless you want to be faithful to the era when the first HeNe laser was built (and there were no other lasers handy), I'd recommend using another HeNe or collimated diode laser to perform the mirror alignment. Mount the alignment laser to the baseplate so that it will be there whenever you need it. Do the initial alignment once everything is assembled but before actually evacuating the system and filling it with the HeNe gas mixture. Then, you'll be ready to lase, or at least very close. The card method of alignment can also be used but may be a bit tougher with the recommended narrower bore.

  • Use spectroscopic grade premixed HeNe gas with a 7:1 to 10:1 ratio (partial pressure/molar). Party balloon helium won't work due to gross amounts of contamination. The purity of the gas fill is extremely critical as the HeNe laser's performance drops off like a rock with even small amounts of N2, O2, H2, and other non-He and non-Ne constituents. As little as .01 Torr of H2 in your 1 or 2 Torr tube will kill lasing entirely.

  • If you are determined to seal off the tube after the laser is functional, run it for several hours while still connected to the vacuum system and continue to monitor and adjust the pressure during this time. The electrodes will act as getters of sorts and will remove unwanted non-inert gases as well as some of the helium and neon, necessitating refilling. Then, perform the seal-off without powering down - this will insure that conditions are correct at the normal operating temperature. Don't forget the very critical act of offering the proper chants and incantations to the "gods of newly born lasers" - though I don't know how much this really helps! :)

  • Make sure you read, understand, and follow ALL the safety guidelines found in the section: Home-Built HeNe Laser Safety.



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    Other Examples of Home-Built HeNe Lasers

    K. L. Vander Sluis et. al. HeNe Laser

    The following isn't quite a home-built laser but would be the equivalent in the arly 1960s - one of the first visible HeNe lasers on the planet:

    (From: George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com).)

    "I have read with interest your wealth of information on home-built HeNe laser because every problem you dealt with was one that we grappled with about forty years ago. I was a member of a group here in Oak Ridge that built the first HeNe laser in Tennessee about six months after Bell Labs announced the construction of theirs.

    Back in the 1960's we had a laser development group that decided that before we came out with a new kind of laser we should get laser experience by building one (HeNe) like Bell Labs. Ken Van der Sluis was the principal investigator. His prior experience with resonators was with the Fabry-Perot (FP) interferometer, so much of our construction was adapted from FP construction. The reflectors were 5 cm diameter in mountings that used 1/4 - 80 threads on the adjusting screws and Invar rods to maintain spacing, a case of overkill on every turn.

    The finest window material we had were quartz FP flats 5 cm diameter x 1 cm thick, and these were cemented onto the Brewster-cut tube ends. Ken was measuring gain with a spectrometer, adjusting mirror angles, gas mix, gas pressure, and discharge current, trying to find the magic combination but with no luck. Then Ken realized that it was possible that the infrared transition at 3.391 um was depopulating the upper level of the transition we wanted to use. After adding a borosilicate crown glass (BSC) flat (which blocks 3.391 um) to one of the windows with masking tape, and some realignment of the mirrors, it wasn't long before he got the first spark of red light - the first HeNe laser light in Tennessee! Soon word got around and for the next day or two we had dozens of visitors to see this fascinating red sparkling light. (It was our opinion that Bell Labs did not know about the 3.39 um trap and that they were lucky to have tried BSC first.)

    The lasers we made were made to get that sparkly red light and we were not concerned about the mode structure (except for our theoretical physicist who was fascinated by all the different multi-mode patterns we could get with our wide bore tube and he had names for them all). In fact, we soon abandoned using thick Brewster windows with optically flat surfaces, and sometimes used ordinary microscope slides.

    This work led to our development of a demonstration laser which we took to universities and a few high schools mostly over the eastern United States, and also to South America and Hungary.

    Everything can be found in the paper: "A Simplified Construction of a Helium-Neon Visible Laser", by K. L. Vander Sluis, G. K. Werner, P. M. Griffin, H. W. Morgan, O. B. Rudolph, and P. A. Staats in the American Journal of Physics, vol. 33(3), pp. 225-240, March 1965.

    (Here is another paper from the same group at Oak Ridge National Lab that should probably be in another chapter but I put it here: "Conversion of a Simplified HeNe Gas Laser to Pulsed Operation with Ar, Kr, and Xe", H. W. Morgan, P. A. Staats, P. M. Griffin, G. K. Werner, and K. L. Vander Sluis, American Journal of Physics, vol. 37(9), pp. 938-939, September 1969. --- Sam.)

    My most important contribution to the effort was that I was the inventor of the Laser Alignment Card, which you allude to later in this chapter. I could go on for several pages talking about lasers. We old-timers love to talk and reminisce!"

    (George has since gone on for several pages talking about lasers and has contributed several sections relating to the home-built HeNe laser, amateur laser construction in general, and other laser topics.)

    The HeNe laser presented in the paper is very similar to the SciAm design which isn't terribly surprising given that it was published in the same time frame. A photo in the paper shows the minimalist approach to laser design - the laser tube as well as the resonator mirrors supported by chemist's burette clamps on wobbly ring-stands with a Tesla-type leak tester for excitation! Well, maybe. Some of may partially home-built laser test rigs were a lot less stable. :) OK, this isn't what they recommend building (or what is described more fully in the paper and below) but it was included to drive home the point that you don't need a lot of sophistication to construct a working laser.

    I really liked the suggested supplier list (with 1965 prices!) which was thoughtfully included with my copy of the reprint of the paper. Optical windows for 25 cents; 1 liter flasks of He:Ne gas mixture for $6.50, and (small) neon sign transformers for $9.95. If only these companies were still n business today (using those same prices)! What I would give for a working time machine. :) One interesting thing is that while some items were quite inexpensive (if inflation wasn't taken into account), the dielectric mirrors were priced quite high - after all, this was new technology! And similarly, semiconductor rectifiers, which are dirt cheap today, were 10 or 20 times as expensive in 1965 dollars - much much more if inflation is included.

    There is one piece of information that can be inferred from the paper that is lacking from all of the SciAm articles: The actual optical power output. Based on their use of a silicon photodiode detector, I expect that it peaked in the .5 to 1.25 mW range depending on gas fill ratio and pressure. This assumes a photodiode current sensitivity of .4 to .5 mA/mW. Note that this was with mirrors that were about half as efficient as modern ones (they had significant absorption losses) and they were both OCs so an equal mount of power exited both ends. Thus, it would appear that up to about 5 mW may have been possible by using a modern HR/OC pair. Maybe I could use that time machine to take them a set. :)

    Here is a description of the HeNe laser presented in the paper summarized in my standard format. Some of the dimensions below were estimated as there is no dimensioned drawing in the paper. The authors suggest a variety of possible modifications as well. While the title of the paper implies a simplified approach, the authors did have access to a decent machine shop (including lathe and diamond cutoff wheel) and glass working shop (the glass fabrication looked perfect). However, like the SciAm lasers, this really isn't essential.



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    Additional Information on Home-Built HeNe Lasers

    Estimate of Home-Built HeNe Laser Output Power

    Given our knowledge of the construction of a modern HeNe laser tube and the type of power supply used, it isn't surprising that the available output power from this 35+ year old design will be less than optimal - probably a lot less!

    A modern tube with a 34 cm discharge length would be rated about 5 mW when run from a normal HeNe laser power supply (DC, constant current).

    Funny how all the 'loss factors' are the same, huh? Can you spell: WILD GUESSES?

    Based on these considerations, I would be surprised if the original design produced more than .5 mW. But the good news is that it might be possible to approach 2 or 3 mW without too much effort using a narrower bore, large can style cathode, and modern HeNe laser power supply.

    The very similar design described in the Verder Sluis et. al. paper (see the section: K. L. Vander Sluis et. al. HeNe Laser), had a maximum power on the order of 1 mW under optimal conditions based on their measurement of power using a silicon photodiode. So the wild guesses aren't all that far off. :) (However, it may have been capable of as much as 4 or 5 mW using a modern HR/OC pair.)

    Why Not to use Quartz Windows for a Visible HeNe Laser

    (From: George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com).)

    The SciAm article recommends using quartz windows because they have the lowest losses. We thought the same thing back in 1963 when we were trying to build a laser like the one that had been demonstrated by the Bell Labs people a few months earlier. Ken Vander Sluis had built our laser with two of our best quartz Fabry-Perot interferometer plates and was trying for days to make it run, with no luck.

    Ken is a spectroscopist and understands how energy levels work, so he thought about it, and reasoned that the 3.391 um transition might be depopulating the upper level so that the visible transition wouldn't lase. For the 3.391 um wavelength, quartz transmits well, but borosilicate and other glasses do not. He got another pair of interferometer plates, made of borosilicate crown glass, and put them over the quartz plates, fastening them in place with masking tape. After realignment he found an increase in gain and before long he got that first sparkle of light, the first HeNe laser in Tennessee!

    So the moral of the story is: Don't count on quartz windows giving you the best performance. "But", you may ask, "What about those lasers with no Brewster windows?" I have never measured their reflectance, but my guess is that the mirrors must have a multilayer surface that was designed with two criteria: high reflectance at 632.8 nm and low reflectance at 3.391 um.

    Even with glass Brewsters, the 3.391 um effect rears its ugly head in long lasers, those with length of one meter or more. In these the path length in the plasma before encountering a window is long enough that the 3.391 um density has a chance to build up to undesirable levels before meeting a window. It's called "superradiance" and can be suppressed with magnets (preferential Zeeman splitting of the IR lines) and/or by grinding the inner surface of the tube to scatter low-angle reflected light. But, tubing with a roughened interior is not as strong as standard tubing.

    (From: Sam.)

    Yes, that is exactly how they are designed. With sufficiently high transmittance at 3.391 um and possibly the frosted bore as well, the need for magnets to split the energy levels via the Zeeman effect has also been reduced or eliminated. For example, even the Melles Griot 35 mW HeNe laser (their largest model) does not need magnets even though the tube is almost a meter long.

    Comments on Alignment Procedure in "Light and its Uses"

    The second of the two articles on the HeNe laser: "More on the Helium-Neon Laser" provides an alternative procedure for mirror alignment which may be potentially hazardous (though realistically, the risk is probably minimal).

    The alignment is performed with the laser powered but presumably not lasing since a 'spoiler glass' - a glass microscope slide - is placed in the optical path. While this probably is fairly reliable with minimal risk for the low gain HeNe laser described in the article, many other lasers - or even a longer HeNe laser - may have high enough gain that the losses introduced by the spoiler would NOT prevent lasing and a beam could appear without warning (once the mirrors are aligned well enough) as the adjustment screws are being tweaked! I would NOT recommend the procedure as described for any laser unless a more reliable method were used of preventing accidental lasing (like the use of a 50 percent neutral density filter) or you were absolutely sure of the maximum possible output power of your laser to be less than a couple of mW. Note that even with a spoiler, there is still a slight chance that a HeNe laser will lase if the glass is nearly perpendicular to the optical axis (due to constructive interference of the reflections from its surfaces). A neutral density filter would totally eliminate even this small possibility.

    The description as presented is also somewhat ambiguous (but this is clarified below).

    Note that if you don't have 20/20 (corrected) or better vision, this procedure may not be appropriate in any case since for the fine alignment, it's necessary to view the reflection from the mirror at the far end of the laser through its narrow bore - not easy with less than perfect eyes.

    I would recommend using one of the other alignment techniques described in "Light and its Uses" or in the chapters of this document on HeNe and Ar/Kr lasers.

    Having said all that, I am honored to have George Werner, the inventor of the this alignment technique while at Oak Ridge around 1963, address the safety issues and provide a clearer description of the procedure:

    (From: George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com).)

    (The alignment card technique may have been independently invented elsewhere.)

    First, the matter of safety. If you are looking through the alignment card at the time the laser starts to oscillate you will see a very bright light, but it won't be the last light you ever see. Have you ever looked at a camera flash bulb when it went off? Have you ever looked at the sun? These sources are too bright for normal viewing so nature gives us a defense for it - - we close our eyes immediately. As for the laser's brightness, the first burst of light, if adjustments are made slowly, is much less than the maximum output. Even this exposure can be avoided, as I will discuss later.

    The alignment card I have used most recently has a hole about 2.5 mm in diameter. If you're worried about exposure you can make it smaller but that makes precise seeing more difficult. (In our report by Vander Sluis et al, we used .5 mm) The card stock is preferably heavier than normal filing cards, but they will do. The hole is made by drilling to ensure a round shape, but this leaves paper fibers protruding into the hole, which can be made to lay down by polishing the inner edge of the hole with wax or maybe glue. On the front side carefully rule a horizontal and a vertical black line across the hole. It is important that the intersection of these lines be on the hole, and sometimes I think that is easier to rule the lines first and make the hole afterward. A piece of a red gelatin filter, Wratten #29, is mounted on the back side of the hole. I have stuck it in place with a 1/2 inch circle of black masking tape with a 1/8 inch hole in it. Having an area of black around the hole as viewed from the back makes it easier to find and look through. In the deluxe model of card I use a fluorescent red surface on the front instead of white.

    The card is used in this way: Position the card at one end of the laser, viewing through the near reflector, so that you can sight through the card hole and through the capillary to the far end. (To facilitate this it may help to place a strongly illuminated target beyond the end of the laser. The fine print on the back of a credit card is good for this purpose.) Holding the alignment card in this position, observe the crosslines as reflected from the back side of the reflector and adjust the reflector so that the pinhole image lies on the capillary axis. Now the adjustment at the near end is complete (we hope).

    Next, take the card to the other end and repeat the operation. Note that at no time up to now has the laser been turned on so your eyes should be perfectly safe. NOW turn the laser on and it will shine with all its brilliance (it says here). :)

    If, however, the laser doesn't lase, make another inspection of the adjustments. This is where the red filter is needed. If you try to sight down the capillary while the laser is turned on, all you see is a cloud of blue light if you don't have a red filter. One experimenter reported the red filter was ineffective. I suspect that he wasn't using a Wratten #29. The red cellophane from a box of Valentine candy won't work. It passes too much yellow. With a proper filter you can easily see to the far end of the tube through the luminous plasma. With the laser turned on, look through the card and plan your next adjustment of the mirror but don't make it. Then move your eye away from the pinhole and make the adjustment you planned. If it doesn't lase, you can look through the pinhole and repeat the motion to see what is happening at the far end of the tube. If your system is geometrically correct but still not lasing, you will see a brighter (but not brilliant) disc of light coming into position at the far end as the final adjustment is made. This is what is commonly called the "full moon" effect. If that bright spot is well centered when viewed from either end, then you can be assured that no further mirror tweaking is called for and you can turn your attention to gas pressure, current level and all those other problems.

    I mentioned the use of a red fluorescent alignment card. What is the advantage of that? The only useful light reflected from a white card with red filter is the red component of the illuminating light. A fluorescent red card reflects the same red light but it also converts the blue, green and yellow light to red, giving us a brighter image.

    I haven't found a laser where it was not possible to see the far end of the tube looking through the card. Maybe the sighting hole was too small (like 1 mm or less) or maybe there was fuzz in the hole, or maybe as I have said before the filter wasn't red enough.

    In a very long narrow tube it is sometimes hard to determine straightness because internal reflections of a curved tube can give false images of the end opening. The curvature of the tube focuses the light in one plane, while at the same time in the other plane the strong focusing power of the bore radius is decreased at grazing angles, so that there is a curvature for which the reflected image has no astigmatism. Once I made a little light box to use as a target for this test. In front of a 15w light bulb I placed a wire screen mounted on a motor shaft to turn 6 rpm. I set it so that the target was moving left to right. Then if I looked at it through the capillary and saw an image moving right to left I knew that I was looking at a reflection.

    Visually Checking the He:Ne Ratio to Test for Gas Fill Problems

    (From: George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com).)

    When you have confirmed good alignment and the windows are clean, you may wonder if the gas mixture is right. In lasers that have been sealed a long time there is sometimes a noticeable loss of helium by diffusion through the glass and through the Epoxy of soft-seals. A good way to check the He:Ne ratio is to view the discharge spectroscopicly. I used to use a transmission grating (600 lines/mm) for this. In the yellow region you will find two lines close together. These are neon, 585.25 nm, and helium, 587.56 nm. If the mix is right these two lines should appear approximately equal in brightness.

    For a sealed tube, the helium lost by diffusion can be restored by putting the laser in an atmosphere of 100% helium (at 1 atm) for a day or two. 24 hours of inward diffusion this way is about equal to the outward diffusion of a year. (See the section: Rejuvenating HeNe Tubes.)

    So You Want to Build a Green HeNe Laser?

    Recall that green (543.5 nm) is one of the lowest gain of all the common HeNe lasers. So, getting any sort of green laser to work will be quite a challenge.

    I do have a working green HeNe laser using a special one-Brewster HeNe tube with an HR optimized for green and a matching HR mirror. OK, so the output isn't anything to write home about - maybe a µW - but the circulating green photon flux is fairly impressive. However, this setup is just about perfect in every way with an optically contacted fused silica Brewster window and super high reflectivity mirrors for both HRs. See the section: A Green One-Brewster HeNe Laser for details. But it's amazing that such a short (26.5 cm) one-Brewster tube will lase green at all!

    Also see the section: More on Other Color HeNe Lasers.

    (From: Steve Roberts (osteven@akrobiz.com).)

    The green HeNe lasing line was first observed by D. L. Perry. See: "CW laser oscillation at 5433 Å in neon", D. L. Perry, IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, vol. 7, no. 2, Feb 1971, pp. 102.

    Summary: CW laser oscillation at 5433 Å has been observed in the He-Ne laser. The transition is from the 3S_{2} to 2p_{10} level and is the 9th in this group of nine allowed transitions to exhibit laser oscillation....

    "Green #1 used a 65 cm long, 4 mm ID tube with a 7:1 fill ratio of He:Ne. Both optics had a 1% transmission at 594.1 (yellow) to kill that line. The current range was 16 to 40 mA (!!).

    The 611.8 nm (orange) line was used to align the laser (using red/orange optics). Then the green HR mirror was installed in the beam to align it and then the red/orange optics were removed."

    He obtained a power of 50 µWatts with this setup.

    (From: Sam.)

    Hey, but that's still much greater than the output power of that green one-Brewster HeNe laser and also greater than the output power of my red two-Brewster HeNe laser described in the sections starting with: Sam's DIY External Mirror HeNe Laser - Some Assembly Required!.

    A Home-Built HeNe Laser Requiring No Glassworking?

    (From: George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com).)

    Yes, it's possible because I have done it. The trick is to mill or saw a 1/2 inch aluminum plate to hold the window at 56 degrees to the axis of a hole you drill through it to receive the small bore laser tube. A side hole connects with this hole into which is glued a nipple for attachment to a vacuum system. Drill and tap a 6-32 hole somewhere for a screw to attach a wire because this piece is also an electrode. The one I made had a few extra square inches extending below so that I could put it in a beaker of water to dissipate the heat from the electrode. The allowable temperature of the aluminum is limited by the heat tolerance of the Epoxy you use to glue it together. Mine was a DC laser so only one end (the cathode) needed to be this large.

    A photo of that part of the tube is shown in Cathode-End of Home-Built HeNe Laser Requiring No Glassworking. The aluminum block cathode and negative power supply lead can be seen with the Brewster window glued to its angled surface. The glowing bore of the tube extends toward the upper left corner. For scale, the platform is 3 inch aluminum channel and that's one of my early (white) alignment cards in the lower right.

    The anode was similar but without the heat sink and vacuum attachment. Keep the kids away from it and/or make arrangements to insulate the high voltage electrode electrically but not thermally.

    (From: Sam.)

    Sputtering at the negative electrode would be my other concern. If it is near the Brewster window or internal OC mirror, a metal coating could form quite quickly, rendering the laser useless. I would recommend locating the cathode a few inches away - perhaps it could be a second aluminum block or an aluminum tube attached to the end of a glass side-arm glued into the block described above. The advantage of this geometry is that there is no direct line-of-sight path to the optics and thus sputtered material is much less likely to land there. Putting a few heat sink fins on this should provide adequate cooling if it becomes more than warm to the touch.

    Even simpler: Use common pipe fittings at each end, one being a "T" for a side-arm mounted glass extension to which the aluminum cathode is attached.

    How about a 100 METER Long HeNe Laser?

    This one is probably for the fantasy department but, hey, perhaps that unused LINAC tunnel you have in your basement left over from the defunct SSC project could be put to good use. :)

    (From: George Werner (glwerner@sprynet.com).)

    Here is a laser design that I planned 35 years ago but never built. If you want to try it out you are welcome to it.

    If one wanted to make a really long laser, one way to keep the 3.391 um radiation suppressed would be to stick a glass (not quartz, remember?) Brewster window in the optical path every 50 to 100 centimeters. Also, if we want to maintain the conditions of a conventional laser, we need to refocus the light rays periodically along the length. So the Brewster thing needs to be a lens rather than just a window. But a lens tilted to 57 degrees would have terrific astigmatism. OK, then have the window start with a reverse astigmatism such that when tilted to 57 degrees the astigmatism vanishes. Or, use a normal lens that is AR coated. If the AR coatings are really good then tilt should be unnecessary. (Note that the standard formulas for reflectivity won't work at an AR coated surface - I don't know if there is a Brewster angle for an AR coated surface.)

    The change in focal length from tilt is a relatively simple matter for concave reflectors (cosine for one direction, 1/cosine for the other), but for lenses it is more complex. I did a rough check on focus of a tilted lens at 0, 30, and 60 degrees and it showed that the focal distance (can we still call it focal length?) is the original focal length times the square of the cosine of the tilt angle for focus in the plane of the tilt and times the square root of the cosine of the tilt angle in the orthogonal plane. Then I did some more exact ray measurements on the computer and instead of cos2. I found it was closer to cos2.55. (Close, but not exact). I contemplated computing the focus in the other plane but decided that was too much bother since I don't even know if anyone is going to read this. (Well, read?, yes; build?, hmmm. --- Sam.)

    Therefore the lens/window, if it is to have a tilted focal length of 50 cm, should have a conventionally-measured focal length of 220 cm in one plane. and 67 cm the other way. The practical way to get such a lens is to deal with a manufacturer of spectacle lenses, so we have to translate to diopters and round to the nearest 1/8 diopter. Thus we end up with a refractive power of 0.50 diopters in one direction and 1.5 diopters in the other direction yielding tilted focal lengths of 45 cm and 50 cm (close enough). I guess the optometrist would call for "sph. +.50 , cyl +1.00". Make sure your lens maker understands that these curvatures are relative to a flat surface on both sides, or you may find you are given a lens that is strongly concave on one side as in standard spectacles. Perhaps each surface should be described as sph +.25 , cyl +.50. Check with the lens man.

    After having one made and checking it out, order as many as you want for your laser. Each section has its own power supply and glass system (with a shared window) and they can be tested and added one section at a time. The completed design as I see it is a multiple confocal system with end mirrors of 100 cm radius and intermediate lens/windows with 50 cm focal lengths every 100 cm. The windows nearest the mirrors are flat. When testing an incomplete assembly the second concave mirror should be 100 cm away from the last lens/window.

    In my imaginary design of this laser, each section has a glass ball joint near a window so that each section can be adjusted to be collinear with the rest, but I can also see it running as one huge glued-together contraption. After enough sections are added, it should lase without a terminating mirror, and this suggests that by that time it would have lost coherence. Who'd like to predict how much power it will produce? Who'd like to predict what limits the power?



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    Alternatives to Constructing an HeNe Laser from Scratch

    OK, so you really want to play with an external mirror HeNe laser but don't have access to the resources, a suitable work area, or more likely, the determination to deal with the glassworking, vacuum, gas fill, and other requirements of a totally home-built HeNe tube.

    The following sections describe various ways of ending up with a working HeNe laser that don't require quite as much in the way of support equipment and supplies as building one from the ground up. These include morphing a commercial HeNe tube into a home-built HeNe laser, using commercial one and two-Brewster HeNe laser tubes with your own resonator, and even a way of converting a cheap barcode scanner HeNe tube into a precision frequency stabilized laser. While perhaps not quite as rewarding as doing everything from scratch, the likelihood of success, particularly with the latter approaches, is much much greater.

    Taking an existing HeNe tube and using it as the foundation for an external mirror laser would eliminate some of the hassle of constructing everything from scratch. Specifically, most glass work would be eliminated and by doing things in stages, the risks are somewhat reduced.

    If you don't want to even think about vacuum systems and gas supplies, HeNe (and Ar ion) plasma tubes with Brewster windows for use with an external cavity ARE available from various sources. With one of these in-hand, and a matching conventional power supply (commercial or home-built), you can still experience the joy and frustration of constructing and aligning an external mirror laser head. I've even gotten lasing from a HeNe tube with a damaged OC mirror using an external mirror though I doubt there is another similar tube in the entire Universe so perhaps that isn't quite fair. :)

    It then is *just* a matter of fabricating the laser platform and mirror mounts, and obtaining a pair of suitable mirrors. There would be NO excuse for failure!

    However, the problem is that since such tubes are a lot less common - and mostly used as replacements in expensive high quality research lasers, their cost is considerable. Figure $600 to $1,000 or more depending on quality, size, and supplier. Check out the large well known HeNe laser manufacturers. Perhaps, if you can convince them it is for an educational project, they might let you have one that doesn't quite meet their specs for free or at cost.

    Perhaps, after successfully constructing a laser head in this manner, you will have the confidence to proceed with a totally home-built design. The continuing saga of my (so far less than entirely successful) experience with this approach follows in the section: Sam's DIY External Mirror HeNe Laser - Some Assembly Required!.

    The opposite situation is also a possibility: Build your own HeNe plasma tube but mount it in a used resonator. Depending on your resources, this might be an easier task (though I find that hard to imagine!). External cavity HeNe laser heads with dead tubes seem to turn up much more frequently than the other way around (for obvious reasons) and can often be obtained at attractive prices. In fact, the dead tube one of these contains might be a candidate for regassing!



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    Sam's Three Part Process for Getting Your Feet Wet in Gas Lasers

    The amount of preparation, acquisition of materials and equipment, and actual work that will be needed to construct a gas laser from scratch can be intimidating. So, here is a way of getting into it somewhat gradually.

    You will need the vacuum setup and a source of the HeNe gas mixture, but the serious glass working can be postponed for another day.

    The basic idea will be to start off with a laser resonator that once worked (a commercial HeNe tube) using a regular HeNe laser power supply. Inexpensive HeNe tubes and power supplies are readily available and therefore, much of the uncertainty can be easily eliminated so you can concentrate on the gas and vacuum issues.

    Part 1: Regassing a Sealed HeNe Tube

    This series of steps will allow you to replace or renew the HeNe gas in a common sealed HeNe tube with minimal fuss. If you are doing this to revive a tube (rather than to build your own laser), then Step 1 won't be needed!

    1. Locate a dead HeNe tube - or sacrifice one in the interests of science. (However, for the sacrifice, you will need to provide the appropriate chants and incantations to the "gods of dead lasers"!) What I mean by this is to start with a tube that is known to be in good physical condition - it worked out each day, took its vitamins, etc. :-) Maybe it is old and tired and needs new gas; perhaps it lases but is weak; or maybe you have 149 others like it and the overcrowding is unbearable. Since suitable HeNe tubes can be purchased for as little as $5 (possibly even less - see the chapter: Laser and Parts Sources) this isn't a huge investment. However, it must have been known to work - messing with mirror alignment is NOT something you really want to deal with - trust me! At least, not until Part 2.

      I would recommend something in the 5 to 10 mW range - large enough to be interesting but not so long as to possibly require magnets or other special attention to operate reliably.

    2. Very carefully breach the vacuum by nicking the end of the exhaust tube with a file - just enough so that the air goes in but you don't want to make a big hole yet because if there is any vacuum remining, it will suck in all sorts of junk. File all around the (metal) tube just to the point where it is about to crack but not all the way through as this will deposit metal particles and who-knows-what-else inside the tube. Once it is up to air, break off the tip and with as little delay as possible (i.e., minutes, not days), Epoxy a short length of metal or glass tubing to the remaining stub and cap the end until you will be actually pumping it down. This is your new exhaust port. With care, there will be only minimal contamination so an extensive bake-out will not be needed. A high vacuum needle valve can be added to make it semi-removable (but don't *count* on long life from your regassed tube).

    3. Hook this up to your vacuum/gas supply system. The gas valve to your HeNe bottle/cylinder/ampule should be closed and the vacuum valve to the pump(s) open.

    4. Pump it down as far as it will go (hopefully, this is a very small fraction of a Torr since you want it to be much less than the 2 to 5 Torr of working pressure for the HeNe mixture).

    5. Power it up using a power supply designed for the type of tube you are using! Note: Make sure the negative output of your power supply is at ground potential - else it will try to discharge through the vacuum hose to the pump earth ground!

      WARNING: The anode will be at a kV or more with respect to everything else! Cover, shield, or otherwise insulated it from accidental contact.

    6. Close the vacuum valve and open the gas valve a smidgen while monitoring pressure to raise the pressure of the HeNe mixture in the tube to its operating range of 2 to 5 Torr.

    7. Watch the color of the discharge and look for a laser beam. Once the gas fill has been purged of air and other contaminants and the pressure is within the required 2 to 5 Torr range, the color will stabilize with the familiar unsaturated redish-orange of a normal HeNe laser tube discharge.

    8. Depending on how high a vacuum your pump(s) can achieve and how much contamination was in the tube, you may have to repeat steps 4 to 7 several times. If the interior of the tube was not exposed to ambient conditions for any significant time, hopefully, no actual baking of the tube will be needed.

    9. Where your vacuum system isn't that great (e.g., not able to get down to .01 Torr or better as with a single stage rotary pump) a flowing gas (or at least a flow through gas) system can be used - add a second port at the opposite end of the HeNe tube from the exhaust tube and use this for the gas supply.

      WARNING: Where this fill port is attached to the anode as is likely, not only must you take extreme care in working with anything connected to it, but there will have to be a long narrow gas flow path to prevent the high voltage from striking between the tube anode and the gas supply cylinder instead of the tube cathode. Even if your gas supply system is electrical isolated from ground, its large capacitance to free space would make powering the HeNe tube difficult.

    10. Experiment with power supply voltage/current, gas pressure, and He:Ne ratio if you have that option. Have fun!

    Note that while you should be to achieve a sufficiently pure gas fill for the tube to lase, don't expect this to permit you to regas an old tired HeNe tube, seal it off, and expect it to generate rated power or last any significant amount of time (either just according to the calendar or hours of use). An extremely good vacuum, ultra-pure gases, bake out to eliminate all contamination, a new or reactivated getter, and some luck would be required for that to succeed. See the sections starting with: Repairing Leaky or Broken HeNe Tubes for more information.

    A nice description of HeNe laser reprocessing which includes this can be found at Mark Csele's Helium-Neon Lasers Page. There is even info on adapting a commercial HeNe laser tube to run as a pulsed neon-only laser.

    Part 2: Adding External Mirrors

    Now that you have successfully regassed and 'revived' a commercial HeNe tube (even if temporarily), it is time to go one step further: Replacing one or both mirrors/mounts with Brewster windows and using the original mirrors/mounts to build an external resonator. In the following discussion, I assume that both mirrors are replaced. However, it would be much simpler to just replace one - I would suggest the OC. Then, with the HR untouched, mirror alignment becomes much less of a hassle and unknown. The result would then be equivalent to a one-Brewster HeNe Laser. See the sections starting with: Sam's One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube Conversion.

    Note: For this to work, both mirrors must be planar (which is difficult to align especially for a long narrow bore resonator) or must have a focal length significantly longer than the original tube length - otherwise, the added distance between them when mounted externally will mess up the cavity relationship that would have been present where one or both was concave.

    In addition, it is almost certain that the reflectivity of the Output Coupler (OC) mirror - the one at the output-end of the laser that were part of the HeNe tube in the first place - will be too low for anything approaching optimal performance (and perhaps not even have enough gain to lase at all) once the losses through the Brewster windows are taken into account (especially those that aren't perfectly clean, high enough quality, and not exactly at the correct angle). Therefore, higher reflectivity optics for the OC with a curvature optimized for an external mirror HeNe tube similar in length to your creation should probably be used from the start to avoid a lot of frustration.

    Note, however, that for clean, fused silica, very flat Brewster windows set at the proper angle, losses can be very low and even short one-Brewster HeNe tubes (e.g., 10 inches between HR and Brewster window) have enough gain to lase easily with quite low reflectance OCs (e.g., 97 or 98 percent - typical of the OCs in 25 to 30 inch internal mirror HeNe tubes. So, you may get away with using the original OCs if your Brewsters cooperate. :)

    Another option is to forgo red entirely until you have something that lases at all and go for one of the IR lines: 1,162.3 nm, 1,523.1 nm, or 3,391.3 nm. I may be easier to get a short tube to opaerte - even one that won't work at all for red, especially at that last one - which will even lase superradiantly (without mirrors) in a moderate length tube. Of course, suitable optics will be needed as well as some means of detecting the IR. A silicon photodiode, CCD camera, or IR detector card can be used for the 1,162.3 nm wavelength; a phosphor plate or something else for the longer ones. Take special care if you do this as the IR is, of course, invisible, but can still cause eye damage. Personally, I'd go with the red - it's challenging but doable.

    1. Fabricate a pair of Brewster window assemblies. These can be made from a glass or metal tube 1 or 2 inches long cut at the required Brewster angle for the type of optical material you will be using for the flats. Quartz or fused silica optical flats are best for the windows since the these absorb less light (which is converted to heat) but also transmit the usually unwanted 3,391 nm wavelength. (See the section: Why Not to use Quartz Windows for a Visible HeNe Laser.) For visible wavelengths, borosilicate crown glass flats are nearly as good. High quality super clean microscope slides may also work with suitable mirrors (though probably not that well). See the section: Optical Windows.

      One possible inexpensive or free source for high quality Brewster windows is a defunct external mirror HeNe tube - but if you had one, you would probably be using that to build this apparatus entirely! Another possibility is a dead one-Brewster HeNe tube or a Hughes style polarized HeNe tube (which may actually be a one-Brewster HeNe tube with an external OC mirror glued to its Brewster stem). See the section: Determining Brewster angle.

      • A metal tube for mounting the Brewster window can be cut using a hacksaw or band saw and then carefully filed or sanded smooth and flat (at the required angle) and cleaned. A glass tube is best cut on a diamond wet saw though the jig described in "Light and its Uses" for the HeNe laser can also be used. It will then need to be lapped to make a nearly gas tight fit.

      • For a permanent assembly, the inside diameter of this tube should be such that they can be slipped snuggly over the portion of the mirror mount attached to the ends of the HeNe tube once the adjustable section has been removed. For testing, it may better to make the diameter about the same as the mirror mount stub and use a short piece of vacuum hose and hose clamps to attach the Brewster window assembly to the tube.

    2. Use Epoxy to attach the windows to the tubes and let them set for a couple of days. Then clean them inside and out with denatured alcohol.

    3. After allowing air to enter the tube slowly if it wasn't already up to air, remove the mirrors from both ends of the tube (or one end only if you want to take this gradually). If you want to save the mirrors, see the section: Salvaging Parts From a Laser Tube. Else, you can use more violence to remove just the glass from the ends of the mirror mounts. Retaining the restricted section will permit the Brewster angle to be adjusted slightly even for the permanently attached Brewster window assemblies. However, there is risk that the mirror(s) may break or chip during removal.

      Or, to keep the mirrors intact and mounted, use a file to score around the thin section to the point just before the metal is penetrated. Snap off the mount and immediate cap the end(s) of the tube to minimize the possibility of contamination. Don't remove the mirror glass from the metal mounts - they are more convenient to handle. Put each mirror/mount in s little plastic bag and set them aside in a tightly capped container until needed. (Even if, as recommended, you start with an OC mirror designed for use with an external mirror HeNe tube, after you get the thing lasing, you can go back and try the original OC to determine if it will work at all.)

    4. After making sure the inside surfaces of the Brewster windows are super clean, attach the assemblies to the ends of the tube using Epoxy (permanent) or the piece of vacuum hose and hose clamps (temporary) taking. For the permanent connection, it is critical that the angle is properly set!

    5. Fabricate one of the mirror mounts described in the sections starting with: Adjustable Mirror Mounts or any of those constructed for the lasers described starting in the section: The Half-Way Approach for a Home-Built HeNe Laser. Attach the mirror(s) of your choice to the movable plate with glue, clips, or screws.

    6. Use one of the alignment techniques from "Light and its Uses" or a green HeNe laser as described in the section: Argon/Krypton Ion Laser Cleaning and Alignment Techniques (these apply to other lasers as well) to align the mirrors without the modified HeNe tube installed.

    7. Mount the modified HeNe tube in position between the mirrors, fire up the pumps and power supply and have fun!
    Make sure EVERYTHING is immaculate! With a low gain laser like this (a red HeNe), even a speck of dust in the wrong place can cut output power way down or kill lasing entirely. At best, it will make alignment much more difficult; at worst it will make it impossible to ever get any kind of beam. See the information on optics cleaning in the sections starting with: Cleaning of Laser Optics. This isn't like an internal mirror HeNe laser where you can mess up the quality of the beam with a strategically located smudge but it will still lase just fine - that fingerprint will make it impossible for enough photons to bounce back and forth to maintain oscillation at all!

    If you really want to experiment, are doing this with an HeNe tube that was originally 30 cm or longer, and have a high frustration threshold, obtain a set of mirrors designed for an 'other color' HeNe tube and see if you can get something other than coherent red light from your contraption!

    Note that even getting a short external mirror HeNe laser (e.g., bore length less than 30 cm or so) to operate on the red 632.8 nm wavelength may be difficult unless everything is perfect. And, there aren't that many commercial external mirror HeNe lasers in 'colors' other than red or IR - the gain is even lower than for red on the orange, yellow, and green lines so losses must be cut down to as near zero as possible! The very slight reflection from even high quality Brewster windows may be enough to prevent lasing unless the bore is long. Hint: Green has to lowest gain of the common 'other HeNe colors' so I would suggest avoiding that, at least until you have succeeded at yellow or orange! :)

    Part 3: Using Your Own HeNe Glass Work

    Now that you have a working 'Frankenstein' HeNe laser - one using a few transplanted parts - it should be a simple matter to substitute a fully home-blown tube of your own. I would recommend using a bore length of around 30 cm for a 632.8 nm visible red output with standard dielectric HeNe laser mirrors. This is long enough to produce a decent output power but short enough so that the tendency to oscillate at the very strong IR spectral lines is manageable without the use of arrays of magnets - thought these could be added to improve performance.

    You can use a pair of identical electrodes and the AC power supply described in "Light and its Uses". However, it would also be possible (with just a little more glass-work) to provide a large side-tube (which also provides a much greater gas reservoir) and aluminum (can) cathode as in commercial tubes with a regular HeNe (DC) laser power supply.

    Sam's One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube Conversion

    The following is a preliminary works-in-progress:

    I have had a 30 inch long HeNe laser tube with a broken-off OC mirror (from overzealous attempts at alignment, don't ask!) sitting in a box in the attic for a couple of years now. It never really worked quite right anyhow with erratic power fluctuations and didn't come anywhere near its 20 mW rating even when all the planets were precisely aligned. :) The cause is unknown - possibly low gain due to a contaminated gas fill resulting in low gain. This tube seemed like it would be ideal for creating a nice long semi-home-built one-Brewster laser. And, I wouldn't feel at all guilty about making irreversible modifications - no chants or incantations required for the "gods of dead lasers" either! ;-) The HR mirror is known to be in good condition and properly aligned and there is a nice hole where the OC mirror used to be (the OC has since been reassigned to other projects and works fine so the tube's original problems weren't due to the OC). The exhaust tube is nice and long (about 3 inches) - apparently, this tube never actually was totally completed. It is also one of those peculiar HeNe tubes described in the section: Segmented HeNe Tubes. I expect this to be an advantage since the gas reservoir ends up being distributed throughout the bore and there should be less 'pumping' of gas from one end to the other by the current in the discharge. (Since I have a couple of other more normal tubes from the same source that also experience the lack of power and instability, I don't believe that is related to the segmented design.)

    A diagram of the proposed assembly is shown in Sam's One Brewster Helium-Neon Laser Tube Conversion.

    To accommodate my mediocre vacuum system, I intend to construct this as a flowing gas system. So, I will drill a hole for the gas fill port in the end-plate at the anode-end of the tube (the exhaust tube is, as usual, at the cathode-end) and attach a piece of metal capillary tubing to it with Epoxy.

    I will attach the well cleaned Brewster stem salvaged from a Hughes style one Brewster HeNe tube to the OC mount stump. Although the diagram shows a sleeve and Epoxy seal, I may use a threaded pipe fitting so that the Brewster window can be easily removed or replaced if needed, or some other optic like an OC mirror could be substituted if desired. For initial testing, I have installed a piece of clear plastic tubing and a pair of small pipe clamps. This probably won't retain a decent vacuum but should work for flowing gas operation. And, the angle of the Brewster window can be adjusted if needed!

    The external OC mirror will be mounted on an adjustable plate with everything attached to a rigid base.

    My SP-255 exciter on a Variac should be satisfactory for powering this laser.

    To be continued....



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    Sam's DIY External Mirror HeNe Laser - Some Assembly Required!

    As noted in the section: The Half-Way Approach for a Home-Built HeNe Laser, if you aren't really into glasswork and vacuum systems, it is still possible to experience much of the challenge and feeling of accomplishment by building a laser using a commercial tube and external resonator.

    I acquired an external mirror HeNe tube for this exact purpose. Physically, the body of the tube looks like a Melles Griot internal mirror type (but no manufacturer label). Probably the closest current model would be the 05-LHR-120 HeNe tube used in the 05-LHR-121 laser head which is rated at 2 mW. Additional info can be found in the section: Typical HeNe Tube Specifications.

    However, instead of the normal mirror mounts and internal mirrors, it has a pair of Brewster windows. Although such HeNe tubes are manufactured for use in research lasers, I suspect this was a one-of-a-kind for another reason: In Magic Marker on the side is printed: He3, Ne22, 2.8, which I assume refers to the isotope of helium and neon used in the gas fill and the gas fill pressure (2.8 Torr). Ordinary HeNe tubes may use normal He4 and Ne20 so my guess is that this was manufactured for someone's thesis project with a title like: "Determination of How Lasing Spectral Characteristics are Affected by Gas Isotope". The consensus is that isotope differences will have only minimal effect - and this is supported by my measurements. See the section: Performing the Single Pass Gain Test.

    Actually, having said that before I know what I was talking about (assuming I do now!), the upper energy state of He3 is slightly closer to that of Ne20 so energy transfer is more efficient and thus gain will be modestly higher for a given tube length. This is particularly critical for "other-color" HeNe lasers where every bit of gain is critical. But apparently, virtually all modern HeNe lasers, regardless of color, are now filled with He3. See the additional comments below.

    Tubes with Brewster windows are available from several companies including Melles Griot and Jodon. Sizes from 10 cm to over 100 cm (between the centers of the Brester windows) are available which will operate at the 632.8 nm (red) HeNe wavelength. My funny tube has a length of about 25 cm so it is well within this range. This tube appears to be similar to a Melles Griot 05-LHB-290 Brewster tube except for the strange gas fill. Thus, if manufactured properly (e.g., with the proper Brewster angle and properly aligned windows), it should work!

    Description of the Home-Built Resonator

    To make use of this tube, I needed to construct a resonator and mirror mounts and provide mirrors. This is shown in HeNe Laser Tube with Two-Brewster Windows Mounted in Home-Built Resonator (not to scale) and Photo of Home-Built Two-Brewster HeNe Laser.

    For the resonator frame, I used some aluminum scrap from an old chart recorder and 9 track tape drive (Like the perverbial cow, I use nearly everything!). Low expansion InVar or something else equally exotic and expensive would be better, but given my machine shop or lack thereof, I would much rather deal with aluminum!

    Once drilled, tapped, and screwed together, this assembly is VERY rigid.

    The mirror mount assembly consists of three parts: a fine adjustment plate, a coarse adjustment plate, and a small slotted adapter to which the mirror optic itself is attached.

    1. On each end is an adjustable mirror plate similar to the design shown in: Adjustable Mirror Mount 2 except that instead of thumbscrews and springs, it uses cap screws (hex wrench adjustment) and split washers, respectively. This is similar to the scheme used with the ALC-60X argon ion laser head. The total adjustment range is only about 1 degree but this should be more than enough once the coarse adjustment is done.

    2. The coarse adjustment is similar to the fine adjustment but is smaller and attaches on to it with three smaller cap screws again using lock washers instead of springs.

    3. The optics are mounted on a plate with oversize holes to permit some adjustment in X and Y to line up the center of the mirror with the bore of the tube.

    The tube itself (henceforth called the 'Tube Under Test' or TUT) is mounted by a couple of aluminum brackets and Plexiglas plates with the anode-end on ceramic insulators. The ballast resistor is also mounted on the frame with a Plexiglas cover to prevent accidental contact with the high voltage terminals. There is even a HV Warning sticker - what a concept! Power is provided via a 4 foot HV coax terminated in a male Alden connector.

    Once this was all constructed, I checked that it would power up and then evaluated the TUT for gain. See the section: Performing the Single Pass Gain Test.

    Salvaging Some Mirrors

    To get it to actually lase, I of course, need mirrors. My intention is to initially select mirrors that will give me the greatest chance of getting some coherent output - even if it is weak. Ideally, this means high reflectance for the OC to minimize gain requirements and some curvature to ease alignment. In the end, what I selected were mirrors from a certifiably dead-dead Melles Griot 05-LHR-002-246, a 5 inch long .5 to 1 mW internal mirror tube, a type used in HeNe laser based hand-held barcode scanners.

    This one in particular must have been dropped since the capillary had broken completely off of its attachment at the anode-end of the tube and was rattling around inside. Given this state of affairs, I would expect the "gods of dead lasers" to understand the need for the sacrifice since I could think of absolutely no way it could ever be made to lase again (but I did provide the appropriate chants and so forth just to be sure!).

    After evaluating several options on exactly how to remove the mirrors (retaining various amounts of the rest of the tube), I decided to cut them off at the narrow section of the mirror mount. This would minimize the possibility of damage to the optics while at the same time providing a convenient metal collar to attach to my mirror mount plate. To minimize contamination, rather than using a hacksaw or file, I scored a line with a sharp pair of wire cutters and then snapped them off. Then, I cleaned up the rough edges with a file after stuffing a the hole to prevent the entrance of metal particles.

    Well, since I pulled those mirrors off the little dead tube, I haven't heard of any global disasters so I guess the "gods of dead lasers" (GODLs) are satisfied with my chants. :) I did break a set of wire cutters trying to score a line (maybe that was my payment to the GODLs).

    To mount the mirrors, I drilled a hole in each of my plates so they would retain their position by a press-fit. Then, with all the mirror mount screws tightened down, the plates with the mirrors were attached. To confirm that the mirrors were seated approximately correctly, I used my alignment HeNe laser to check for a return beam down the bore of the TUT. It didn't have to be exact (the coarse and fine adjustments will take care of that), but I wanted to be sure it wasn't really far off. A bead of Epoxy then assured that each mirror would stay in the proper position.

    However, now I have 3 unknowns:

    1. Mirror alignment - This will be a real !@#$. My frame is about 15 inches long and they are planar mirrors. :( It was enough of a pain in the you-know-what aligning my ALC-60X which is (1) shorter, (2) has a curved OC, and (3) passes HeNe red for alignment. I really don't want to fire up an argon ion laser for this.

    2. Absolute single pass gain of funny tube. I really can't measure that as noted previously beyond saying that it looks close. So while I believe it to be positive, unable to confirm or quantify.

    3. Reflectance/transmission, quality, and cleanliness of mirrors. With less than 2 percent gain, it doesn't take much to kill lasing.

    Attempting Alignment 1

    I already knew that alignment would be quite difficult, especially with planar mirrors. What I really need is a set of mirrors with a radius of curvature about equal to the length of my resonator to form a confocal cavity. this would be much easier to align than a planar-planar configuration. Until then, I am stuck with what I have. I played with alignment for a few hours but without any flashes. So, I decided to measure the transmission of each of the mirrors I had available.

    All the HRs tested at less than .1 percent transmission.

    I know that I only have 2 percent to play with excluding losses through the Brewsters! So, these mirrors at least should be acceptable as long as the losses through the Brewsters are less than 1.3 percent or so. However, to have the best chance, I can just use an HR from another little tube (already have it so no need for sacrifices as someone else already went through that ritual) to see if I can get it lasing at all, then worry about the OC to get some power out at one end. Or, use Sam's special means of extracting power - a plate inside the cavity at almost the Brewster angle - 2 beams for the price of one! :)

    (From: Daniel Ames)

    Maybe my BEFIA (Beam Expansion for Interference Alignment Method) might come in handy with this one. (I guess that title sure could use some rewording, as the abbreviation sounds like a "beef processors union". :)

    Important note: Be sure to offer the HeNe alignment chant, FIRST!

    1. Secure the reference laser (R-Laser).

    2. Mark the exact spot of the beam on the (stationary) viewing card with a cross.

    3. Add to the beam (past where the TUT will be), your best lens and center so you get the most concentric looking pattern, centered on the cross and secure the lens (with tape).

    4. Insert the TUT into the beam and by monitoring the (new) position of the beam's spot and the interference patterns, produced by reflection off the TUT's cavity walls, try to get the spot back to the "center" of the cross. Then fine tune the TUT's alignment to make the interference patterns concentrically on axis with the cross's center.

    5. The TUT must be secured (without moving it). I found that Steve Roberts' idea of using tape, preferably the 2" wide packaging tape, works pretty well for this.

    6. Now align the mirror that is closest to the R-Laser, so that you get more interference - from the reflected beam from the R-Laser's OC and back through the TUT and lens, when viewed against the cross.

    7. Fine tune the first mirror to get the new interference more centered with the cross and the interference rings to look as symmetrical as possible.

    8. Now, repeat steps (6) and (7) on the 2nd mirror without moving anything.

    NOTE: This can be done with the same color HeNe, but the reflections will be substantially reduced in intensity. So, if using the same color R-Laser, (HeNe) use a bright fluorescent sticker or card for the viewing screen and dim the lights.

    This procedure should only take a minute or two of your time, or forever. Your mileage my vary. :)

    On your alignment jig, have you thought of any way other than the manual (slip and slide) method for lateral adjustment?

    Geometrically speaking, it is much easier to move the TUT for aligning, than the reference laser. It works out to be a much less critical movement. The distance of movement of say 1/100th of a degree times the distance between the two lasers, is much greater than 1/100th of a degree times the length of just the TUT. It makes dialing in the alignment much easier, especially if the distance between the two lasers is more than the absolute minimum.

    My (unorthodox) method:

    It's reversed from the norm. I put the TUT on the alignment jig, and the reference laser was just positioned and secured at the approximate center of the jig's vertical and horizontal travel.

    Although with my (unorthodox) method, the TUT still needs to somehow secured to the Jig.

    Either way, what about putting a piece of metal, maybe aluminum, under the TUT for a smoother lateral positioning? Just a thought, maybe you already thought of this. :)

    But I'm sure that you have a plan. :)

    (From: Sam)

    Right... I am quite convinced that alignment of the A-Laser relative to the TUT's bore really isn't a problem at this point.

    Attempting Alignment 2

    After a few weeks, off and on, of attempting to obtain output from this laser, I am wondering if I need to go back and seriously attempt to determine whether the tube has a net greater than unity absolute single pass gain.

    However, there have as yet been no confirmed sightings of any flashes regardless of which optics were used, the phase of the moon, or wishful thinking. :(

    At this point I am therefore left with 2 of the 3 unknowns: Absolute single pass gain of the funny tube and the curvature, quality, and cleanliness of the mirrors. Or....

    I just noticed that there is some possibility that the funny gas fill with the non-standard isotopes of helium and neon might have been used to make this HeNe tube producing a green beam at 543.5 nm. See the section: More on Other Color HeNe Lasers. However, for all my tests, I have used red probe beams and mirrors designed to reflect red at 632.8 nm. Perhaps my problem all along is that I should have gone green!

    Finally, Success (More or Less)!

    Drum-roll please! Is the crowd ready?? :)

    After a pleasant interlude of getting a HeNe tube with a single Brewster window to work (see the section: A One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube), I returned to this effort. I suspected that part of the problem was that I hadn't paid enough attention to the cleanliness of the Brewster windows. With the one-Brewster tube, even a single spec of dust or fine coating of who-knows-what could drastically reduce the output power. With two Brewsters, such effects would be much worse.

    So, I went back to optics from the large-frame Spectra-Physics laser (and are what are shown in the photo, above). I hoped these would have the best chance of lasing short of a pair of long focal length HRs which I currently don't have. (The OC from the old lab laser might be even better if it has higher reflectivity - I may try that in the future.)

    I discovered that by watching the scatter from the Brewster window closest to the alignment laser (A-Laser), it was possible to tweak the mirrors so that the spot caused by the beam from A-Laser and the return from the HR mirror at the other end of the tube could be superimposed. If this was done with the OC's reflection smack in the middle of the A-Laser's output aperture, there would be an increase in intensity and fluctuations in intensity due to mode cycling of the A-Laser and light bouncing back and forth between the A-Laser's OC and the OC of my resonator. At this point, alignment was really very close.

    While gently rocking the mirrors I got what were unmistakable flashes for the first time. More cleaning and blowing off of dust and I was finally able to get a few photons of coherent 632.8 nm light coming from the funny tube.

    Actually, a grand total of about 19 µW. (That's 19 whole microwatts - not milliwatts or megawatts!) It's a nice TEM00 beam - just not very bright! :)

    Part of the problem may be that the inside of the Brewster on the cathode-end of the funny tube seems to have a lot of scatter - about as much as I get from the Brewster window of the one-Brewster tube with perhaps 100 times as much circulating light flux between the Brewster and the OC. How do you clean the inner surface of a Brewster window on a sealed tube? :(

    Another and perhaps more significant characteristic is that when first turned on, the output power may be more than 2-1/2 times greater (more than 50 µW!!) and then decays to the lower value over the course of a minute or two. If it is turned off for a minute or two, the behavior will repeat. This could indicate a gas fill problem as I've seen similar behavior with an old Spectra-Physics 084-1 soft-seal HeNe tube. The mechanism would be that discharge current is causing the gases to be redistributed to the detriment of lasing gain or the optical power that can be extracted from the population inversion (sounds impressive at least!). The color of the discharge isn't obviously incorrect but could be a bit more pink than normal, though the spectrum appears normal. However, I may attempt to reactivate the getter in any case but this will have to wait until I get my induction heater working - there is no way to do this easily with my solar heater or by loading the entire laser into the microwave! However, I have tried the RF exciter test for gas fill problems and the results would seem to indicate that there is no detectable contamination.

    I do believe at present that my OC reflectivity is marginal and I should be able to get a bit more power out of this tube by locating a mirror with 99.6% or greater reflectivity. As noted, I have tried a couple of HRs (which would certainly satisfy the reflectivity criteria) without even a single pair of coherent photons being ejected from the laser but since they originated from small internal mirror HeNe tubes, their focal lengths may have been too short.

    Anyhow, this is success! I don't know how much more I can squeeze out of it regardless of optics but at least the entire effort resulted in a working laser - even if you do need to have someone point out the location of the beam!

    I have left the two-Brewster laser as well as the A-Laser (just in case) set up against the back wall of my laser lab bench and turn it on from time-to-time just to be sure I wasn't imagining things. It continues to work at about the same power (or lack thereof) level, generally without requiring any mirror tweaking to peak it, only brushing off the Brewster windows.

    Comments on the Funny Two-Brewster HeNe Tube

    I finally got around to asking Steve Roberts if he had any additional info on this thing:

    (From Steve Roberts (osteven@akrobiz.com).)

    You've got a research tube. And, being as short as it it, probably one designed for a single longitudinal mode. The foggyness on a hene is bad news... Do you get chaotic fluctuations as the mirror is moved slightly or if you put your finger on the tube? If so you have dirt in the path.

    I suspect your tube was designed for spectroscopy games, or perhaps to be locked to a iodine or methane cell as a standards laser for metrology. Or maybe somebody was redoing the isotope work to see if anybody missed something.

    Your best bet on the isotope thing is to contact Spectra Gases and ask them what isotopes they sell in the hot HeNe mix.

    The following excerpts is from: "Laser Fundamentals" by William Silfast, ISBN: 0-521-55617-1:

    "and a single isotope of neon (Ne20) is used to keep the gain bandwidth to a minimum and thereby increase the gain."

    "Using a natural mixture of neon will reduce the gain by approximately 10%. Additional modes will then only develop from the Ne22 isotope if the much smaller gain in the frequency range of that isotope exceeds the losses within the laser cavity."

    "The shift between Ne20 and Ne22 is approximately 1 GHz, whereas the bandwidth due to doppler broadening is on the order of 1.5 GHz".

    From what I can tell, Ne22 has a difference in gain of -9.8% in the mix (best guess on the sign, as the graph in the text is ambiguous. Naturally occurring neon is: 90.8% Ne20, (10 neutrons), .26% Ne21 (11 Neutrons), and 8.9% Ne22 (12 neutrons).

    Naturally occurring helium is 99.9998% He4 and .00013% He3, so somebody wanted a real shift in the hyperfine spectrum of a HeNe laser, I would suggest asking why on the USENET newsgroup scl.physics.research.

    I don't know about the chance of the other color lines lasing on a short tube like that, but I'd get two pieces of Newport BD-1 coated mirror and find out. It's 99.99% reflectivity across the visible spectrum and well into the IR. I doubt you'll see green in less then a 1 meter tube with brewsters but yellow is a strong candidate.

    (From: Sam.)

    I see that Spectra Gases does list He3 and Ne22 on their Visible and Infrared Laser Gases Page but you have to call for more info.

    As suggested, I posted to the USENET newsgroup sci.physics.research (as well as alt.lasers). Here is the one reply so far:

    (From: Excimer (species8672@email.com).)

    My good friend Chris Leubner - laser expert extraordinaire - was very interested in your laser:

    "I think you have found a very unique HeNe laser tube. Helium 3 comes from tritium. He3 also has a higher energy state than normal He4. So the laser is quite efficient at operating at an otherwise weak line. It is most likely designed to operate at a wavelength of 1.523 um. This wavelength is used for infrared spectroscopy and fiber analysis. It most likely came from some sort of spectrometer or fiber optic analyzer. Definitely hold on to this laser! It is a very rare find!"

    PS: Try and see if it would work with other types of mirrors... You never know...

    (From: Sam.)

    OK, so now I need a set of mirrors good for 1.523 um.... :)

    But now, perhaps the final word:

    (From: Lynn Strickland (stricks760@earthlink.net).)

    Most HeNe lasers are filled with He3 and an equal mixture of Ne20 and Ne22. This broadens the gain curve and provides a little more power. Some want just Ne20 or just Ne22, usually for frequency references.

    The center of the gain curve for Ne20 and Ne22 are (can't remember for sure) about 500 MHz apart. If you want a precise frequency reference, you wouldn't want the mixed neon isotopes because the center frequency could vary anywhere in that 500 MHz range.

    As for the He, no one really uses He4 in HeNe lasers any more - only He3.



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    Sam's Instant External Mirror Laser Using a One-Brewster HeNe Tube

    So even the only partially home-built HeNe laser described in the section: Sam's DIY External Mirror HeNe Laser - Some Assembly Required! is still too complex? How about one that can be put together in an hour or so and be made to lase with almost anything better than a shaving mirror? Such a laser can be built easily using a commercial HeNe laser tube with an internal HR mirror and Brewster window in place of the OC mirror. While such tubes are very expensive if purchased new, they are available surplus from various sources at reasonable prices. In fact, a few linearly polarized HeNe tubes (like some Hughes models) may actually be one-Brewster tubes with the OC mirror mount fastened to the end of the tube externally with Epoxy. Thus, if you have one of these, it may be possible to remove the mirror without damaging the rest of the assembly to use just the one-Brewster tube alone.

    This should be the experimenters' dream laser combining low cost, ease of use, safety, simplicity, flexibility, and a visible beam while still providing convenient access to the inside of the resonator. With only very modest metal working skills and a hacksaw, file, drill, and tap, a one-Brewster HeNe laser tube and compatible power supply can be turned into a an external mirror (well, one mirror at least - which is really all you probably need in most cases) laser for experimentation with the high photon flux inside the resonator; effects of mirror reflectivity, curvature, and location; or just the thrill of seeing several hundred mW to several WATTs of HeNe laser light bouncing off specs of dust - along with the frustration of knowing that you can't really get at it! :)

    The safety aspect in particular of this design makes it an ideal laser for experiments requiring access to the cavity. There are no high voltages near the Brewster window and mirror mount assembly, the tube is fully enclosed in a robust aluminum cylinder, and the output beam power will generally be well below the Class IIIb threshold. Even though there is Class IIIb power inside the cavity, it is in a sense 'virtual' - if anything interrupts that beam, including an unsuspecting eyeball, it simply disappears as lasing stops.

    And, unlike most commercial external mirror HeNe lasers which locate the mirrors as close to the ends of the tube as possible, you can mount the mirror for your one-Brewster HeNe tube at almost any distance to provide either easy access to the circulating photons or to just show off with a several hundred or more mW beam visible in the air. For example, with the 60 cm radius of the HR typically found in these one-Brewster HeNe tubes, a planar mirror will work as far away as about 30 cm (~1 foot) from the Brewster window; another 60 cm mirror could in principle be mounted up to 90 cm (~3 feet!) away though adjusting its alignment would be quite a treat. :) In the design described below, we'll be a bit less ambitious, but see the section: Mirror/Optics Test Jig Using One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube.

    One-Brewster HeNe Laser Parts and Assembly

    A drawing of a typical one-Brewster HeNe tube is shown in HeNe Laser Tube with Internal HR and Brewster Window with External OC mounted in its laser head along with the external mirror mount detailed below. This is the CLIMET 9048 laser head which uses the Melles Griot 05-LHB-570 one-Brewster HeNe tube.

    I have a limited quantity of CLIMET 9048 laser heads (with or without power supplies), as well as Melles Griot 1-B laser tubes, available for sale. See the section: Sam's Stuff for Sale or Trade and Items Wanted.

    The parts list and mirror mount drawing is provided below:

    (Not listed is any hardware required to mount the laser head and mirror mount assembly to a baseplate or enclosure.)

    The left photo in Sam's External Mirror Laser Using One Brewster HeNe Laser Head shows the complete system with mirror mount and an SP-084-1 OC mirror installed in the Simple Mounting Cell for Salvaged HeNe Laser Tube Mirrors. A Melles Griot 05-LPM-379 power supply brick set for 6.5 mA provides the excitation. The middle photo shows the adjustable mirror mount and support standoffs. This assembly can be easily swapped to another similar one-Brewster HeNe head requiring at most a touch-up of the mirror alignment. For the right photo, an SP-084-1 HR mirror has been installed in place of the OC to maximize the internal circulating power. The scatter of the 500+ mW circulating photons from the random dust particles (in a relatively dust-free office environment) is quite visible.

    Note that this HeNe tube operates reliably from a small HeNe laser power supply like the Melles Griot 05-LPM-379 because it has a wide bore and thus a low operating voltage (1,470 V from the power supply at 6.5 mA assuming a 68K ballast resistance). However, the 05-LPM-379 would appear to be a bit marginal for starting (8 kV instead of the 10 kV listed for the tube) and one recommendeded Melles Griot power supply is actually the 05-LPM-939 which has a somewhat higher maximum starting (and operating) voltage. While these tubes will work on either supply, starting is very quick with an 05-LPM-939 even for a tube that might (on a bad day) take a minute or more to start using an 05-LPM-379.

    Mirror Mount Plates for One-Brewster HeNe Laser has the mechanical details for compatibility with the CLIMET 9084. The only critical dimensions are the locations of the 4 corner holes and center hole. Everything else can be modified for use with your particular mirror(s). If you don't have some aluminum scrap, even Plexiglas or other rigid plastic can be used in a pinch. The hardware should be readily available from any electronics distributor or your junk box. :). The fixed aluminum plate and 4th standoff can be eliminated with a slight reduction in stability as shown in Anode-End One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube Mounted in Test Fixture. (This also happens to be one of the less common tubes with the Brewster window connected to the high voltage.)

    If your junkbox is bare and you don't want to 'invest' in standoffs, 6-32 threaded rods or long screws and some extra nuts and washers could be substituted instead with slightly lower rigidity and ease of set up, but the standoffs are really much better. In any case, don't be tempted to use too thin a material for the mirror mount plate (not less than 1/8" for aluminum) as the adjusting screws may warp it enough to really confuse things. :( One-Brewster HeNe Laser Head with Very Simple Mirror Mount shows such a setup with a piece of a barcode scanner spinner mirror for the OC (though it actually is more of an HR in terms of reflectivity). This arrangement isn't fancy or elegant but is quite stable and relatively easy to align.

    Here is the parts list for the simplified setup:

    Or go a bit less basic as shown in Enhanced Simple Mirror Mount for One-Brewster HeNe Laser Head, built by Dave (Ws407c@aol.com) for one of these (purchased from me). He added springs and wing nuts which allow for easy adjustment (possibly too easy though as bumping one will mess it up!). Actually, the photo makes the mirror mount look much spiffier than it does in person. :)

    Almost any planar or high Radius of Curvature (RoC=r, more than about 12 inches) high reflectivity (R, more than about 94 to 96 percent at 632.8 nm) good quality first surface mirror will result in lasing action if mounted next to the Brewster window. However, the range of positions beyond this for the resonator to be stable will depend on the actual RoC as noted above. Here are the rules:

    Where:

    In practice, lasing may not continue quite to the limits but should come close.

    While OC mirrors from 5 or 6 inch barcode scanner HeNe tubes have adequate reflectivity, their RoC may be so short (typically 26 cm for the OC) that no lasing is possible until the mirror is more than 60 cm from the internal HR (more than a foot from the Brewster window). And, some longer HeNe tubes like the Siemens LGR-7641S use the same 26 cm radii for the OC mirror so tube length alone is no guarantee of a suitable OC curvature.

    Some examples of the approximate range of positions (*) where an external mirror (e.g., OC) of a particular RoC should work with the internal HR having an RoC of 60 cm:

     Distance to HR: 0  10  20  30  40  50  60  70  80  90  100 110 120 130 140 cm
                     |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
           26 cm OC: (        =\              *********
           45 cm OC: (        =\*******       *****************
           60 cm OC: (        =\*************************************
           80 cm OC: (        =\*************         ***********************
          Planar OC: (        =\*************
    

    Dielectric mirrors are much better than aluminized mirrors but the latter may work in a pinch (though not that well, and some just don't have the required reflectivity even though they may look identical). I've gotten several mirrors from HeNe laser based barcode scanners and an old HeNe laser based laser printer to work with these HeNe tubes. A high quality dielectric mirror with very high reflectivity (e.g., greater than 99.9 percent such as a HeNe laser HR) and low losses should result in a great deal of circulating power inside the resonator - possibly up to a WATT or more and a very visible beam in there unless you are in a clean-room, but only a weak output beam. The OC from a typical medium length HeNe tube will result in a more modest 300 or 400 mW inside the resonator but a useful output beam of 1.5 to 5 mW. A mirror from that laser printer produced 750 mW inside the cavity with a 0.9 mW output. And those barcode scanner spinner mirror chips result in very high circulating power with only a few hundred mW of output. As a matter of fact, it is likely that these non-laser dielectric mirrors are actually probably better quality than the laser-quality mirrors of the 1970s.

    Even with just a bare tube or laser head without the external mirror mount, it is quite easy to test a mirror by holding it about 2 to 3 inches away from the Brewster window positioned so that the reflection of the light of the discharge from the bore is centered around the Brewster mount. Then, rocking the mirror about this position should yield flashes quite quickly if the mirror has adequate reflectivity and is of high enough quality. Thus the lasing ability of a newly acquired one-Brewster tube or head can be easily determined without constructing the mirror mount as long as a suitable mirror is available. Or, evaluating a newly acquired mirror using a known good one-Brewster tube.

    These HeNe tubes usually can produce a beam which is TEM00 or multimode depending on the mirror and a stop inserted inside the cavity. (This should happen on a red HeNe laser when the ratio of the aperture diameter to mode radius is about 3.5:1.) The higher order mode structure is quite interesting (not just a rectangular array). Higher quality mirrors will result in a more well defined mode structure. There is enough gain that additional Brewster angle optics (even a cheap microscope slide) can be introduced inside the resonator to act as an etalon, and possibly optics that are just AR coated as well.

    Note that there should generally be no need to touch the alignment of the internal mirror to get these to lase unless someone before you had mucked with it. I don't particularly recommend attempting this alignment though since unless the output beam is obviously non-circular (oval or cut off) even with the external mirror aligned for maximum output power, any benefit will be minimal. However, where there is a locking collar present, some careful tweaking (basically walking this mirror and your external mirror) is relatively low risk and may result in some additional output power by centering the intracavity beam in the bore. Only attempt this while the tube is lasing (unless you enjoy going through the entire alignment procedure using an external alignment laser) and take care with the high voltage! Where there is no locking collar, a standard Melles Griot locking collar from a dead HeNe laser tube can be installed.

    However, with a mirror and lens for the external mirror, it can be even easier to get these things lasing with basically no alignment. The mirror and lens are rather special though. See the section: Cat's Eye Mirror for Hassle-Free Alignment. I need to scrounge something along these lines. :)

    Initial Tests and Mirror Evaluation

    The one-Brewster HeNe tube I have is part of a CLIMET 9048 laser head, original application unknown (but likely particle counting or something like that). The actual HeNe tube is a Melles Griot 05-LHB-570 rated at 4 mW output with a matched OC mirror. (Since there are previously owned tubes, getting that much output power may be optimistic but the ones I've tried will all do at least 2 mW with sub-optimal mirrors, see below.) In order to test it, I constructed a mirror mount similar to the one described in the previous section. This enabled various mirrors to be easily installed and aligned and provided access to the inside of the laser cavity. Small mirrors could be 'quick checked' for lasing ability by positioning them inside the cavity (in front of any mirror that is already in place) and then attached to permit fine alignment.

    First, I fired the unit up on a Melles Griot 05-LPM-379 power supply brick to confirm that the tube was intact and had the correct discharge color. It did, though I figured this power supply might be a bit marginal. From the bore diameter of at least 1.4 mm, it would appear to be a tube which would tend to produce a beam with multiple transverse modes and would require a higher current than typical for narrow bore TEM00 HeNe tubes for maximum power output. During the subsequent tests, I used an adjustable HeNe laser power supply (the one described in the section: Aerotech Model PS2B HeNe Laser Power Supply (AT-PS2B) with a Variac (and its internal regulator disabled). A tube current of about 7.5 mA resulted in maximum power output. Note, however, that Melles Griot actually recommends 6.5 mA for the tube current and it turns out that the 05-LPM-379 power supply brick will provide this with no problem.) I don't know how life expectancy will be affected by runnnig at the higher current and the ballast resistor supplied with the CLIMET 9048 laser head may overheat after awhile.

    The OC-end of the laser head has a flange with conveniently located holes to attach the external optics. I used 4, 2-1/4" x 1/4 threaded spacers to mount a pair of 2"x2"x1/8" plates, the second of which is adjustable via using a hex wrench via cap-head screws and split washers used as springs. My mirror mount. :) See the HeNe Laser Tube with Internal HR and Single Brewster Window and External OC.

    Based on the geometry (assuming that the HR mirror has a radius of curvature of 60 cm as I had been told and later verified), a stable resonator should result for an external mirror at a 30 cm distance from the HR as long as its radius is between +30 cm and planar (concave) or -30 cm and planar (convex). This means that except for some short radius barcode scanner HeNe tube mirrors, almost anything else with enough reflectivity at 632.8 nm should work. At this point, I didn't really know the value of the required reflectivity to achieve threshold.

    I had several possible mirrors to try both from deceased internal mirror HeNe tubes as well as from a couple of external mirror HeNe lasers. Initially, for rough alignment, I used another HeNe laser (the A-Laser) firing down the bore of the 9048 without the OC in place. The returned a strong nicely focused reflection which (indicating a curved/concave OC) and centered in the A-Laser's output aperture. Then, without disturbing anything, the candidate OC-mirror was installed and the mirror mount adjusted to center its reflection in the A-Laser's output aperture.

    I first tried the OC from a dismembered tiny barcode scanner HeNe tube - a Melles Griot 05-LHR-002-246. No amount of fiddling resulted in any output beam. Nor did the use of its companion HR. (Using an HR mirror in place of the normal OC to test a laser results in the lowest lasing threshold since it maximizes round trip gain. Thus, it should be easiest to get going where losses are unknown. For a high power laser, this can be risky since the oscillations in the resonator could build up to a sufficient level to actually damage the optics. However, for a low power (at least) HeNe laser, such effects are unlikely.) I assume that these mirrors were unsuitable either because the reflectance was too low (for the OC) and/or they were curved with a radius of curvature that was too small (almost certainly the latter). (Later I did achieve lasing with that same HR. I don't really know what caused it to fail the first time.)

    Next, I tried the HR mirror from an unidentified (but probably Hughes) internal mirror HeNe tube, using the same alignment technique. And, almost as soon as I touched the adjustment screws to center the its reflection, a beam appeared! I almost missed it shining back into the A-Laser but then noticed the really bright scatter off of the Brewster window. With the a bit of tweaking and HR mirror adjusted for maximum output, the beam was weak (maybe 10 µW, just the minimal transmission through the HR that is normally considered waste!) but this was success! While not exactly strong, it was stable. Of course between the OC and the Brewster window, there was probably several hundred mW bouncing back and forth as evidenced by the dancing illuminated specs of dust. :)

    As expected, the laser produced a beam with multiple transverse modes - perhaps TEM44 though somewhat jumbled (not a nice rectangular or hexagonal array).

    Well, a 10 µW beam isn't anything to write home about (unless it is the first one you ever got from a semi-home-built laser of this type!), so as much as I didn't want to disassemble a working setup, I decided to try the one remaining good mirror from the small external mirror HeNe lab laser described in the section: A Really Old HeNe Laser (the other mirror was damaged due to a cleaning attempt since they were soft-coated as I found out the hard way). I really didn't know whether it was the OC or HR.

    With the wide bore of the 9048's tube, I discovered that if a mirror candidate was going to work, I could pretty much dispense with the rough alignment. Just holding the OC in my hand next to the mirror plate and rocking it would result in flashes! And, for this mirror, the beam was definitely much stronger than the previous attempt so I assume it was the OC of the lab laser. When mounted as shown in the diagram, the result was a TEM77 (or thereabouts - again not like would be shown in a textbook!) beam of about 1 mW output power.

    Next, I tried the OC from a large frame Spectra-Physics HeNe laser, possibly an SP-125 (I don't really know for sure where it came from). This proved to be the best so far. A similar or perhaps even more complex and wonderful mode structure but with over 2 mW of output power.

    The acquisition of this head represented a pleasant interlude to my otherwise frustrating experience (so far at least) with the funny two-Brewster tube I had been attempting to get to lase. (See the section: Sam's DIY External Mirror HeNe Laser - Some Assembly Required!. Knowing that the CLIMET 9048 had been a commercial product and thus known to work in some application gave me confidence that only minimal fiddling would be needed to get it to produce a beam. And, as it turned out, it was even easier than I had expected.

    Watching the beam between the OC and Brewster window is entertaining in itself knowing that more than 350 mW is circulating there but not being able to tap it! (2.25 mW out for a mirror with 99.4% reflectivity.) The amount of power is evident from the visibility of light scattered from the specs of dust as noted above. Of course, moving anything (including a finger - since the power can't be extracted, you won't feel anything - trust me!) in to block any portion of the circulating beam results in a reduction in the output power and the number of transverse modes present (reducing the diameter of the beam).

    As an experiment, I introduced a microscope slide as a second Brewster window between the OC and the tube's Brewster window. This also resulted in a significant reduction in output power and the number of transverse modes but not to the point of killing lasing entirely (at least as long as the slide was immaculate and arranged close to the optimal angle). (When doing this, some very slight mirror adjustment will be needed if the OC is curved since the refraction inside the second Brewster shifts the location of the beam slightly).

    I later dug up an etalon from a large frame ion laser and tried that - I could get reasonably strong lasing when held very carefully with its optical axis nearly parallel to the tube's axis. I don't currently have a suitable mount for the etalon so further experiments with this will have to wait.

    And, even a single spec of dust may reduce power by 10 percent or more. Just sitting in my not-so-sterile basement lab resulted in a steady decrease in power over the course of a few minutes (after cleaning) as dust collected on the optics. In fact, I suspect that a proper cleaning of both the Brewster window and OC with spectroscopic grade methanol in a dust free environment would result in substantially more output power. I was just using using 90% isopropyl alcohol and cotton swabs! (With enough work, the scatter off of the outer surface can be made less intense than the scatter from the supposedly pristine inner surface (inside the tube) of the Brewster window.) I have not done any cleaning of the OCs themselves beyond blowing off dust with an air-bulb since I don't have the proper cleaning supplies and they are a lot less robust than the Brewster window.

    I then positioned the OC from a poor old deceased Spectra-Physics 084-1 HeNe laser tube (it didn't survive baking in the microwave oven! :) See the section: An Older HeNe Laser Tube) in my hand between the Brewster window and OC mounting plate to see if it would work - and got flashes immediately. So I installed it. With full alignment and optimization requiring somewhat less than 1 minute, I'm getting spoiled by the eagerness of this setup to lase! This mirror performed at least as well as the large-frame OC peaking at more than 3.0 mW with a well dusted Brewster window:

    The OC from a deceased 20 mW internal mirror HeNe tube produced an output beam of about the same power level despite its reflectivity being only 97.7 percent.

    As noted, testing and aligning these mirrors is very easy with this wide bore HeNe tube. The 'holding the mirror in your hand and rocking it trick' doesn't work nearly as well with a narrow bore 05-LHB-270 one-Brewster HeNe tube. That tube has a bore that is less than 1 mm and produces a TEM00 beam using the same SP-084-1 OC but mirror alignment is definitely more challenging!

    Lasing Using Non-Laser Mirrors

    A few weeks later, on a hunch, I decided to try a couple of other mirrors that were never intended to be used inside a laser resonator. Someone had sent me several cartons of supermarket checkout barcode scanners and parts (most HeNe laser based) which naturally include many mirrors, all first surface. Some dielectric coated but most are just aluminized. I couldn't resist trying a couple of the smaller mirrors from an IBM 4687 just to see what would happen using the "hold the mirror approximately in front of the HeNe tube" approach. :) The IBM 4687 is the full size (often with electronic scale) scanner used at many supermarkets (at least until they are replaced with something more modern). Both these mirrors are, of course, planar. They are also quite old but in pristine condition. I just used some rubbing (isopropyl) alcohol for cleaning.

    I then tried a dielectric mirror ripped from a little somewhat bedraggled multifaceted motorized scanner, origin and purpose unknown. I mounted this one properly so I could actually tweak the alignment and expect it to stay put. It also had very high reflectivity, similar to the dielectric barcode scanner mirror:

    In fact, this mirror would work even when mounted with its back (glass) side facing the HeNe tube! Not as well - output of about .15 mW but that it did anything is still kind of amazing!

    Next, I installed the dielectric turning mirror from an old large HeNe laser-based laser printer, manufacturer and model unknown:

    This printer yielded a number of mirrors that with adequate reflectivity but some of the others had a frosted back surface so they wouldn't make very good OCs but would be fine for HRs and inside-the-cavity experiments.

    Some time later, I acquired a cosmetic reject HR mirror for a 1,000 W (!!) copper vapor laser made by Coherent for Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (sent to me courtesy of Sterling Resale Optics). This mirror was just a bit of overkill in the diameter department: 76 mm (3 inches)! It must have cost the U.S. Government more than you would care to imagine. :) While designed for the wavelength range 511 to 578 nm at 45 degree incidence (better than 99.996 percent, 1/20 wave surface finish), since the reflectivity wavelength function shifts up about 50 nm when going to 0 degree incidence, I expected it to work well at 632.8 nm - and the results were most impressive. Although it was somewhat difficult to tell by just holding the mirror in my hand (heck, I don't have a mount for a 3 inch diameter mirror!), the circulating power appeared to be higher than anything tested previously with only a small fraction of a mW of output. I was unable to measure its reflectivity. My 2 mW HeNe laser's beam could barely be detected visually (on a piece of paper) after passing though the mirror and didn't register on my laser power meter. It's reflectivity is certainly better than 99.95 percent.

    I then remembered that I had a nice new Nd:YAG 45 degree HR mirror someone else had sent me and tried this, also with great success. Its reflectivity is about 99.4 percent for 632.8 nm at 0 degree incidence - more appropriate for an OC, and produced 1 to 2 mW of output power (not measured).

    Later, I did build a universal mount of sorts for the mongo mirror so I could stabilize the beam. I didn't measure either the intra-cavity or output power but they were as high and as low, respectively, as I've seen with this one Brewster head. The beam, all 10 or 20 µW of it, was multimode as expected, but a sort of doughnut in this case.

    Perhaps, I will have to try a shaving mirror next. :) However, this probably won't work. Some other first surface aluminized mirrors (from an Orion 300 barcode scanner) were just on the hairy edge of the lasing threshold resulting in a very weak beam even when optimally aligned. In all fairness to the physics, an HeNe tube of this size would have a single pass gain of about 2 to 3 percent and thus a round trip gain of about 4 to 6 percent (based on my measurements of the single pass gain of a two-Brewster HeNe tube of slightly shorter length. See the sections starting with: The Single Pass Gain Test). With a high quality HR and Brewster window (to be expected on a tube of this type), those would result in minimal losses so nearly the entire 4 to 6 percent would be available to squander on the external mirror!

    Demonstration One-Brewster HeNe Laser

    I acquired a 3 mW HeNe laser that was built into a wonderful Plexiglas box with an output fiber-coupler. This was the aiming laser for some sort of big dye or YAG laser. Since 3 mW HeNe lasers are somewhat boring, even with exposed innards, I decided to replace the tube with one of the bare 05-LHB-570s and the fiber-coupler with an adjustable OC mirror. The result is shown in Demonstration One-Brewster HeNe Laser. The adjustable OC mirror mount is just the platter stack hold-down plate from a defunct harddrive seated on an O-ring with 4 screws. The OC mirror itself, installed in one of my standard mirror cells, is from an SP-084 HeNe laser tube. (I saved the fiber-coupler and fiber for future use - it has the standard hole pattern for mounting on most Melles Griot cylindrical laser heads.) Although not perfectly sealed, the Plexiglas cover provides enough protection so the Brewster window doesn't seem to require cleaning even after months of sitting on a shelf in my dusty basement, err, laser lab. :)

    A Green One-Brewster HeNe Laser

    A few months after constructing my one-Brewster HeNe tube test fixture (see the section: HeNe Laser Tube Test Fixture), I was given an 05-LGB-580, a tube identical to the very high quality 05-LHB-580 but with an HR mirror optimized for green (543.5 nm). Popping this tube into the test fixture along with a matching green external HR mirror, it took only about 5 minutes and there were piles of green photons bouncing back and forth between the mirrors! However, having previously gotten a HeNe tube with an obliterated mirror coating to lase (see the section: External Mirror Laser Using HeNe Tube with Missing Mirror Coating), I figured I could even make a carrot lase, so this green tube really wasn't much of a challenge at all!

    The setup is shown in Hughes Style One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube Mounted in Test Fixture.

    To align the mirror, I first set the mirror adjustment screws so the mount was just snug. Then, while gradually tightening the Y adjustment screw, I rocked the mount in X by (pressing and releasing the plate near the X adjustment screw) until there were flashes of green light reflecting off the Brewster window, and then tightened the X adjustment screw to obtain a stable beam. Fine tuning of X and Y peaked circulating power by maximizing the size of the beam scatter on the Brewster window's surface (and thus the number of transverse modes).

    Note that since this tube has a glass Brewster stem (the part that holds the Brewster window), it isn't possible (or at least easy) to view the reflection of the bore light back from the mirror (the glow from inside the tube is too bright.) One option is to put a shroud over all but the central area to block this light. However, an alternative way to align the mirror is to view the reflection of the bore light from the mirror off of the Brewster window (from the direction shown in the diagram for "Reflections from Brewster Window"). When this lines up with the reflection of the center of the mirror itself, alignment should be close enough for lasing - you will see flashes. Then, fine tune. CAUTION: For a low power laser like this, viewing the reflection is safe even if it is lasing at full power as what comes off the Brewster window is much less than a mW. However, don't even think about looking at any such reflection for higher power lasers!

    Since both mirrors are very high quality HRs, not much comes out the ends (perhaps a µW or so) but the 4 reflections off the Brewster must total 0.1 mW. This thing came right up with difficulty (or lack thereof) of alignment and mode structure similar to the red one-Brewster tubes but lases green! There is probably several hundre mW, perhaps more than a 1 watt of circulating power based on the brightness of the green photons bouncing back and forth in there. It's nice and stable except that dust just loves to collect on the Brewster windows. Now, what can I do with high green photon flux?

    I tried inserting a microscope slide at the Brewster angle as well as nearly perpendicular but all variations killed lasing entirely - not surprising given the gain (or lack thereof) for the green line. And, as confirmation of how low the gain really is, while I can leave a red one-Brewster laser out for a week and have it come right up with nearly full power (at least by eyeball), I usually have to dust off the the Brewster window on this green one to get anything after only a few minutes (or less depending on conditions in my 'lab'). But then I'm still amazed that such a short tube can do green at all! :)

    I wonder what the reflectance of a OC would need to be for optimum output (rather than maximum intra-cavity flux)? I've obtained the mirrors from a physically broken 05-LGP-170, a large green internal mirror HeNe tube. (Don't ask but not mine, courtesy of "Dr. Destroyer of Lasers"!) These should make for some interesting experiments. :) The OC probably won't be optimal, having originated from a 16 inch long tube. But since the 05-LGP-170 was a polarized tube, it did have a Brewster plate inside so that at least will be similar in terms of losses. Hopefully, the OC will still have a high enough reflectivity to lase. If it does, almost any output beam would be stronger than what I have now!

    But, so far, it doesn't look too promising. I can barely get flashes from the salvaged HR and only with a super clean Brewster window - after 30 seconds to a minute of just sitting, enough dust (or something) collects on its surface to kill lasing totally. And, I can't get anything from the OC. Now, I haven't yet mounted them solidly - I'm just holding the mirrors (in their mounts) in my hand so this hasn't been exactly what you'd call a highly controlled experiment. However, with the high gain (relatively speaking) red one-Brewster tubes, it would be more than adequate to test out a candidate mirror. And, I was able to evaluate the matching green HR that came with the one-Brewster tube without difficulty in this manner. So, it must be a super high quality high reflector even compared to what goes inside green internal mirror HeNe tubes. Assuming a circulating power of over 100 mW and an output of 1 µW, its reflectivity must be greater than 99.999%! Since the gain for green is only a small fraction of the gain for red - much less than 1/10th its value, the reflectivity of the mirrors is super critical, even more so with the not absolutely sterile Brewster window inside the cavity. That last decimal point of reflectivity is significant as there just isn't much headroom and even a very small difference between the two HR mirrors can determine whether any lasing occurs at all.

    There is a very slight possibility that the salvaged 05-LGP-170 mirrors are damaged (say from running with reverse polarity) or defective ("Oops, Joe, you know that batch of dud green tubes, we installed the wrong mirrors!") as they did come from a tube that didn't lase and may have been a manufacturing reject to begin with. I could understand the OC not having high enough reflectivity since it was supposed to be for a much longer bore tube but I'm rather surprised that the HR is causing problems. The next step - to mount the HR and see if I can get sustained lasing without an automatic Brewster window wiper - is thus far proving to be very frustrating and so far my 'by hand' approach isn't working - there is no way to know if the Brewster window is clean enough for lasing without the mirrors being aligned and lasing. So, lack of flashes could be bad alignment or a dirty window - a "catch-22" situation.

    Even after setting up a red HeNe alignment laser, I have been unable to get the 05-LGP-170 HR (or even my super LLNL mirror) to do anything. With this rig, I can pop in the matching HR and get green flashes consistently but not at all for the other mirrors. In fact, I can't get any flashes from the 05-LGP-170 HR at all at this point - clean Brewster or not. Apparently, the mirror must have collected a film of crud or dust or something just sitting around and in a bag or from when it was out for testing. It certainly looks pristine but won't cooperate! :)

    I have subsequently tested the 05-LGP-170 mirrors for reflectivity of the green and yellow HeNe lines (using working HeNe lasers to provide the probe beams). For green, they appear to be quite good, at least to the extent that they reflect the green wavelength. Both reflect virtually 100 percent of green light - passing too little green to register on my laser power meter. For the HR, it is just barely possible to detect photons leaking out by eye. But I guess this is still inferior to the HR mirror which works with the green one-Brewster tube. However, the salvaged HR passes the yellow wavelength almost as though the mirror isn't there (less than 25 percent reflectivity) while the OC's reflectivity for yellow is about 98 percent. Either is low enough to kill the lasing on the yellow (and any other visible) HeNe lines entirely - which is surely the intent. Unfortunately, the HR inside the one-Brewster tube also reflects less than 99% of yellow so there will be no hope of getting it to lase yellow or any other non-green colors.

    Sam's Tunable HeNe Laser (Hopefully)

    This is another works-in-progress since I haven't actually detected anything but 632.8 nm red - yet. Encouraged by confirmation that at least some versions of the Melles Griot 05-LHB-570 One-Brewster HeNe tube incorporate an HR mirror that has a reflectivity of better than 99.9 percent from 590 to 680 nm, I salvaged the wavelength tuning assembly - a Brewster prism and mirror mount - from my discombobulated Carson laser (see the section: The Really Strange Carson Dual Tube Ion Laser. Normally, this is used at the HR-end of the laser but I don't have that option with a One-Brewster HeNe tube so it will be at the OC-end instead (though I will using mirrors with high reflectivity for initial tests at least). One disadvantage of this arrangement, however, is that any output beam will exit at a steep angle (around 50 degrees) and this will change slightly as the tuning prism assembly is adjusted to select wavelength.

    I constructed a bracket using my standard 1 inch hole spacing so it could be attached to the optics mount of any of my One-Brewster HeNe lasers. The existing mirror mount allows for movement side-to-side (yaw or X) using its X adjustment screw while the Brewster prism assembly can be moved up-and-down (pitch or Y) on its pivots or by using the Y mirror adjustment screw.

    So far, this contraption lases happily at the usual (now quite boring) 632.8 nm red wavelength using both one of my barcode scanner mirror 'chips' and the HR mirror from a Spectra-Physics 084-1 HeNe tube. The first of these isn't the greatest quality and the spectral reflectivity curve of the 084-1 HR isn't known. I hope to dig up a proper broadband HR, perhaps from a diseased Hughes style One-Brewster HeNe tubes.

    Unfortunately, the losses from passing through 3 optical surfaces (the tube's Brewster window and the two sides of the Brewster prism) take their toll and cleanliness becomes even more important than before. And, the surfaces collect a noticeable power reducing coating in my not so pristine lab (or lack thereof) conditions quite quickly. However, it still seems to produce a circulating and output power which are at least of the same order of magnitude as without the tuning prism. :)

    With the Brewster prism itself mounted about 6 inches from the Brewster window, adjusting its vertical angle (pitch) causes the mode structure to change as the mode volume shifts position in an attempt to continue lasing. This may be part of the difficulty in getting other wavelengths to lase - the dominant 632.8 nm line is sucking all the power even when the mirror/prism assembly isn't well aligned with the bore and internal HR mirror. It may also be the due to reflectivity characteristics of the external mirror I'm using in conjunction with cruddy optical surfaces.

    I then moved the wavelength tuning assembly to the laser described in the section: Mirror/Optics Test Jig Using One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube since it could be mounted more than 18 inches from the tube's Brewster window which should restrict the mode options. Even with a pair of .040" diameter stops in the internal beam path (one at the Brewster window and the other just before the wavelength tuning assembly) - which makes alignment much more of a pain - I still cannot obtain any confirmed sightings of non-632.8 nm wavelengths.

    Part of the problem is that I don't know if I'd really recognize something that was just another shade of red like 640.1 nm and certainly not 629.4 or 635.2 nm as different colors so I would really have to use a spectroscope to be sure - which I don't have. A simple diffraction grating won't work (at least not easily) since adjusting the tuning prism also moves the beam (that gets through the HR mirror) with this arrangement. This would confuse any measurements of angle or position. Only if I were to have two wavelengths lasing simultaneously would I see it with a diffraction grating - and that hasn't happened as far as I can tell. Orange at 611.9 nm would be easily seen as a different color but the gain of that line is quite low - about 1/7th of 632.8 nm and 1/3rd of 640.1 nm. That one has the highest gain of any visible line except 632.8 nm and is thus my best hope.

    One option would be to attempt to use a diffraction grating on the reflection off the tube's Brewster window but even that will move around somewhat as the mode structure changes.

    So, I still have the following unknowns:

    Well, I have yet to see a single photon of non-632.8 nm coherent light (though I guess I wouldn't recognize 629.4 nm), even using my LLNL 99.996 percent broadband HR mirror, two one-Brewster tubes in tandem, as well as using the HR from another high quality one-Brewster tube (all without the tuning prism). If anything should produce other color photons, it would be the tandem arrangement since that should be about equivalent to a single one-Brewster tube with an ideal (perfect broadband reflector) external HR mirror. I though I'd at least see 640 nm since that should be a strong line. With the Brewster prism tuner, I get a decently strong red beam, but nothing else even with a stop in the beam to restrict the modes and the tuner located a foot and a half away from the B-window to give it more sensitivity. I can see the reflection of the bore light of the tube come back and hit the stop and its color changes nicely without affecting alignment as the tuner is adjusted, just no lasing except at 632.8 nm.

    I wonder if the older 1-B tubes had significantly crappier mirrors or the gain of that relatively short (10") tube is just too low. I did try to determine the reflectivity of the 1-B tube's HR at 594.1 nm from a yellow HeNe laser but the results were inconclusive - high enough to possibly be satisfactory but not nearly perfect. There are also a bunch of other variables which I may not have gotten all just right yet.

    (From: Lynn Strickland (stricks760@earthlink.net).)

    "On the multiline experiment, any idea on the order of magnitude losses on your optics? I.e., scatter and absorption? Not that the actual number is that important, but it can kill you in a hurry when you're looking for non-red light. Make sure that puppy is ultra clean, too. I'd tend toward lasing massively multimode red (make it scream), then bounce the output beam off of a grating. The other lines should be in there - you almost can't escape getting 640 nm, and 612 nm isn't that tough.

    I've also got multiline lasing by stacking two HRs together (one behind the other). Actually, get it lasing with one HR, then put the second behind it and tweak appropriately. It's not stable by any means, but you can get it to lase. Finally, when you are tuning (I assume tilting) the prism, are you sure you're not walking-off, out of alignment as you tune? Bottom line, try to get multiline lasing first, worry about tuning to a single line later. A wavelength tunable HeNe is a bitch!

    Anyway, the older B-tubes definitely had crappier mirrors."

    From data acquired from my multiline HeNe laser experiments (see the section: Getting Other Wavelengths from Internal Mirror HeNe Laser Tubes), I now believe that the SP084-1 mirrors are quite selective for the 632.8 nm line and their reflectivity drops off enough to suppress other wavelengths. I also know that even a Climet 1-B tube with a Hughes 1-B HR or another Climet 1-B tube in tandem will not produce a single non-633 nm coherent photon. If none of these configurations result in even unstable lasing at other wavelengths, there will be little hope of doing so with the tuning prism assembly.

    More to follow.

    One-Brewster HeNe Laser Resonator Considerations

    Here are some guidelines for construction of a resonator and for experimentation with the Melles Griot 05-LHB-570 one-Brewster HeNe laser tube like the type inside the CLIMET 9048 laser head. Other models may differ somewhat but this should be a good starting point.



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    Other Things to Build with One-Brewster Laser Tubes or Heads

    One-Brewster HeNe Laser Heads in Tandem

    For my next strange experiment, I decided to attach a pair of these one Brewster HeNe laser heads together - Brewster windows to Brewster window to see how high the circulating power could go. As long as the radium of curvature of the internal HR is greater than the distance between the two HRs, the resonator should be stable. A way to confirm this is to try a flat mirror as the external OC/HR. If the tube lases and can be aligned to a stable peak output power, the HR radius should be at least double the distance to the that flat mirror. Although there will be double the losses through the pair of Brewster windows, the gain will be more than double that of a single tube. The net effect should be nearly equivalent to a one-Brewster HeNe tube of twice the length with an optimum (super reflectivity) external HR.

    With only one HeNe tube powered, the round trip gain is about 4 to 6 percent and with the additional Brewster loss, the beam won't be quite as strong as with just an external HR mirror. However, with both tubes powered, there will be a total 8 to 12 percent gain. This will result in a stronger photon flux inside the resonator and also provide enough gain margin to allow a variety of optics like etalons to be inserted into the cavity.

    I attached the two tubes using 3 inch threaded standoffs with lockwashers between these and the flange of one of the tubes - a sort of oversize mirror mount where one of the tubes in its entirety is the mirror! The orientation is with the Brewster windows both facing the same way so hopefully, any offset of the bore will cancel. Lateral alignment is a challenge but with the large (1.4 mm) bore, it should be close enough to lase initially. Then, tweaking can be done once the basic alignment has been achieved. The configuration looked similar to High Photon Flux Laser Using a Pair of One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tubes in Tandem though perhaps not quite as polished. At least, that is what I thought originally.

    However, this scheme will only work if the Brewster windows on the two tubes are oriented exactly the same way. On these laser heads, this is not always the case since it didn't matter for the original particle counting application. Thus an adapter would need to be added between them to allow for their relative angle to be adjusted precisely. Otherwise, the planes of polarization won't line up and there will be additional losses.

    What I didn't realize initially was that the Brewster window alignment on my pair of one-Brewster heads was off by 15 or 20 degrees using the existing bolt holes. Since I wasn't that determined to construct additional parts for this initial test, I ended up just holding the tubes in position using the treaded spacers attached to one of them for guidance. Needless to say, this wasn't very stable. But, I did manage to get the combination to lase, if erratically. It looked like the potential was there for a high photon flux but without precise adjustment of the 5 degrees of freedom (X and Y between the bores; relative pitch, yaw, and roll) - plus cleaning the Brewster windows - there was no way to do anything consistent to optimize circulating power.

    So, I constructed an adapter plate to correct for the difference in Brewster orientations. Instead of using a set of 4, full length threaded spacers, I used 2 sets of shorter spacers. They are attached using an aluminum plate with offset holes. With this contraption, I am able to obtain stable output. Apparently, the bore of the HeNe tube in each of these laser heads is aligned quite precisely with the axis of the cylindrical case - alignment is optimized when all the adjustment screws are tight. So, the only variables are X and Y position to center one bore relative to the other.

    Given the distance between the two HR mirrors - about 60 cm, this turns out to be close to a confocal cavity. The beam waist is in the center and quite narrow - perhaps 0.75 mm - considering the large diameter bores. The assembly will lase with either tube energized but circulating power increases substantially when both are powered as expected. However, I was somewhat disappointed in that the circulating power and reflections from the Brewster windows doesn't seem to be that much more, if any, than with a single laser head and decent external HR mirror. But, I guess this is what should be expected: There will be double the available (real) power but also double the total losses so the circulating power remains about the same as with one tube and an external HR. What it does permit, though, is the placement of optics with much greater losses inside the cavity without causing lasing to cease entirely. For example, a high quality clean microscope slide can be inserted almost perpendicular to the laser axis and then tilted gradually resulting in periodic angles where there is lasing, thus acting as a sort of mode filter or etalon. For an explanation of this phenomenon (which shouldn't work at all just based on reflection losses), see the section: Perpendicular Uncoated Windows in a Low Gain Laser. Too bad there isn't any way to extract useful beam power - the only outputs at present are the 2 pairs of reflections from the Brewster windows.

    I then decided to see what would happen if the area of the circulating flux was shielded from air currents by wrapping the tubes with some clear plastic. Without the wrap, any dust particles in the air would just cross the beam almost instantly without being affected in any detectable way. Now, however, if not actually being attracted to the beam, the dust particles were at least lingering there for a very long time. Perhaps it was may imagination or inspired wishful thinking or just a manifestation of the internal convection currents set up by the warm tube-ends, but it appeared as though some of the individual bright specks would tend to travel along the beam, occasionally as far as the Brewster windows, before disappearing. Perhaps this is a poor-man's version of optical tweezers where high photon flux can be used to capture and manipulate small objects like biological cells or aerosol particles. (Such a scheme would also work, of course, with any other sufficiently high power beam but the tandem dual tube setup allowed the area of the beam to be easily enclosed.)

    Mirror/Optics Test Jig Using One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube

    If the internal HR mirror of a one-Brewster HeNe (or other) laser tube has a long enough radius (RoC = 2 times the focal length), it should be possible to extend the resonator quite a distance out from the Brewster window. With a flat external mirror, this would be to R distance from the HR, longer with a curved mirror external mirror.

    So, I am building a jig that would allow a mirror (or other optic) to be fastened in position and aligned, and then moved along the axis of the tube, from just beyond the Brewster window to about 30 cm further away while maintaining alignment (more or less). See Mirror/Optics Test Jig Using a One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube. For the optical rail, I salvaged the ball bearing slides and pen carriage from a defunct strip chart recorder (the same one that yielded the metal stock for my two-Brewster laser and other projects, very useful!). This isn't quite the equivalent of a $2,000 Newport slide but scroungers can't be too selective. :) I mounted a mirror/optics mount similar to others I've used for laser resonators (a fixed and movable plate fastened at 3 corners using cap screws and lockwashers for the springs) rigidly to the carriage. The mounting surface will accomodate both the endplates of HeNe tubes like the SP-084-1 as well as the Simple Mounting Cell for Salvaged HeNe Laser Tube Mirrors.

    To align the entire rig, I installed a planar mirror for an OC on the carriage and aligned it for maximum output. Then, using the beam spot visible on the OC, I adjusted the height of the one-Brewster laser head at both ends (just using the slop in the bolt holes) and the side-to-side position of the rails so that the spot was centered at both ends of the carriage's travel. It isn't perfect but I can pretty much maintain lasing from end-to-end with only minor fluctuations due to imperfect alignment. The simple mirror mount is quite precise and quite adequate for fine adjustment even at the far end of the rails.

    This test jig will permit various mirrors to be installed in an adjustable length resonator and provide easy access to an extended space inside the cavity. And with an external HR mirror and resulting high photon flux, this setup should work reasonably well as a high-tech insect attractor (with unknown consequences at present) though I bet insects are blind to 632.8 nm light. :)

    Some initial experiments:

    An alternative to the ball bearing slide which should really be just about as good and can be made almost any length desired is to use 1"x1" right angle aluminum stock for the rail (with the corner up) and a similar short piece positioned on top of it holding the mirror mount. Or, find a defunct printer and salvage the tracks and head mounting. Or, better yet, a pen plotter: The pen assembly is mounted on a ball bearing carriage which moves on tracks that are very precise and may be quite long (e.g., greater than 34 inches for an E size plotter!). And, no one wants those beasts nowadays having replaced them with faster lower hassle ink jet technology.

    For some more ideas of what can be done with this rig, see the section: Experiments With the Mirror/Optics Test Jig Using One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube.

    HeNe Laser Tube Test Fixture

    I have also built a setup similar to the basic one-Brewster tube laser using the salvaged aluminum tube from a different (deceased) one-Brewster laser head which originally housed a Hughes style one-Brewster HeNe tube that had been broken in half. As far as I can tell, it may have been in a fire as two other laser heads were destroyed in a similar manner and one of them had a very melted Alden connector! I got them from a laser surplus place (free along with some other stuff), who of course, didn't have any idea what happened. The label on the head (which also appeared to be heat damaged) said LHB-568 which probably meant it was the Melles Griot model 05-LHB-568 (surplus places may drop the '-05'). The tube looks similar to my 05-LGB-580 (green, see below) but with a normal (red) HR - a high Q (and no doubt very expensive) design with an optically contacted fused silica Brewster window (I saved that at least!).

    The head is of slightly different construction than the CLIMET 9048 and includes two sets of Nylon screws (4 each) about 6 inches apart to support and fine adjust the position of the actual HeNe tube. After removing the remains of the old tube and a thorough cleaning the aluminum cylinder turned out to be ideal for use in testing one-Brewster and 0 degree window HeNe tubes. Bare tubes can be easily installed and then fine adjusted with four degrees of freedom (front X,Y and rear X,Y) to precisely center and align the bore to the mirror or other optics.

    Both Melles Griot and Hughes style tubes can be easily installed. Initially, I used this setup to test several bare 05-LHB-570s (one from a disassembled CLIMET 9084, a pair of similar tubes from another source, and another pair of similar size tubes that had the Brewster window at the anode-end (stay clear of the high voltage!).

    A very similar setup can be built using the aluminum cylinder from a defunct HeNe laser head or other sort of pipe and 8 nylon thumbscrews with blunt ends. Carefully drill and tap sets of 4 holes equally spaced around the perimeter of the cylinder at 2 locations selected to hold your tube(s) securely. As with the commercial laser head described above, 4 rather than 3 screws allow for more intuitive adjustment of tube position for fine alignment. The entire assembly can be secured with clamps or (via additional holes) with screws and brackets.



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    External Mirror Laser Using HeNe Tube with Missing Mirror Coating

    I was given a Melles Griot 05-LHP-120 HeNe laser tube which had a most unique problem - the coating on the inner surface of the OC mirror had vanished, probably due to the discharge taking place at times to the mirror mount instead of the cathode can due to a bad internal connection. See the section: Mirror Coating Vanishes for more information on this tube. Except for the residual annular ring of good mirror coating on the OC (see Melles Griot 05-LHP-120 HeNe Laser Tube with Missing OC Mirror Coating), this tube could be mistaken for something like a Melles Griot 05-WHR-570, a real window HeNe tube.

    Although everyone including my inside contact at a major HeNe laser company said it would be impossible to get anything out of the damaged tube, I refused to give up even though none of my initial tests resulted in any coherent photons. However, the appearance of the window (formerly, the OC mirror) was just soooo perfect that I couldn't give up. :)

    Persuading the Tube to Lase

    I can now report some success in getting this tube to lase with an external mirror - though just barely at first. Using the setup shown in Window HeNe Laser Tube Mounted in Test Fixture, I was able to get perhaps two to three whole microwatts (that's 2 to 3 µW - count 'em all!) of output power at 632.8 nm - just detectable on my laser power meter - with the HR mirror from a deceased Spectra-Physics 084-1 HeNe tube. I used a 1 mW HeNe laser to confirm that the internal HR mirror was correctly adjusted by lining its beam up with the window tube's bore and checking that the reflected spot was centered in its output aperture. Then, without moving anything, I installed that SP-084-1 HR mirror and tweaked it so that the spot reflected from it was also centered. After powering up the window tube and a bit of jiggling, I got the weakest imaginable flashes - evidence of lasing - erratically while the discharge was going to the mirror mount. At first I thought it needed the extra gain of the discharge inside the mirror mount to kick it over the threshold but later I got it to lase when the discharge reverted back to its proper home in the cathode, though possibly with lower power (if that is possible!). In both cases, everything must be extremely borderline because even after fine tuning the HR and external mirror alignment, the output never quite settles down but varies in intensity and comes and goes seemingly at random. Even a slight change in the alignment of the window (by adjusting the locking collar) affects output power (what of it there is!). Oh well, an interesting exercise if nothing else but perhaps not worth writing home about. But I think I could get a carrot to lase at this point. :)

    Obtaining Respectable Output Power

    A few days later, I tried the OC mirror from one of those SP-084-1 tubes. To my surprise, that worked much better in the output power department - up to .15 mW (yes folks, that's milliwatts!). Then I moved the OC mirror about an inch closer to the end of the tube - now about 1 inch away - and that boosted the peak power to about .3 mW! But it still appeared to be very erratic - flickering and coming and going at random even when the discharge was perfectly stable. And, even just blowing past the end of the tube changed output power noticeably! Had it been operating just at threshold with the HR mirror, I would not have expected any output at all with the additional loss of close to 1 percent of the OC mirror (which has around 99 percent reflectivity). What this suggests is that the losses from the original OC glass are low enough that the laser is operating well above threshold for the tube's gain but between the reflections from the front and back surface of the OC mirror glass and, several longitudinal modes are competing for attention.

    Analysis of the Strange Behavior

    Here is the configuration:
    
                Internal              Original OC     External
                   HR                   X1   X2     SP-084-1 OC
                  99.9%     Bore       1-4% .25%        99%
                    | ===============    )    )          )
                    <-------- L1 -------->
                    <---------------- L2 ---------------->
    
    

    In fact, it appears that the contribution of the slight reflection from the inner surface of the OC glass (X1) is actually necessary for lasing. But, this forms a dual Fabry-Perot resonator with 3 reflective surfaces. Ignoring the AR coated outer surface of the original OC glass (X2), these are the internal HR mirror, the inner surface of the original OC (X1), and external SP-084-1 OC mirror. With such a configuration, the alignment and even length of each half of the cavity becomes extremely critical. As confirmation, pressing on the mirror mount toward the tube (not changing alignment) resulted in the beam coming and going as the length of the overall resonator (between the tube's HR and external OC) changed ever so slightly and the permitted modes shift compared to those inside the HeNe tube (between its HR and X1). In essence, what is created is an interferometer which includes the inside of the HeNe tube. Each cycle represents a shift in position of the order of a wavelength of 632.8 nm light - gentle pressure on the supposedly rigid mirror mount would cause it to go through a dozen such cycles!

    (A fully accurate mathematical treatment of the topic of multiple cavity effects is way beyond the scope of this document but should be present in a comprehensive laser text. What follows is more along the lines of hand-waving to just give the general idea.)

    The combination of the critical alignment of the intermediate and external mirrors, and the continuously changing lengths of the parts of the resonator made any determination of causes of the erratic behavior very confusing. Observing the fluctuating output power in this new light (no pun....), a cycle of about 20 seconds to a minute became apparent - almost certainly due to the heating and expansion of the tube cavity length (L1) relative to the total resonator length (L2). So, if I were to wait until the temperature of the tube stabilized, much of the erratic behavior should disappear.

    The general resonator arrangement is shown in HeNe Laser Resonator with Intermediate Mirror (not to scale). The L1 and L2 modes drift past each other as the tube expands and the distances change. When a peak of the weak L1 mode function coincides with an L2 mode at a portion of the HeNe gain curve with a sufficiently high gain, output power is at a maximum. For the setup above, the overall gain is sufficient for lasing only about 20 percent of the time. However, that cycle isn't sinusoidal since the L1 and L2 modes are moving with respect to the HeNe gain curve and each-other. In the center of the gain curve, there is a smooth from 0 output to maximum power and back again. However, where two L1 modes are approximately balanced on either side, lasing could start with one and jump to the other resulting in the more random behavior described above.

    And as if that's not enough, the curvatures of the middle surfaces (X1 and X2) complicate matters! There should be an optimal distance from the external (also curved) OC to the tube where the wavefronts will have the same shape for best constructive reinforcement. However, given that the curvature of the original OC was designed to produce a parallel output beam, it may be that a flat external OC would match the wavefront best, though I've yet to get a flat external mirror to work at all.

    Assuming the reflection from X2 can be ignored, the change in L1 relative to L2 is the major cause of the instability and fluctuating output power with contributions from wavefront shape due to the (curved reflective surfaces) as well as the presence of an internal Brewster plate (not shown) in this linearly polarized HeNe tube. What a mess! :)

    I later noticed that this analysis is somewhat incomplete. There is also reflection from the OC to X1 which needs to be in phase with the other two. This will happen automagically when an integer number of wavelengths fit between the HR and OC AND HR and X1. However, given this additional condition, I believe the response function will be more peaked with narrower areas of lasing with respect to X1 position - which would appear to agree with the observed behavior. How's that for hand waving? :)

    It has been suggested that this power fluctuations are simply due to normal model cycling with a low gain resonator. I don't believe this to be the case for two reasons:

    1. The original OC mirror glass of the 05-LHP-120 must be properly aligned to get the most output power, perhaps to get any output power. If it weren't involved in the lasing process, shifting it slightly off axis should have had no significant effect.

    2. The general behavior is very similar whether an HR or OC (about 1 percent transmission) are used for the external mirror. If simple modes cycling were to blame, I would have expected a much higher percentage of on-time with the HR than the OC since the overall losses would be much lower. I later tried an OC with over 2 pecent transmission (from a 20 mW HeNe tube). While output power was a tad less than with the 1 percent OC, everything else was similar.

    It is well known that an optical flat or etalon with two uncoated surfaces can be inserted into a low gain laser cavity like this with minimal losses if positioned at an angle close to the perpendicular such that destructive interference takes place for the lasing wavelength at its surfaces resulting in almost no reflections. The mechanism for this is explained in the section: Perpendicular Uncoated Windows in a Low Gain Laser. Perhaps what I should do is find a plate with one AR coated surface and attach this to the OC - which should be equivalent to a pair of non-AR coated surfaces. Then, just maybe, the combination would permit this laser to operate more normally. :)



  • Back to Home-Built Helium-Neon (HeNe) Laser Sub-Table of Contents.

    Inexpensive Home-Built Frequency or Intensity Stabilized HeNe Laser

    So you need a frequency stabilized HeNe laser? Or, maybe you'd just like to be able to impress your friends by saying you have a laser with a frequency of exactly 473.61254 THz! Here's how to do it cheap with similar performance to systems costing thousands of dollars. In fact, a perfectly usable stabilized HeNe laser can be built with less than 10 parts in addition to the laser tube and its power supply!

    First, some of the issues involved in stabilizing a HeNe laser are addressed.

    After that, its on to stabilization using a single photodiode and very short HeNe laser tube. This is the simplest approach since only a single photodiode and no polarizing beamsplitter is needed, it requires a very short HeNe laser tube.

    Then, several sections deal with the more common and only marginally more complex two mode stabilization techniques that provide better performance and allow for greater flexibility in selecting a suitable HeNe laser tube.

    There is also information on two-frequency Zeeman split HeNe lasers and intensity stabilization without regard to frequency.

    Single Mode or Dual Mode Stabilized HeNe Laser

    It might seem intuitively obvious that building a single frequency stabilized laser using a tube that operates on only a single longitudinal mode would be easier, better, or perhaps even essential. But this isn't true at all.

    The issue here isn't necessarily whether a HeNe laser tube operates on a single longitudinal mode, or more than one. But, rather whether the feedback circuitry uses a single photodiode to monitor the amplitude of 1 mode, or two photodiodes to monitor the amplitudes of 2 orthogonal modes.

    Starting with a tube that supports 2 or 3 (or sometimes even 4) modes as long as there is a way of extracting a single mode so single frequency operation is guaranteed when the laser has stabilized has advantages:

    1. Using the ratio of the power in two adjacent modes, rather than the power of a single mode, provides superior frequency stability. The ratio - usually set to be 1:1 - will remain quite constant with respect to absolute frequency but the power in each mode may vary as the tube warms up and over the tube's lifetime as it ages with use. However. The exception is when the laser is to be intensity stabilized. Then, a single mode (rather than the ratio of two modes) is compared to a reference in the feedback loop. Since adjacent modes are generally orthogonally polarized in a random polarized HeNe laser, it is a simple matter to use a polarizing beamsplitter to provide two photodiode channels which will then represent adjacent mode signals.

    2. Likewise, separating out a single mode for the single frequency output is easily done using a polarizing filter or polarizing beamsplitter. Even a 9 inch (225 mm) tube will only oscillate on at most 3 modes when one of them is nearly centered on the gain curve. When these lasers are frequency stabilized with 2 adjacent modes of equal power (ratio of 1:1), this prevents any other modes from oscillating. For intensity stabilization, the dominant mode is locked closer to the center of the gain curve and there may be 2 other modes lasing, but they won't appear in the final output since they are orthogonally polarized relative to the dominant mode and blocked by the polarizing optics.

    3. HeNe laser tubes supporting 2 or 3 modes are much more common than true single mode tubes. In fact, true single mode tubes are virtually non-existent. Even tubes as short as 4 inches (about 100 mm), produce two modes during part of the mode sweep, though they are probably single mode much of the time. And the longer tubes can be designed to have much higher output power.

    As general guidelines assuming the doppler-broadened neon gain curve is about 1.5 GHz FWHM and gain is insufficient for lasing beyond the FWHM:

    Now in reality, the gain may be sufficient beyond the FWHM of 1.5 GHz so that additional low amplitude modes could be present. Thus, the maximum lengths given above may be overly generous. A 9 inch (225 mm) such as used in commercial stabilized lasers like the SP-117A, will generally have a rather strong presence of a 3rd mode popping up at times.

    It should be noted that when the stabilization is optimized for frequency, the intensity will still be maintained nearly constant, and vice-versa, but not quite as good as when it's the primary feedback variable. In principle, both frequency and intensity could be stabilized at the same time by adding a feedback loop for laser tube current to output power independent of mode position, but I don't know of any commercial HeNe lasers that provide that.

    Beam sampling can be done using the waste beam from the HR-end of the tube if it is of adequate power and the power relative to the output beam doesn't change significantly with a change in tube temperature. The advantage of waste beam sampling is that it doesn't reduce the available output power and the sampling optics don't affect the main beam. However, some tubes produce a very low power waste beam or one that changes relative to the output beam as the tube warms up. (This is generally due to etalon effects inside the mirror glass between the mirror coating and uncoated outer surface modulating HR reflectivity as a function of temperature.) The main beam out the front can also be used but will result in some reduction in output power, and the sampling optics have to be of high quality and very clean so as not to degrade the output beam. Any technique that obtains the desired polarization components will work. These include polarizing beamsplitters, non-polarizing beamsplitters followed by polarizers, and Brewster-angle plates. One advantage of using the latter is cost since pieces of a decent quality microscope slide or cover slip will work fine to sample the main beam by producing near-zero reflection of one orientation and 10 or 12 percent reflection of the other to the photodiode.

    The electronics required for stabilization using 1 mode (1 photodiode with or without polarizer) or 2 modes (2 photodiodes and polarizing beamsplitter) isn't all that much different and as noted above, either technique can be used with a 2 (or 3) mode tube. The two mode approach is better for frequency stabilization while the single mode approach is better for intensity stabilization, though not by a huge amount.

    The output beam may consist of only a single mode - the other may be blocked by the beam sampling optics (if on the OC-end) or an optional polarizing filter (if beam sampling is on the HR-end). Other stabilized HeNe lasers may use a special tube with an internal heater or piezo transducer to control cavity length. See the sections: Coherent Model 200 Single Frequency Stabilized HeNe Laser, Melles Griot Stabilized HeNe Lasers, Description of the SP-117 and SP-117A Stabilized Single Frequency HeNe Laser, Teletrac Stabilized HeNe Laser, and Hewlett-Packard HeNe Lasers.

    Achieving High Performance in a Stabilized HeNe Laser

    Specifications of a typical commercial mode-stabilized HeNe laser system (the SP-117A or 05-STP-901) are:

      Stabilization     Frequency    Output Power
        Technique       Variation     Variation
    -----------------------------------------------
        Frequency        +/-2 MHz      +/-1%
        Intensity        +/-5 MHz      +/-0.2%
    

    For complete specifications, see the Melles Griot Web site or the section: Melles Griot Stabilized HeNe Lasers.

    While it is very easy to construct a laser that locks to one or two modes keeping them generally stationary as described in subsequent sections, providing performance comparable to commercial systems - order of 1 part in 108 - requires careful attention to design and implementation:

    In fact, typical commercial stabilized HeNe lasers are really quite simple despite their high price, burying a common HeNe laser tube inside their expensive laser head with not much more electronics in their main feedback loop than a couple of op-amps. For example, the Coherent model 200 uses a standard Melles Griot HeNe laser tube but it has been selected to be a non-flipper and so forth based on criteria similar to those presented above. It produces two longitudinal modes, an external heater, and orthogonally polarized beam sampling. (Yes, the tube is from Melles Griot, not Coherent!) The Spectra-Physics models 117 and 117A (and identical Melles Griot 05-STP-901) use an SP-088-2 or the equivalent Melles Griot 05-LHR-088 tube, similar to those in barcode scanners, but higher power. Using both polarizations provides better frequency stability since their ratio can be easily maintained to be equal, independent of output power, which can vary as the tube warms up and as it ages with use. The 117A and 05-STP-901 also can be intensity stabilized which maintains the output constant based on feedback from a single mode. Many other companies have sold or still sell these types of stabilized HeNe lasers including Newport before they merged with Spectra-Physics (and probably acquired the technology from a long defunct company called Laseangle), Zygo, Teletrac, Nikon, Micro-g Solutions, SIOS, NEOARK, Nikon, Mark Tech, and many more.

    Stabilizing a HeNe Laser Tube Using a Single Mode

    By using a short HeNe laser tube with a large mode sweep percentage (or with the addition of a polarizer to isolate a single mode), the laser can be locked to a specific power of the waste beam (or sampled output beam) with minimal circuitry. This results in the simplest implementation. But if you want to build a stabilized laser, consider one of the two mode approaches described later in this chapter. They are only slightly more complex but potentially can provide better performance.

    The following description was inspired by the paper: "A Very Simple Stabilized Single Mode HeNe Laser for Student Laboratories and Wave Meters", B. Stahlberg, P. Jungner, and T, Fellman, American Journal of Physics 58(9), September 1990, pp. 878-881. Copyright American Association of Physics Teachers. I have edited the description just a bit and extended it to allow the use of a wider variety of tubes.

    (Portions from: Steve Roberts.)

    1. Find a 0.5 to 1.5 mW (actual output power) random polarized HeNe tube in the range of 4 to 9 inches (100 to 225 mm) from mirror to mirror. Barcode scanner tubes work just fine. These are readily available from surplus dealers and on eBay.

    2. Test the HeNe tube by installing it in a steady mount with no drafts or air currents around it. Apply power and check the following as it warms up for at least 20 minutes. Check for the following:

      • Adequate output power: If the main beam isn't strong enough for your needs, then there's little point on using the tube. However, simply for an experimental stabilized laser, this is generally of little consequence. However, a tube longer than 9 or 10 inches may have too many longitudinal modes to allow stabilization with a single mode output.

      • Well behaved mode sweep: Slowly rotate a polarizer (e.g., Polaroid sheet) in the output to locate the axis of the polarization for the modes. Most random polarized HeNe laser tubes will have adjacent modes which are othogonally polarized with a fixed orientation. As the modes sweep through the neon gain curve, the output power from the polarizer should vary smoothly from a minimum to a maximum with a cycle that gets longer as the tube gets warmer and the rate of expansion slows. At 4 orientations 90 degrees apart, the output power will vary the most and for a short tube, will likely go to zero and stay there periodically. This is good. Mark these orientations on the tube for future reference. But if the output power changes erratically, abruptly, very little, or not at all, the tube should NOT be considered suitable for the stabilized laser project.

      • Consistent waste beam and output beam power: If the waste beam will be used for sampling, this is important for your sanity. It also has implications for stability even the waste beam is not being used for anything. Monitor the power in the waste beam and output beam simultaneously to assure that they track each-other fairly closely. With some mirrors, the temperature of the mirror has a strong effect on reflectivity due to etalon effects inside the mirror glass between the mirror coating and uncoated outer surface resulting in a periodic variation in effective HR reflectivity as a function of temperature. As an example, for a 1 mW tube with an HR mirror reflectivity of 99.97 percent producing 30 µW in the waste beam a change of even 0.01 percent (from 99.97 to 99.96 percent) would result in an increase of 10 µW in the waste beam. If the waste beam was used for intensity stabilization, that would be a 33 percent change in the amplitude! But, it may be difficult to find a tube that is really perfect in this regard since it's not something that most applications care much about. An even simpler initial test is to shine the waste beam on a white card in a dark room and look for a ghost beam off to the side. If one is present, then the HR mirror was ground with wedge and is less likely to suffer from this problem. If there is no wedge, it will be necessary to add an angled plate to the HR mirror using an index matching cement (5 minute Epoxy may be satisfactory if care is taken not to trap bubbles in it during mixing.)

      The best way to do these tests is to use use a data acquisition system or laser power meter with a graphing display capability to monitor the output of one of the polarization orientations (through a polarizing filter) for the main beam and waste beam. The power should appear along the lines of either the red or blue plot of Plot of Melles Griot 05-LHR-640 HeNe Laser Tube During Warmup (Polarized). The 05-LHR-640 is a very short tube so the valleys of the plot may not be as flat or even go to zero power on yours. But the power should always vary smoothly with no abrupt changes. Compare this to Plot of "Flipper" Aerotech OEM1R HeNe Laser Head During Warmup and the closeup of flipping behavior in Plot of "Flipper" Aerotech OEM1R HeNe Laser Head During First Part of Warmup, which are the mode power variations of an otherwise healthy 1 mW HeNe laser head with a chronic case of flipperitis for much of the warmup period. :) The flips are virtually instantaneous, probably order of a few hundred photon round trips in the laser resonator. Also note that the frequency of the mode cycles for a flipper is double that of a normal tube - each mode would normally be what resulted from tracing the continuous curve and not taking the discontinuities as is evident in Plot of "Flipper" Aerotech OEM1R HeNe Laser Head During First Part of Warmup (Combined). So following red-blue-red, etc., ignoring the green lines.

      However, at some point in the warmup period something very interesting occurs: The tube seems to revert to being well behaved! This only happens within a half dozen or so mode sweep cycles of thermal equilibrium and is consistent from run to run. The cause is unknown, nor is it known whether the tube would continue to behave if stabilization was attempted. It may indeed behave since the temperature at which it would run is well above the transition point. Plot of "Flipper" Aerotech OEM1R HeNe Laser Head at Transition to Normal Behavior (Combined) shows the abrupt change from flipper to non-flipper in stark detail. Note that the "envelope" of the mode plot is virtually unchanged at this point but the green transitions have disappeared. There are at most 3 or 4 additional complete mode cycles beyond what is shown and then the temperature of the tube is in equilibrium with its surroundings with only small slow fluctuations remaining.

    3. Obtain a metal film type lab heater that will run off of your power supply, or wind a bifilar heating element using resistance wire or even fine magnet wire. A bifilar winding is desirable to cancel the magnetic field from the heater and is made by carefully wrapping a pair of wires side-by-side for the length of the winding. Short them at one end and drive the coil via the two wires at the opposite end. Since equal and opposite current is flowing along the pair of wires, virtually no external magnetic field is generated. However, an even better arrangement (but one very difficult to do by hand) is longitudinal back and forth glued to the tube. This results in a much higher bandwidth and more predictable response. But that's for the advanced course. :)

      As a guideline, the maximum heater power should be about the same or a bit more than that of the HeNe laser tube. So, for example, if the laser tube is 4.5 mA at 1,400 V (6.3 W) like the SP-117A, a 7 or 8 W heater should work. For a 12 V power supply, this would have a resistance of around 20 ohms. The paper actually suggests double this - about 15 W - which is fine as well and would provide a wider operating temperature range and faster warmup, but also results in higher power dissipation in the driver.

      A home-built heater can be made from magnet wire salvaged from a relay, solenoid, or other similar device. Magnet wire can also be purchased from an electronics distributor. Or, thin film heaters can be purchased from suppliers like Minco. Home-built heaters are less expensive and easily customized to the desired dimensions and resistance/power, but commercial heaters are more convenient since they can be moved from one tube to another without unwinding a hundred turns or more. :) But if your time isn't factored in, they are also much more expensive - $30 or more for a single heater!

    4. Mount the tube at its center with a long aluminum ring and RTV Silicone, or two rings near the ends as long as the tube is free to expand slightly (it doesn't need much - about 0.1 mm!). However, the center ring mound may better isolate the tube from the environment.

    5. Install this assembly in a tight metal box that keeps out stray light and lets the tube reach thermal equilibrium. Painting the box black inside might help to minimize stray reflections causing instability but really isn't necessary as long as the sampling optics/photodiode are enclosed. You can even put the entire thing in a box with a Plexiglas cover.

    6. Poke a hole for the output beam in the box. Use the waste beam off the rear mirror to illuminate a broad area photodiode. Using such a photodiode eliminates the effects of beam wander on the sensor surface. It is very important to arrange the photodiode so there are no back-reflections into the laser tube. Even a very small amount of power back into the laser cavity can destabilize it. At the very least, it will increase the noise level, but might also cause the modes to flip polarization at random times even for an otherwise well-behaved tube. To prevent back-reflections, angle the photodiode (and polarizer) and don't mount them too close to the mirror. To help this, as well as to minimize bore light shining on the photodiode, attach something opaque to the mirror that has a hole only large enough for the waste beam to pass. A red filter to block out most of the bore light would also be desirable.

    7. Although a short tube may have up to a 20 percent output power variation with mode sweep, most are lower and may make reliable and stable locking rather finicky. More importantly, without some means of locking to a specific mode polarization, the polarization of the output when stabilized will randomly be one of the two orthogonal modes. Therefore, I (Sam) recommend adding a polarizer between the tube and photodiode, oriented based on the mark placed on the tube, which will result in a much larger signal swing and fixed polarization orientation when stabilized. The paper mentions the use of a polarizer, but sort of as an afterthought. The polarizer can just be a tiny piece of a Polaroid sheet.

    8. Any garbage op-amps can be used - 741s, LM358, etc. Use regulated +/-15 VDC power supplies.

      The photodiode has its anode grounded and its cathode feeds the negative input of the first op-amp and the positive input is grounded. The value of the feedback resistor will depend on the actual amount of power in the waste beam or sampled beam. The paper used 330K ohms for a BPW34 photodiode and their specific tube, with a 47 pF shunted across the 330K ohms to assure stability. (This may not be needed but won't hurt.) For typical short Uniphase tubes, 1M or even higher may be desirable to obtain a nice large signal swing.

      The differential amp is a second 741 with a 1M ten turn pot as its feedback resistor, and two 10K resistors as its inputs, one on the - terminal and one on the +. The plus terminal is fed off the ten turn 50K pot which has a 1M trim pot on its high side, to set the upper limit. The high side is fed to +15 V through the 1M trimmer, and the low side is of course grounded. The negative terminal goes straight to the trans-impedance converter's output via the second 10K input resistor.

      The second op-amp then feeds a Darlington transistor pair made with a small signal NPN and a 2N3055 that has the heater in its collector circuit. Use a 1K between the opamp output and the Darlington base. Put an ammeter on the heater.

      And, of course, shield everything.

    Principle of operation: When the tube contracts the mode tens to drift to a higher frequency and thus the intensity of the output beam decreases, provided you start with a mode on the high side of the gain profile. As the converter voltage falls it approaches the set point of the pot and the heater is energized more (set quiescent heat for about 4 watts) the tube expands, forcing the mode frequency to decrease and sliding the beam to a higher gain point of the curve. To ensure your single mode, run the polarizer test again, adjust the set point so you only have 1 mode with no drift. (For the longer tubes, getting a single mode may not be possible at a reasonable set-point. So, just add a polarizer in the output.)

    The authors of the original paper achieved a stability of 50 MHz with this method, over long periods of time, as compared to a commercial polarization stabilized HeNe using a beat frequency method. This will get you a better then 1% amplitude (or intensity) stability. God only knows what it does to the coherence length, as I have no way to measure that.

    I (Steve) didn't come up with this, I just built it, and have seen similar methods used on a surplus measuring interferometer. The nice variation is to run this beam through a 40 MHz AOM, and beat the frequency shifted beam against a non-modulated sample, then phase lock it to a 40 MHz crystal, but thats time consuming and needs a critically designed RF amp and photodiode circuit as the second order correction. I used a short aerotech tube that is no longer made.

    The original article gives full theory. They showed a drift as little as 2 MHz over 15 minute time spans, and as little as +/-6 MHz over an hour compared to the reference laser, and the locking frequency is repeatable to 50 MHz if you switch the unit on and off.

    (From: Sam.)

    That 50 MHz uncertainty could probably be reduced greatly if the temperature of the tube was monitored during preheat and then the feedback loop was enabled at the same temperature every time.

    Note that the feedback loop described above is for all intents and purposes, pure gain or proportional control. The paper does suggest using an integrator and more sophisticated techniques but I suppose since the intent was to do the simplest possible implementation, there were no details.

    I would expect the coherence length of this laser (or of any other home-built thermally stabilized HeNe laser) to be quite long at any given instant - possibly hundreds of meters or in the same league as a commercial stabilized HeNe laser - if the tube is isolated from vibration and AC magnetic fields, and the power supply is well filtered. What is not available with this scheme, which may be used in some commercial models, is high bandwidth piezo control of mirror spacing so there's no way to deal with short term fluctuations. However, the commercial stabilized HeNe lasers I've seen just use the heater approach. I do think that you could do better than the authors of the paper have achieved and match or exceed the performance of typical commercial systems with enough care in construction, particularly with respect to these factors above, as well as feedback for thermal control, and providing adequate thermal insulation (but not total isolation).

    By using two longitudinal modes and straddling them on either side of the gain curve (see the next section), it should even be possible to spec an absolute wavelength/frequency to 9 or 10 significant figures. What other device can you build at home that can claim such precision?! :)

    Here are some additional references that may be of interest:

    I am considering making a kit of parts available to construct a basic one or two mode stabilized HeNe laser. This would be suitable for an advanced hobbyist or an university undergraduate course project. It would use a preselected non-flipper 6 inch (150 mm) tube with 12 VDC input HeNe laser power supply, microscope slides used as Brewster plate polarizing beamsplitters for the main beam, photodiodes, and a wrap-around heater for the tube (type to be determined). I may also include the required electronic components. The electrical schematic from which to start would be the same as that given in the next section, but could be enhanced if desired to provide separate s and p polarization signals, for example. Mounting would be up to the ingenuity of the student. Most of the parts are not very expensive but having them all from one source would simplify things. And starting with a HeNe laser tube that is known to be well behaved would eliminate a lot of potential frustration. I welcome comments on whether there would be any interest in such a kit.

    The parts list would go something like:

  • Tested HeNe laser tube guaranteed NOT to be a flipper. 0.8 to 1.5 mW, 150 mm length, mode spacing of 1,063 MHz typical.

  • Beam sampler plates (2), to be used at the Brewster angle to provide approximately 10 percent of the output power to each polarization from the output-end of the tube.

  • Silicon photodiodes (2), relatively large area, 0.4 A/W typical sensitivity.

  • Wire to construct a heater or thin film heater for the tube with approximately 25 ohm resistance.

  • Quad op-amp, MJE3055T heater driver, assorted resistors and capacitors.

    Sam's Stabilized Two-Frequency Helium-Neon Laser

    The approach above can be extended to use a somewhat longer HeNe laser tube, one having a longidtudinal mode spacing as low as 600 to 700 MHz or one with a magnet to perform Zeeman splitting, to build a two-frequency stabilized HeNe laser similar to commercial models. Before you get too excited about maybe having a HeNe laser that outputs red and green light, the two frequencies I'm talking about will differ by 600 MHz to 1 GHz (less than 0.0015 nm at 632.8 nm) for the laser described in this section and up to only 2 MHz or so (less than 0.000003 nm) for the two-frequency laser based on Zeeman splitting, below. Looking at a 600 MHz signal may be stretching it for a home lab but a 2 MHz beat signal can easily be seen with very modest equipment.

    A two-frequency laser can be built by using a HeNe tube that will support a pair of longitudinal modes (maybe the same tube as the one used above or one that is slightly longer) and monitor the two polarization orientations of the waste beam (from the HR) with with a pair of photodiodes. A suitable servo system would then control the heater temperature to equalize the intensity of the two outputs. This would result in operation with a pair of adjacent longitudinal modes of orthogonal polarization separated by a frequency of c/(2*L). Whether an 'even' mode and next higher 'odd' one or an 'odd' mode and next higher 'even' one is stable would depend on the sign of the feedback equation. Such a feedback system would not be much more complex than the one to maintain a single frequency output. I have thrown together a very simple and preliminary design which can be found at Sam's Stabilized Helium-Neon Laser 1. I was intending to construct it at some point but ended up building the even simpler one described in the next section instead. :)

    The HeNe laser tube should be one that's random polarized and between 5 to 9 inches in length, rated about 0.5 to 2 mW with a mode spacing of between 1.2 GHz and 600 MHz. From some quick tests, the shorter tubes seem to have very pronounced cycling of polarization with almost perfect nulls, but 3:1 or 4:1 even with the 9 inch tube. Having the nulls is fine but the tube has to be able to support two modes simultaneously which means that there should be some times at which there will be little or no evidence of polarization of the beam indicating that more than one mode but hopefully only two modes are oscillating. Even if up to 3 modes oscillating at timnes is acceptable if one of them is near the center of the gain curve. Keeping the tube length below 9 inches should guarantee this. The tube will be enclosed in a thermal control system consisting of a bifilar wound heating element, aluminum heat distribution layer, and outer isolating layer. Note that this must not be a totally insulated (adiabatic) system since there is no way to cool the tube actively. Thus, thermal conduction to the ambient is a requirement. The purpose of the outer layer is to isolate the tube from air currents and other disturbances that would produce frequency fluctuations that would occur too quickly to be handled by the thermal control system.

    The mode sweep behavior of any candidate tube should be tested by monitoring its output through a polarizer, oriented to produce maximum change from minimum to maximum signal during mode cycling as the tube warms up. The power should vary more or less smoothly without any abrupt jumps or dips which would indicate that the tube is a "flipper" - one where the modes suddenly swap polarization states as described above.

    The beam from the HR-end of the tube is passed through a polarizing beam splitter to create the S and P oriented beams for their respective photodiodes. The TL072 op-amp implements a differential integrator feeding a darlington heater driver. At first, I was going to use an SG3524 PWM controller chip but then realized that the AC switching frequency would result in both electrical noise and some residual magnetic fields even with the bifilar wound heater coil. Thus, I changed it to a linear regulator. Depending on the heater power (and thus the maximum power dissipated in the regulator, a large or forced air-cooled heat sink and/or multiple pass transistors may be required.

    The heater would be driven during initial warmup at a constant current around half of what it can safely handle. At this power level, the warmup time is not critical as long as it is long enough, allowing the temperature to stabilize to the point of near equilibrium. The feedback loop would be off until the tube is close to a steady state condition due to the balance between its discharge current heating, thermal input from the heater, and thermal leakage to the environment. This point could be determined by detecting when mode cycles take more than 20 to 30 seconds. Then, the heater will have to run at around the same power to maintain lock. Using a higher heater power would get to this point faster, but if you wait too long, the heater will have to run near full power to maintain it - or may not be able to at all even at full power. Switching over when the heater can run below half its maximum current (1/4 power) is probably better.

    After preheating, the control system would be enabled and will seek a stable point equalizing two adjacent modes. If by chance, it started with a pair of modes which resulted in increased imbalance with higher temperature (greater distance between mirrors), it would stabilize at the next pair. If the feedback loop was switched on too early (even from a cold start!), the behavior would be dominated by the warmup-expansion due to the discharge current heating, but even then, it would probably stabilize eventually. Experimentation is welcomed. :)

    Sam's Home-Built SP-117 Compatible HeNe Laser

    The Spectra-Physics model 117 was one of the classic commercial stabilized HeNe lasers with its successor, the 117A (and the OEM 117C), still in production. For more info on this laser, see the section: Description of the SP-117A Stabilized Single Frequency HeNe Laser. (The SP-117 and SP-117A are similar except that the latter can operate with intensity stabilization or frequency stabilization.) I have constructed a frequency stabilized HeNe laser from junk parts that consists of a laser head and bare-bones controller. The laser head will also operate from an SP-117 or SP-117A controller, and my controller will also run a stock SP-117 or SP-117A laser head, with at most minor adjustments to the premap gain settings. (This also applies to the Melles Griot 05-STP-901 which is identical to the SP-117A except for the color of the case and front panel layout.)

    The special - and no doubt very expensive SP-117 (or 117A or 05-STP-901) laser head, should you need to replace yours - is of the typical design described above - a common random polarized HeNe laser tube (probably a Spectra-Physics 088-2 or Melles Griot 05-LHR-088) surrounded by a heater with polarizing optics and photodiodes to generate feedback signals for two orthogonal longitudinal modes.

    I used a common barcode scanner HeNe laser tube, a Spectra-Physics model 088 (about 1.4 mW). This is about half the power of the 088-2 but it was available. :) Almost any other random polarized tube would work as long as it was 9 inches or less between mirrors.

    The heater is about 50 feet of #36 AWG copper magnet wire wound bifilar-style around the tube on top of the original aluminum wrap after adding a layer of clear packing tape as insulation insurance. The bifilar winding is used to minimize the magnetic field of the heater that would result in Zeeman splitting - not desirable for this version of the stabilized laser. The length of wire was chosen to result in approximately the same resistance as the heater in the SP-117 laser head - about 20 ohms.

    The photodiodes are common types found in barcode scanners and similar equipment (similar to the Photonics Detectors PDB-107.) A Polarizing BeamSplitter (PBS) is used to separate the two modes of the waste beam from the HR mirror. The photodiodes are set at an angle to prevent reflections back into the laser.

    The SP-117 controller's HeNe laser power supply runs at 1,700 V at 4.5 mA for the 088-2 tube. Therefore, the ballast resistance for the 088 tube was made 160K so that the power supply in the SP-117 controller would see about the same operating voltage. The 4.5 mA is nearly optimal for this tube as well.

    One concern was that the waste beam may not have enough power for the photodiode preamps inside the SP-117 controller. About 25 microwatts for each of the two polarizations after the beamsplitter is the minimum that will work reliably with unmodified Spectra-Physics or Melles Griot controllers. This is because the feedback resistors are 500K ohm pots in the preamps. With 25 µW and the typical 0.4 A/W sensitivity of silicon photodiodes, this will result in a voltage swing of 5 V. If the power is much less than this, additional amplification will be needed. Or, sample the output beam instead. The power of the waste beam from the 088-2 is about 3 times that of the 088, so this was a concern.

    Final assembly went very smoothly and the completed unit is shown in Photo of Sam's SP-117 Compatible Stabilized HeNe Laser Head. Some windings of the heater are visible under the plastic covering. The small black cylinder on the left is the polarizing beamsplitter, borrowed from an SP-117 laser head. The photodiodes are attached at the rear and underneath. Awhile after the photo was taken, I found a half dead very small PBS in a Hewlett Packard 5500C interferometer laser head and substituted that, freeing up the SP-117 PBS to go back to its original home or for other purposes. (Part of the coating on the critical diagonal surface had rotted but there was enough remaining for beam sampling.) Yes, that's a piece of quad twisted pair blue Ethernet cable and the highly stable base is laminated hardwood with a suger maple stain. Who says optical systems can't be built on real breadboards. :)

    The system powered up just fine. Even the polarities of the photodiodes were correct. The voltage swing of the photodiodes was much better than I had feared, about 2.5 V end-to-end (more on this later). The behavior during warmup was about the same as with the genuine SP-117 laser heads. And, after approximately the normal warmup time, it was quite clear from the photodiode voltages no longer changing, and the modes no longer changing (as determined by a polarizing filter), that the tube had locked. However, the Stabilized indicator never came on but for a momentary flash or two. The lock seemed quite solid with the laser remaining stable as long as it wasn't disturbed. Blowing on the tube might cause it to lose lock but it would regain it in at most a few mode cycles. (The only protection over the heater is several layers of thick plastic.) But the stable point was very near one extreme with one of the two modes nearly centered on the gain curve and dominating. This might be desirable to maximize the output power in the single mode, but is not as stable a location as with both modes on the slope of the gain curve and of approximately equal power.

    As far as the Stabilized indicator, I think that what was happening is that although the voltage swing of the two photodiode channels is not that much worse than with the SP-117 laser head, the actual voltages on each of the photodiode channels is much lower. While for the 088-2 tube, a typical voltage swing is from 2 or 3 V to 5 or 6 V, for the 088, it is from 0.1 or 0.2 V to 2 or 3 V. Since the 088 is a lower power tube, there are probably only 2 modes maximum and the polarization extinction ratio is much higher than for the 088-2. So, the controller may be looking for the signals to be within a specific absolute voltage range, or may not like the lock being at one extreme of the range. This, too, is almost certainly something that an adjustment would remedy. But, installing a 1.5K ohm resistor across each of the photodiodes added an offset of about 2.5 V so that the voltage swing became 2.5 to 5 V. This was sufficient to keep the system happy. After the normal warmup period, the Stabilized indicator flashed a couple of times and my mode meter stopped nearly abruptly at dead-center. The laser was stabilized with the two modes of nearly equal amplitude, which is the desired outcome. In fact, there was less flashing of the Stabilized indicator before lock than with either of the genuine SP-117 laser heads, and it then stayed lit continuously. That's a good thing. Else, I would have had to just tape a Day-Glow red dot over the Stabilized indicator. :-)

    I don't know for sure why the 1.5K ohm resistors produced the desired effect. Based on the design of the SP-117 photodiode preamps, it probably the result of the offset voltage of the two op-amps, and thus might not work in general. However, it would be simple to introduce the needed current in some other way if needed.

    Next, I decided to build the simplest controller possible. In fact, the initial version constructed on a protoboard consisted of literally five (5) parts - 1 op-amp, 2 resistors, 1 zener diode, and 1 MJE3055T transistor. See Sam's Stabilized HeNe Laser 1 (SG-HS1). The power input is 12 VDC. And, if a dual power supply (e.g., +/-6 VDC) were used, the zener and 1 resistor could have been eliminated, so 3 parts. :) OK, these simple implementations won't switch from constant heat mode to feedback mode automatically - there's a switch for that but the switch doesn't count as an essential part since it could be done by moving a wire! :) Locking was very stable with minimal overshoot. Grab the tube or block the waste beam to the photodiodes to force it to lose lock and when restored to normal, it will stabilize very quickly. In fact, the first time I completed the feedback loop, I thought that something was wrong when it settled down almost immediately.

    The soldered refined version has a few more parts to implement PI (Proportional-Integral) control. It is shown in Sam's Stabilized HeNe Laser 2 (SG-HS2). The "I" in PI control eliminates the offset error of the stable point resulting from the finite gain of the error amplifier which would change depending on the temperature of the tube and thus heater current. A pot to move the stable point over about 90 percent of the gain curve, a tuning input, and LEDs to show the relative intensities of the modes were also added. The LEDs also serve to show when the laser has locked, and roughly where on the gain curve it is sitting. There are now a grand total of 29 parts, but more than two thirds of them are for the non-essential bells and whistles. :) The only change that may needed to allow it to be used with any SP-117 compatible laser head would be to make the gain of the error amp adjustable but I didn't have any suitable pots handy.

    SG-HS2 seems to work every bit as well as the SP-117 controller and perhaps better, at least based on general behavior. Admittedly, I haven't measured the frequency stability. Certainly, additional filtering and shielding would be needed to truly achieve similar noise specifications. But for now, this will have to do And, the entire circuit fits on a little piece of perf. board (overall dimensions less than 2x3 inches). See Photo of Sam's SP-117 Compatible Stabilized HeNe Laser Head and Controller. Yes, it's that little thing in the lower left corner! The power supply for the HeNe laser and the 12 VDC power supply for the controller are not shown, but that's all. Really! :) After the photo was taken, I couldn't resist adding a green LED for power, a yellow LED showing the approximate heater voltage (by its intensity), and a test connector with the mode difference signal (U1-1), the output of the PI amp (U1-7), the heater voltage, and ground.

    Determining when to switch to "Lock" is generally no problem. Just set it on "Preheat" and wait until a full mode cycle takes at least 20 seconds or so. It should then stabilize in less than one additional mode cycle and remain at a fixed locking point, with the heater voltage nowhere near its extremes (0 V: too cold, 12 V: too hot, that LED is a good enough measure). For example, if the tube isn't hot enough, the modes will continue to slowly drift away with the heater totally off, and incapable of keeping the temperature from increasing due to the power in the HeNe discharge. In that case, switch back to "Preheat" and give it a couple more minutes. Another simple test is to switch to "Off" from "Preheat" and watch the mode LEDs. If it's hot enough, the mode display will immediately change direction as the tube cools. If the modes don't do much of anything or continue in the same direction, more heating is needed. As a practical matter, once an optimal minimum mode cycle time for switchover has been determined for a particular laser head, waiting until it occurs should be sufficient, and is basically what the "real" stabilized laser controllers do. For the rig shown above, it takes about 12 minutes in my approximately 65 °F seasonally adjusted lab. Or, count full mode cycles - about 72 after 12 minutes. You're welcome to add the logic if desired. :)

    I have tested SG-HS2 with a genuine SP-117 laser head. The required warmup time is even shorter - less than 10 minutes. I'm not quite sure why that should be the case since the heater resistance (and thus power disspation) is similar). Possibly, it's due to the tube being enclosed by the head cylinder which provide thermal insulation. It would certainly be beneficial to enclose the tube in such a cylinder or other semi-insulating jacket to isolate it from air currents and other thermal disturbances.

    SG-HS2 should drive a Melles Griot 05-STP-901 laser head with no changes (except maybe for gain as discussed above) since that stabilized laser is the same as an SP-117A. Adapting it to a Coherent 200 laser head may require minor changes (aside from connectors and such). I have not measured the maximum heater voltage required for that laser but suspect it is higher than 12 V because the laser head cylinder heats up more quickly and stabililizes at a much higher case temperature than the SP-117 even though the heater resistance is similar. The integrator time constant may also need tweaking.

    So, who needs to pay $5,000 for a stablized HeNe laser. Aside from the cost of the HeNe laser tube, its power supply, and some sort of polarizing beamsplitter, this entire rig would cost nothing to build for anyone with a reasonably well stocked electronics junk drawer. And, for a laser jock, those other items will be in their junk drawer as well. :)

    Sam's Very Simple Stabilized HeNe Laser

    I have now built a minimalist laser head using the single mode approach that runs from my SP-117 compatible controller. It uses a 6 inch barcode scanner tube with a single photodiode behind a polarizing filter stuck on the HR mirror mount. An adhesive dot painted black with a hole was stuck on the HR mirror to block bore light. The heater is approximately 50 feet of #36 AWG magnet wire wound bifilar-style over an aluminum wrap. The tuning pot on the controller is used to set the locking amplitude.

    While locking was successful on the initial attempt after preheat, it only remained stable for a minute or so and then fliped polarizations and cycling through one set of modes before reacquiring lock. And then this cycle repeated continuously. So, this tube has turned into a flipper. Perhaps, I didn't test it thoroughly enough. I thought that perhaps, there were still some back-reflections that needed to be tamed given that the photodiode is so close to the HR mirrir. But even when the tube was allowed to warm up on its own without anything near the HR mirror, it still occasionally flipped, though not as consistently as is the case when the feedback loop is enabled.

    I have now checked out several other 6 inch tubes both for non-flipping mode behavior and acceptable power in the waste beam. I found another tube that flips *all the time*. The power in one mode climbs smoothly until about two thirds of the maximum and then abruptly drops to zero. That mode looks like a sawtooth. :) But most tubes seem well behaved. Of the dozen or so tested, I've identified 5 that seem to be flip-free and have enough power in the waste beam to be usable without needing to increase the photodiode gain on my controller.

    Installing a heater on one of the well behaved tubes eliminated the flipping problem. The laser now stabilizes easily and remains locked continuously, though the feedback loop is a bit underdamped if disturbed, possibly since the same wattage heater was used on a much smaller tube. This would be unimportant if the tube were installed inside some sort of enclosure to provide isolation from air currents - to which is is very sensitive. I may mount it in the cylinder from an 05-LHR-911 laser head, inside of which it should fit easily. I'll keep the original tube and heater assembly intact as an example of one not to use.

    Then I discovered another issue: This tube has waste beam power that varies by almost 2:1 depending on the temperature. Once everything reaches equilibrium, this may not be that critical. But as it warms up even after locking, the output power can be seen to drift significantly even though the photodiode voltage is rock solid. Based on tests of other tubes with similar behavior, my conclusion is that the HR mirror was ground without wedge and is suffering from etalon effects. A change in effective reflectivity of only 0.03 percent would change the waste beam power by about 30 µW. For more on this phenomenon, see the sections starting with: Melles Griot Yellow Laser Head With Variable Output. Such variation wouldn't be quite as critical for two mode ratio stabilization, but for one mode intensity stabilization, the output power ends up inversely tracking the changes in waste beam power. So, it would be better to sample the output beam for the feedback.

    So, I checked out the remaining tubes that had a well behaved mode sweep and found two others that had a minimal change in relative waste beam and output beam power from cold to hot (beyond that during normal operation). (I only checked those two, so it's possible I just got really unlucky with the bad one.) There is probably still some change but it is down near the limit of detectability watching a pair of laser power meters with the tube doing its mode sweep thing and the readings varying. (Recording the power of both beams as a plot would have been better.) Instead of almost a 2:1 change, it's more like +/-1 percent. But, this is still much greater than I would have expected before undertaking this exercise, since it never occurred to me to even check for such a problem, um, "feature", in a normal red HeNe laser. Using this tube results in much better performance with only a small drift after locking until thermal equilization is complete. When stuffed into the cylinder from an 05-LHR-911 laser head without end-caps, the short term stability is about +/-0.5 percent. If carefully packaged, it would probably be much better.

    But, locking to a specific amplitude is more finicky all around than locking to a 1:1 ratio, which can be set and forgotten. :) So, this further suggests that the additional complexity of a polarizing beamsplitter and two photodiodes is well worth it unless the goal is intensity stabilization. And, sampling the output beam is also probably a better idea unless the tube is known to have very consistent waste beam and output beam power.

    Sam's Simplest Stabilized Laser Controllers

    Would you believe two (2) electronic components in addition to the mode sampling photodiode and heater? Yes, it's true. This controller consists of a high value resistor and BUZ71 or similar N-channel MOSFET, and runs on 8 to 12 VDC. That's it! This is so simple that a diagram is almost not worth drawing:

         V+ o--------+----------+
                     |          |
                     |          /
                    _|_         \ HTR1
                PD1 /_\         / 10 ohms
                     |          \
                     |          |
                     |        |-+ Q1
                     +-------||-, BUZ71
                     |        |-+
                     /          |
                  R1 \          |
                  5M /          |
                     \          |
                     |          |
        GND o--------+----------+
    

    A silicon photodiode is reverse biased from the positive power supply to the resistor. Select the resistor value so that the voltage to the MOSFET varies near ground to near V+. The exact value will depend on the power in the waste beam from the laser tube and the details of the polarizing beam sampler. The junction of the PD and resistor is attached to the gate of the MOSFET. The heater (10 to 20 ohms recommended) sits between the drain of the MOSFET and positive power; the source is grounded.

    To operate, run the laser tube from its power supply and run the heater from the controller power supply direct until the tube is hot enough such that removing heater power causes the modes to reverse direction. As usual, this takes 10 to 20 minutes. Then allow the MOSFET to take control. :)

    Of course, since this uses only one of the two polarized modes, it is an intensity, not frequency stabilized laser, and only for the mode that is sampled. There are no guarantees on performance other than that it will lock and remain locked to a specific mode. Since the feedback loop is proportional only (no integrator) with the gain provided by the resistor value and MOSFET transconductance, don't expect quite the same specifications as the SP-117A. However, it will still be a couple orders of magnitude more stable than a common HeNe laser, and will be single frequency like the others.

    Victor Zhao, a high school student working at the Laser Teaching Center at Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY during the summer of 2008, and I actually built a stabilized laser based on this circuit in about 1 hour total. Most of that time was spent in Victor practicing his soldering skills and scrounging up a suitable MOSFET from another lab. But despite the MOSFET simply dangling in mid-air by its wires, the thing locked on the first attempt! I really need to dig up that photo. It's a classic! :) (I did later explain about the importance of heatsinks, but MOSFETS are tough.) Victor went on to achieve semifinalist status in the Intel Talent Search competition based on his subsequent work with stabilized HeNe lasers.

    For better performance, use both polarizations with 2 photodiodes and 2 resistors. (That's 3 parts instead of 2 parts!) And perhaps make one of the resistors adjsutable to set the stable point on the neon gain curve. The PDs should be in series reverse biased from the positive supply to ground and the resistors should also be in series to ground. The center taps of the PDs and resistors should be connected together and to the gate of the MOSFET. Getting this scheme to work is left as an exercise for the student! :)

    Sam's Laseangle RB-1 Stabilized HeNe laser Conversion

    Laseangle was a company that built some stabilized HeNe lasers in the early 1980s. I don't know if they ever actually sold anything commercially but there is a reference in a paper to the use of 6 of their systems. Perhaps, the researchers were related to the company founder. :)

    I was given what must have been a prototype or testbed - the RB-1. The RB-1 consisted of two pieces as shown in Laseangle RB-1 Stabilized HeNe Laser Head and Controller. The connecting cables were nowhere to be found when these photos were taken. The laser head is SN# 1 and and the controller is SN# 2, so at least two of these systems were built. The thing clearly wouldn't be caught dead going out to a paying customer, though it's likely that the RB-1 or its successor eventually morphed into the Newport NL-1 (maybe "Newport Laseangle 1"?) as a result of a merger or buy-out. However, I've yet to see an actual NL-1 (or production RB-1 if there ever was such a thing).

    The RB-1 laser head contained the HeNe laser tube, with wrap-around heater, a beam sampler assembly that diverted all of one polarization to a photodiode and part of the orthogonal polarization to another photodiode, and preamps for the photodiodes. The base is a 3/4 inch thick aluminum slab with a 1/8 inch aluminum cover sealed with foam rubber.

    The controller housed what appears to be a standard Laser Drive HeNe laser power supply brick, DC power supply, feedback circuitry, and heater driver. There were controls on the front clearly not for an end-user, like 8 or 10 gain settings and a fine gain control for one of the op-amps, selection of which mode signal to pass to an output, a current meter for the heater, and so forth. People who actually use these things would have no clue of what to do with the knobs and switches.

    While the mounting of the HeNe laser tube is somewhat overkill and the beam sampler is a nice solid unit with an adequate number of adjustments, the electronic construction of both the laser head and controller are, to put it politely, a disaster. Everything is on those copper strip prototyping boards, with capacitor upon capacitor added in various places no doubt to tame noise pickup or instability. (Someone must have had stock in a capacitor company!) The designers must have had a goal of using strange and hard to find connectors wherever possible which they did for the separate cables of the photodiode signals (blue multipin) and heater drive (microphone two pin). Power for the HeNe laser tube came from a standard Alden on the controller but at the laser head had both the medium voltage BNC on top for the positive and the normal BNC on the bottom for the negative. Someone must have been toasting marshmallows above the DC power supply voltage regulators since there is a nice brown spot on the ventilation grill there. I have no intention of powering up either the controller or the entire laser since the cables with their strange connectors are nowhere to be found, it's not worth constructing replacements, and the thing would probably explode in any case.

    My mission was to convert the laser head alone into a basic self-contained stabilized HeNe laser suitable to use to demonstrate a simple stabilized HeNe laser. It will be donated to a university Physics Demonstration facility.

    The original HeNe laser tube was from Uniphase, a garden variety model but was end-of-life - hard start, hard run, white-ish discharge color, and only about 0.4 mW of output (probably should have been around 2 mW). Its length of 8 inches is somewhat unusual - 6 or 9.5 inches being more common, at least today. While a 9.5 inch tube would satisfy the criteria for the number of modes, it would just barely fit, but with marginal clearance for the high voltage on its anode mirror mount. So, I installed one of the 6 inch tubes I'd already selected for well behaved mode sweep behavior. The beam sampler uses the main beam, so any variation in waste beam power is more or less irrelevant.

    The original beam sampler included a polarizing beamsplitter cube to extract one of the mode signals and prevent it from reaching the output at all, and a separate angled plate to extract a portion of the orthogonal mode. A pair of EG&G SGD-100A photodiodes (may be similar to the Perkin Elmer FFD-100) fed LF356 op-amps.

    Of all this, only the angled plate and the mounting hardware for all the beam sampler stuff was retained. I wanted the beamsplitter cube for other uses but also needed to roughly equalize the power to the 2 photodiode channels to keep the new controller happy. (Single mode locking would probably have satisfied the design goals but it would only take a bit more effort to use both modes.) So, in place of the beamsplitter cube, I built a little angled mounting post and added a bit of an optical window to act as a plate beamsplitter. In place of the EG&G photodiodes which were too nice to use here, I installed a pair of my normal $2 photodiodes - which also have a larger area making them easier to align with the sampled beams. A red filter was glued in the beam path in front of each photodiode to block bore light. These were left in place. A piece of Polaroid polarizing film was cut to fit in front of each photodiode to select the orthogonal modes. Some experimentation showed that one set of orientations resulted in approximately equal power in the orthogonal polarizations to each photodiode - within 20 percent - which would be good enough. For the other possibility, they differed by perhaps 2:1.

    The new controller was constructed on a piece of perf. board to fit in about the same space as the original preamp. The rear panel of the laser head was modified to have a power switch, Preheat/Off/Lock switch, LEDs for the heater (yellow) and the two modes (red and green), the Offset pot, and a Tuning input BNC (more to fill the existing hole than to be something essential!). The original connector on the front of the laser head was left in place just in case someone would want to monitor various signals (though I have no intention of wiring anything to it at the present time). The orignal controller came in handy though. Its rubber feet were transferred to the converted laser head. :-)

    The HeNe laser power supply is one of those little copper covered bricks made by Laser Drive for a variety of barcode scanners. It easily fits on the baseplate behind the laser tube. The system runs from 12 VDC at about 1.5 A max. A 2 amp fuse (in a socket) was included for good measure. These little plug-in fuses were about the only thing worth salvaging from the mainboards of Sparc-II workstations. :)

    Views of the completed unit are shown in Laseangle RB-1 Stabilized HeNe Laser Conversion Rear Panel and Laseangle RB-1 Stabilized HeNe Laser Conversion Interior. Some labeling of the rear panel will be needed. Inside, the HeNe laser power supply is on the left next to the tube with its heater. The large black object is the modified beam sampler assembly with the red and green dots indicating which section is associated with the vertical (green) and horizontal (red) polarization modes. The controller is on the elongated perf. board with heatsink. The bare blue connector is left as an exercise for the student (or professor) to provide for signal monitoring.

    The system now works like the one described in the section: Sam's Home-Built SP-117 Compatible HeNe Laser. After a 10 minute preheat period, it locks easily and will clearly be able to demonstrate the basics of a two mode stabilized HeNe laser. The control loop is a bit underdamped, probably because of the smaller thermal mass of the 6 inch tube. The wrap-around heater, originally used with the RB-1, is also slightly higher power. But if the user wants to play with the gain of the integrator, its proportional feedback resistor is in a socket (no pots in the entire thing). I just picked the first one that seemed reasonable. I make no guarantees on frequency drift or noise, but with the cover in place, the amplitude of either polarized mode settles down after a couple of minutes to a short term variation of less than +/-0.25 percent. Since it's locking on the mode ratio, the frequency variation this corresponds to should be quite respectable, probably less than +/-2 MHz. This is better than 1 part in 108!

    I assume that the ugly cover will be replaced with clear Plexiglas. ;-)

    Specifications (of sorts) and operating instructions for the SL-1 ("Sam Laseangle 1") can be found at SL-1 Operation Manual. There's a good reason it is under the "humor" directory, but the actual operating instructions are serious. :)

    Two-Frequency HeNe Lasers Based on Zeeman Splitting

    I originally got interested in doing this because I had acquired the HeNe laser tube for the HP-5501 interferometer. This is a "two-frequency laser" which generates a beat signal (in a photodetector) between 1 and 2 MHz using Zeeman splitting. I had also acquired the reference detector PCB for an HP-5517 interferometer which is a very similar instrument. See the section: Hewlett-Packard HeNe Lasers for more information.

    The HP-5501 laser tube is easily powered with a small HeNe "brick" for a 1 to 2 mW laser. The optimal current is between 3.0 and 3.5 mA. The connections are positive (with ballast resistor) to the terminal near the output lens, negative to the terminal on the side of the big glass bulb, and no connection to the terminal at the end which is a piezo for controlling cavity length. Using that for the negative connection may result in damage to the tube. The HP-5501 tube is constructed with a very stable resonator structure having an ultra-thick cylinder with a small bore and ends that are precision ground for the mirrors, which are held in place by springs (!!) - no adjustment possible other than for cavity length via the piezo element at the cathode-end. That cylinder is made of Zerodur, a special very low thermal expansion coeffient glass/ceramic developed by the Schott Glass. In fact, longitudinal mode cycling present with normal HeNe lasers is virtually non-existent in the 5501A. A stack of ALNICO ring magnets similar to magnetron magnets (though not quite as powerful) surround the tube covering about 2/3rds of the bore but not the whole length - the discharge can be seen at both ends. Aside from the huge solid cathode and funny construction, the tube is otherwise unremarkable as a HeNe laser goes. The output is less than 0.5 mW and there are ghost reflections/interference from the slightly tilted non-AR coated outer glass window through which the beam emerges.

    The HP-5501 tube is mounted inside the magnet assembly using a combination of RTV silicone and black rubbery stuff. It is possible to get it out non-destructively by removing the magnet retainer/mounting bracket at the output-end and then picking away at the adhesive/sealer pulling off magnets as they become free (protect the fragile tube) and then finally the bracket at the HR end. However, it's best to leave the tube snuggly in place to maintain alignment with the output optics. A photo is shown in HP-5501A Laser Tube Removed From Magnet and Output Optics Assembly.

    Someone had sent me a partial schematic of the reference PCB so I was able to determine where to connect power and take the signal output. After confirming that it did respond to a laser pointer, I powered up the HP-5501 tube and immediately got a nice beat signal on my scope of around 1.5 MHz - the difference in energy levels which translates to a difference in frequency caused by Zeeman splitting via the large cylindrical magnet surrounding the tube bore.

    But, for some as yet to be determined reason, when I went to reconnect it after doing the experiments below, I could not get any beating unless the gain of the detector was turned all the way up and there was no polarizer in the beam. And even then it was very noisy turning on and off at a 20 KHz or so rate. The laser appears to work fine otherwise. Then, after sitting on the shelf for about 6 months after this, I fired it up and immediately got a strong 1.9 MHz beat and it has continued to operate perfectly. Go figure. :) I still have not resolved this mystery. As far as I can determine, there isn't anything that is different to account for either its change of heart about cooperating or the much higher beat frequency. Now this tube was a reject. From later experiments, I have determined that the PZT on this tube doesn't work. But I have no idea how that would account for the inconsistent behvior.

    However, since it decided to start working again, I had the opportunity to put a voltage on the mystery terminal at the rear of the tube. Previous attempt to get any effect from this were inconclusive. This time, I used delayed sweep on the scope to increase the sensitivity to frequency changes and was able to detect a very small effect when varying the voltage from 0 to 30 VDC or so - probably less than 1 percent. However, it wasn't instantaneous as would be expected but appeared to lag behind the voltage change. Since this is inconsistent with the normal behavior of a piezo driver, there is still somewhat of a mystery as to what is inside.

    I obtained a really old HP-5500C laser, (which uses the same tube) to analyze. The driver is just a voltage controlled high voltage power supply module and the labeling on the printed circuit board is "PZT"! It runs on 15 VDC and provides 0 to 1.5 kV when fed a control voltage of 0 to 15 V relative to the negative input. The power supply for the HeNe laser tube itself is just a potted brick that runs on 15 VDC but it does have an enable input which must be tied to the positive input to turn it on. (In looking back on this referring to the HP-5501A schematic which I assume to be similar, it may not be an enable but a current control input.) In the HP-5500C, both these power supplies (no model or manafacturer available) run on the -15 VDC power supply so plus is actually ground. And, the wire color coding is confusing: Pink/red is -15 and black is ground.

    I also have an HP-5501A laser head and on this one, the HeNe laser power supply also runs on the -15 VDC supply, negative is violet and black is ground. There is a white/green control wire that appears to be driven to +15 VDC to turn on the laser but the circuitry isn't just a simple interlock. Applying power to the laser head is all that is required to turn on the laser and get it to "Tune" (as HP calls it) to the proper conditions for stable two-frequency operation.

    Another sample of the bare tube I obtained on eBay was comatose on arrival (lit up but no output). However, it came back to life over the course of about 12 hours. I wouldn't have expected soft-seal behavior from this very high quality hard-seal tube but it had been sitting on someone's shelf for over 15 years! There is no obvious getter so perhaps the cause was just slight outgassing of internal parts over this time period. Without being run periodically to clean it up, the result was enough contamination to prevent lasing.

    Anyone can take a commercial two-frequency laser tube and make it work. So, that's pretty boring. :)

    To see what I could do with a common HeNe laser tube, I dug up a typical 1 mW, 6 inch randomly polarized barcode scanner tube and connected it to the same brick power supply. Without any magnet, there was still a signal from the detector. It was varying widely in frequency as the tube heated, no doubt a byproduct of mode cycling. In actuality, this was due to the stray magnetic field of the HP tube which wasn't far away. With no magnetic field present, there were no detectable beats, as expected. (Where more than one longitudinal mode is present, there would be beats at a frequency determined by the mode spacing, c/(2*L), but this is about 1 GHz for these 6 inch tubes and not detectable by any equipment I have available. For multi-transverse mode tubes, there would also be beats at much lower frequencies but all these HeNe barcode scanner tubes operate TEM00.) The effect of the magnetic field was confirmed by moving a magnet in the vicinity of the tube which would generate all sorts of variable frequency beats with detectable effects as far as a foot or more away from the tube. Hey, could this be used to create a new sort of musical instrument - a laser based successor to the Theremin for the new millenia? :) If so, I declare first disclosure for patent purposes. :)

    Anyhow, to create a true Zeeman split two-frequency laser, I installed the HeNe laser tube inside a fairly powerful cylindrical magnet. If the tube would have fit inside magnetron ring magnets, I would have used a stack of them but this tube is a bit too wide. So, I used a magnet assembly that was supposedly for "flavoring" wine by placing the neck of a bottle of wine in the hole in the magnet and pouring the wine through the magnetic field - each polarity for two possible flavors. Yeah, right. :) I picked it up at a garage sale for 50 cents simply because the magnets seemed nice and powerful. The length of the magnet assembly was about 2 inches. I initially centered the tube in the magnet and used a bit of packing to keep it secure. A diagram of this rig is shown in: Demonstration of Two-Frequency HeNe Laser Using Zeeman Splitting.

    A polarizer (Polaroid sheet) was needed to obtain a consistent signal. Without a polarizer in the output beam, it was almost impossible to get any response on the oscilloscope though with careful adjustment of the beam position (and presumably intensity on the detector), a weak and somewhat unstable beat could be found. However, when a polarizer was added, there was a very strong beat signal almost continuously - at times more than 25% of the average power when measured with an analog (continuous) sensor. The orientation of the polarizer didn't appear to matter at all, just that it be present. (I did confirm that this wasn't simply a matter of needing some attenuation to stay within the dynamic range of the sensor.) And, any polarization preference the tube may have had totally disappeared once the tube was installed in the magnet. This implies that the polarization is no longer linear and probably consists of two circularly polarized beams with the Zeeman split frequency difference for each oscillating mode (based on the quantum mechanical properties of isolated gas atoms in a constant axial magnetic field). Mode cycling of the HeNe tube as it heated resulted in a periodic instability or momentary loss of signal.

    The result was similar to the behavior of the commercial two-frequency laser except for instability at times as it warmed up. Depending on the position of the magnet, the frequency could be varied from about 500 kHz to over 1 MHz with the highest frequency produced when the magnet was closest to the anode-end of the tube. An explanation for the frequency's dependence on position is that locating the magnet closer to the anode-end of the tube puts more of the magnetic field inside the short bore. The frequency still varied cyclicly by 10 percent or so as the tube heated due to mode competition. With a single magnet (about 1/2" thick) near the cathode, the weak field behavior could be produced with the beat frequency varying from DC to a few hundred kHz based on mode cycling.

    The beat frequency is about 1/3 to 2/3 that of the HP tube, which might be accounted for by a proportionally lower magnetic field compared to that assembly. However, in testing various tubes (see below), identical model tubes in identical positions resulted in a wide variation of beat frequencies. Even repeating what I thought were identical experiments at different times resulted in widely varying results so there's more going on than can be accounted for by the simple explanations of Zeeman split two-frequency lasers I've found so far.

    I seem to have lucked out with the first tube I tried and have now tested a few others. It would appear that for best stability in beat frequency, the tube should be a "flipper" - one that oscillates single (longitudinal) mode at one polarization and then abruptly switches polarization but still remains single mode as the modes cycle during warmup. It could be that flippers are more symmetric without or something. When more than one mode is oscillating as with most non-flippers where modes gradually come and go, the beating is not a clean waveform but a superposition of beating of the two (or more) modes:

    It is quite straightforward to further stabilize this rig with a heater and temperature feedback to control cavity length. This should result in a system which produces a clean and highly stable signal with specs similar to commercial units. As a qick experiment, I did just that with the last tube in the HP-5501A magnet/waveplate assembly. The feedback had to use the output rather than the waste beam since only there are the Zeeman modes converted to linear polarized modes. So, an additional non-polarizating beamsplitter was needed so that the output beam could also be input to an optical receiver for display on a frequency counter and oscilloscope. The waveplates were adjusted as best I could by feel so the Zeeman modes were linearly polarized and orthogonal at the output. Baiscally, this was trial and error until the amplitude of the mode changes seemed to be a maximum and balanced. Stabiilzation was then trivial using the controller described in the section: Sam's Home-Built SP-117 Compatible HeNe Laser. The tuning knob could then be used to adjust the frequency. As a practical matter, almost any waveplate orientations would result in enough mode variation for locking, but the maximum tuning range required reasonably balanced modes. There's no doubt that this will also work with any of the other non-HP magnets, but then the 1/4 and 1/2 waveplates would need to be added.

    However, there's one strange characteristic of this setup compared to a "real" HP Zeeman laser: With the 5501A and 5517C that I've checked, when the beat frequency is present, the actual frequency is a maximum when the modes are equal, then gradually goes down on either side and abruptly disappears. With the "Frankenstein" laser, the beat frequency is a minimum when the modes are equal. The only obvious difference would seem to be that the cavity length is a bit shorter - around 5-1/2 inches compared to between 6 and 6-1/2 inches. But there are many other parameters that might be significant. For example, it could be a different gas fill ratio or the use of pure isotopic He and/or Ne. Interesting. Just when I thought I had an idea of how this works, another mystery! :)

    However, it's possible that I had the phase of the feedback reversed so it was locking on the opposite slopes of the gain curves. If this tube produced a beat signal for the entire mode sweep cycle as some do with modest magnetic fields, then it might lock either way, but would end up at the wrong place. Where the beat only appears for part of the mode sweep cycle, it could still lock at the wrong place, but then there would be no beat.

    Using an electromagnetic solenoid instead of the permanent magnet for these experiments would permit dynamic control the beat frequency. In fact, a phase locked loop (PLL) could be used to lock the output to a reference oscillator. Since even with a permanent magnet, the beat frequency varies slightly with the position of the mode on the gain curve, once the range is known, phase-locking to a reference frequency would result in a highly stabilized laser. Though, depending on application, stablizing the mode position on the gain curve may be more desirable. The latter is what is done in all the HP/Agilent metrology lasers.

    I leave this and countless other variations as exercises for the student. :)

    U.S. Patent #4,672,618: Laser Stabilization Servo System provides a good introduction to the HeNe two-frequency laser and discusses techniques for stabilization with some references. This would be a good starting point free of too much hairy math. :)

    More on the theory behind the axial Zeeman-split two-frequency HeNe laser can be found in the sections starting with: Hewlett-Packard HeNe Lasers. Don't worry, no hairy math. :) But the explanation for why the beat only appears for a portion of the mode sweep cycle is explained there. Also included are some plots of the Zeeman mode cycle behavior with warmup and how it relates to the Zeeman-split neon gain curves.

    Two-Frequency Interferometer Laser Tester

    There were a couple of motivations for building this. I wanted to confirm that the horizontally polarized component of the beam was actually the lower frequency, F1, for the HP-5517 lasers. It was. I also wanted a way of easily monitoring the output when replacing a tube and adjusting the waveplates. And most importantly, I needed an excuse to play with some of the HP interferometer components I had accumulated! :)

    The tester is a slab of butcher block (in leu of a real optical breadboard!), an HP-10706A plane mirror interferometer, an HP-10780A optical receiver, and a light-weight front surface mirror glued to a loudspeaker woofer on a crude wooden kinematic mount. :) The laser being tested is simply placed in position where the return beam is centered on the optical receiver and clamped in place. Clamps sold separately. :-)

    The setup is shown in Diagram of Two-Frequency Interferometer Laser Tester and the actual painted and hand-rubbed apparatus in Photo of Two-Frequency Interferometer Laser Tester. The laser is a tired old HP-5517D outputting about 120 µW, somewhat below the minimum HP spec of 180 µW, but perfectly usable. The beat frequency with the mirror stationary is 3.59 MHz for this laser.

    I was concerned that the thin mirror and loudspeaker wouldn't retain the mirror surface figure adequately flat and perpendicular to the beam axis but that doesn't seem to be an issue if there is enough laser power. So, in-spec lasers work fine. But the tired worn laser required around 20 minutes or so after locking for there to be a stable correct beat frequency through the interferometer, though it was always correct directly out of the laser (or at least much sooner). Before then, the detected frequency would gradually climb from around 700 kHz and eventually settle in at the correct value (3.7 MHz for this laser). That 700 kHz is a pure amplitude modulation of the beam, as determined with a silicon photodiode (Non-HP) detector without a polarizer. So, it's definitely optical and not electronic interference. For this relatively weak laser, the bogus signal starts out with a higher amplitude than the beat frequency signal but gradually declines and eventually nearly disappears. As it does so, the beat frequency signal is detected over a larger fraction of the time. A signal around 700 kHz is also present with other 5517 lasers coming and going seemingly at random and at about the same amplitude (at least for one laser I tested). But since the beat frequency output was over twice that of the weak laser, it was always high enough to not be a problem (at least for what I was doing). The origin turned out to be in the laser tube itself, probably a result of plasma oscillations due to its negative resistance having increased from use in conjunction with the excessively long wire between the ballast resistor and tube anode. I determined the cause by trying another HeNe laser power supply with adjustable current and ballast resistance. Increasing the current by about 0.3 mA eliminated the oscillation entirely, as did adding a 10K ohm ballast resistor spliced in close to the tube anode. Adding anode ballast resistance near the power supply had little effect. A cathode ballast resistor would probably work also but is not an option in these lasers since the cathode of the laser tube and the heater coil for thermal tuning are electrically connected inside the tube and must be near ground potential. So, I installed a 20K ohm resistor an inch from where the anode wire enters the rubbery tube potting compound. The 20K ohm value was to be conservative. The additional voltage drop - about 70 V - shouldn't annoy the power supply very much as it only represents another quarter watt. I had originally used the higher current power supply approach (which is the same one I use when upgrading these lasers for chronic sputtering syndrome). But then went back to the standard HP supply with the additional 20K ohm ballast resistance.

    Before discovering the bogus signal and its cause, and fixing it, I suspected the thin mirror. So I glued another somewhat thicker higher quality mirror on top of the original one in an effort to eliminate the warmup problem. (Attempting to remove and replace the thin mirror seemed likely to damage the speaker.) The mass is perhaps 50 percent higher but the thing still works well enough. That reduced the time required for the beat frequency of the weak laser to settle down to the correct value, probably by slightly increasing the beat frequency amplitude relative to the 700 kHz. But the additional ballast resistance (or the higher tube current) totally eliminated the problem.

    When driven with a sinusoidal waveform, It will easily run at 50 or 60 Hz with sufficient amplitude to result in a 50 percent Doppler shift in the beat frequency. While aligning the moving mirror required some care, it was not at all critical compared to aligning laser cavity mirrors. Once the return beam was incident on the optical receiver, some adjustment to center it while watching the Beam Indicator LED. This could be further optimized by maximizing the voltage on the "Beam Monitor" test point. Higher laser power also results in less critical alignment.

    A buffer amplifier consisting of a dual power op-amp (TDA0372) configured for unity voltage gain was added to drive the loudspeaker since its input impedance of 8 ohms would strain the output of the function generator. This provides at least 5 V p-p which is more than sufficient to drive the loudspeaker over its full range of about 6 mm (at low frequency). The frequency counter with a 0.1 sec gate time and fast update easily shows the frequency variation with a 1 Hz input from the function generator. The scope is useful for both showing cleanliness of the beat frequency waveform as well as the beat frequency percentage shift at higher loudspeaker drive frequencies like 30 Hz.

    Using a triangle wave at slow enough speed for the frequency counter to register (2 Hz, 1/10th second gate) the offset on the forward and reverse stroke are easily displayed. But the loudspeaker is far from linear over much of its range of travel! The scope clearly shows the period changing based on the mirror direction and velocity even at this low speed. At 30 Hz and moderate amplitude, the 50 percent variation in beat frequency is quite dramatic.

    And nothing has flown apart - yet. :)

    The latest version includes a genuine HP-5508A Measurement Display and my simple educational version, Sam's Interferometer Measurement Display 1 (SG-MD1). See Photo of Two-Frequency Interferometer Laser Tester 2.

    Installing a Common HeNe Laser Tube in an HP 5517 or 5501B

    The original HP/Agilent HeNe laser tube used in these lasers is custom made, rather special, and very expensive. For more information, see the sections starting with: Hewlett-Packard/Agilent HeNe Lasers and in particular: HP/Agilent 5517A/B/C/D.

    OK, so the first question one might ask is "Why would anyone in their right mind want to do this?" :) The quick answer is: "There are many HP laser bodies out there with marginal or dead tubes but perfectly good electronics, and these can be had for next to nothing.". Originally, I was planning on simply installing a conventional well behaved random polarized HeNe laser tube with no magnet and then would have a stabilized HeNe laser for little cost. After all, most of the work has already been done. It's true that the special HP tubes have an internal heater which results in faster response, but I doubt this would matter given the slow sampling speed of the LCD switch.

    However, what may make more sense, and is actually easier in some ways, would be to retain the magnet assembly and only replace the glass HeNe laser tube and add an external heater. The result would then be a fully functional two-frequency Zeeman laser. Even if it didn't quite meet HP/Agilent specifications (for lifetime at least), such a laser could be very useful for educational purposes if nothing else. And for the same reason people climb mountains, "because it's possible". Well almost the same reason! :)

    My plan is to use a six inch tube like the Typical Uniphase HeNe Laser Tube from a Barcode Scanner. This one is from JDS Uniphase, but Melles Griot and Siemens (now LASOS) have similar tubes, and all are compatible with the HP/Agilent HeNe laser power supply. The heater will consist of about 50 feet of #32 wire wound bifiler style on the outside of the tube. The tube+heater will be installed in place of a dead HP 5501A tube in a 5501A magnet assembly. And from previous experiments, I already know that this arrangement can be stabilized using my home-built controller.

    The heater should have a cold resistance of around 8 ohms - same as most HP lasers. I don't know what type of wire is used in HP laser tube heaters, but if it were copper, the set-point temperature would have to be in the vicinity of 100 °C to obtain the factor of 1.285 with respect to cold resistance. My heater isn't going to get that hot, so the factor will be smaller, but hopefully the adjustment pot on the controller PCB has enough range. Even though the thermal response time of the Uniphase tube with external heater will be much slower, I don't anticipate any real problems in making this work. Famous last words!

    Well, it does work, sort of. Preparing the laser tube was straightforward using 50 feet of #32 wire for the heater resulted in a resistance of about 8.5 ohms. The result is shown in Replacement HP HeNe Laser Tube With Heater Using Barcode Scanner Tube. A combination of modified pill bottles, electrical tape, and rubber wedges were used to mount the tube inside the 5501A magnet assembly. It was necessary to add a negative lens to the low divergence tube to convert it into a high divergence tube. (This was actually the lens originally removed from a similar tube which was required to be high divergence in the barcode scanner. Otherwise, the beam diameter at the HP beam expander was so narrow that the final beam was only about 2 mm in diameter so (1) I wasn't entirely sure it would reliably hit the photodiodes inside the beam sampler and (2) it was difficult to align the interferometer for a reliable signal. In hind-sight I should have used a high divergence tube to start. No hig deal - the lens is held on with a piece of plastic tubing. With the high divergence (8 mR), the beam is large enough at the input to the beam expander to produce a 5 or 6 mm diameter collimated beam from the laser with most of the power making it through. It's still not really as wide as wouild normally be the case with the beam expander aperture actually cutting off the edge of the beam, but close enough for now. Another minor glitch had to do with feet. Yes, feet! :) Only one of the two base castings on the ends of the 5501A tube magnet assembly would fit into the 5517D case, so the casting at the other end had to be removed. (Remarkably, though I suppose not that surprising, the hole spacing in the castings is the same for the 5501A and 5517/5501B.) This didn't make for the most stable arrangement in the World during testing and adjustment, with the tube assembly balancing on one set of feet! See Replacement Tube Assembly Installed in 5517 Laser - Initial. For a more permanent setup, I added spacers, nuts, and washers so that the two base castings would be at the correct spacing for all the holes to line up. And, 3 Nylon screws to center the cathode-end of the tube. (Shifting the position of the optics assembly provides adjustment at the other end.) See Replacement Tube Assembly Installed in 5517 Laser - Final. Of course, using the actual magnet and optics in its mount from a 5501B or 5517B/C/D laser would eliminate the mechanical issues, but I haven't taken one of those apart yet.

    Here are some of the more significant issues:

    Removing the glass tube intact from a 5501B or 5517 tube assembly that conforms to the diagram above - all those in the small case - is the sort of thing that anyone in their right mind would only attempt at most once, unless appropriate noxious chemicals are available to dissolve the potting compound without damaging anything else (except that they likely will also rot your internal organs). Naturally, this represented a perfect challenge! The result is shown in Major Components of HP/Agilent 5517B/C/D or 5501B Tube Assembly. This one is actually from a 5517B laser. Of course, if there was no desire to save the original glass tube, this could have been done using any technique that would work! I did later remove the intact glass tube from a 5517D. I'll spare you the suspense - it appears identical to that of the 5517B in all the physical parameters that can be determined without going inside. :) For the 5517A, 5518A, and 5519A/B, removing the tube intact using physical means alone will be much more difficult, if not impossible, since the outer casting is a single piece with no front and back sections to separate, which makes access at least a little bit easier. The only instance I've heard of anyone doing this successfully on was on a 5517A where they used a rotary tool (e.g., Dremel) with a cutoff wheel to slice the outer casting lengthwise.

    Next, I installed a similar 6" barcode scanner tube in the 5517B magnet. The 5517B laser normally has a REF frequency of 1.9 to 2.4 MHz, but with the standard tube, it produced a maximum beat frequency of only about 1.3 MHz. Matching of the magnetic field to the active discharge region of the tube is also critical to maximizing the REF frequency. While this may have been an issue with the 5501A magnet, it was quite well matched in the 5517B magnet. So, I was about to conclude that a modified tube is essential in achieving a higher REF frequency. But then I had a thought: I had selected both these 6" tubes for high output power. Suppose I could adjust the output power somehow, which in effect would be adjusting the gain (or equivalently, cavity loss)? Two possibilities came to mind on how to do this: (1) Run the tube on reverse polarity to cause sputtering at the anode-end mirror (now acting as the cathode) which would increase losses at the mirror or (2), adjust the mirror alignment to be slightly sub-optimal. I first tried (1) since I didn't like the idea of installing a misaligned tube. (Not that I liked the idea of degrading a tube permanently any better but...) However, all that stuff about ruining tubes in a few minutes with reverse polarity is highly overrated, at least for some tubes. After 10 minutes, all that had happened was that that output had gone up from 0.7 to over 0.9 mW. Now, this was probably just the normal effect of warmup, but output power was clearly not declining precipitously as I had expected.

    But (2) worked very well with the following very approximately results:

                        Beat Frequency
        Output Power   Tube 1    Tube 2
      ------------------------------------
          1.3  mW      1.3 MHz
          0.9  mW      1.5 MHz   1.6 MHz
          0.75 mW      1.6 MHz   2.0 MHz
          0.6  mW      1.7 MHz   2.2 MHz
          0.5  mW      1.9 MHz   2.4 MHz
          0.4  mW      2.2 MHz
    

    The Output Power is directly from the tube after appropriate mirror misalignment. The output power of the laser would be about 30 percent lower due to the beam expander, waveplate, and beam sampler losses. The Beat Frequency is the maximum value meausred during mode sweep, which generally occurs close to where the laser would lock. So, the tube that had an output with optimal mirror alignment that was lower, produced a higher output power for any given beat frequency. This is the tube I shall use to build my SG-5517B laser. :)

    Eventually, I may do some more careful measurements, but this seems to open up a very interesting possibility: Build a single type of tube assembly that can be tuned to the desired REF/split frequency, even after installation. It seems like this could certainly be varied from a 5517A to at least a 5517C, and perhaps even a 5517D, by adding a single screw adjuster to the rear mirror mount! It would also allow periodic tunups to maintain the same output power and REF/split frequency as the tube ages.

    I then realigned Tube 2, above, for maximum power (whicn ended up being about 1 mW after warmup) and added a bracket to the cathode-end mirror mount with a screw that applies sideways pressure to the mirror mount stem. Since it only needs to reduce output power, only a single screw should suffice. This was installed in the 5517B magnet assembly shown above, whose previous tenant had been removed, and that was installed in the original 5517B body from which it came. See Replacement Tube Assembly With Adjustable REF Frequency Installed in 5517B Laser and Closeup of Bracket Attached to Mirror Mount to Adjust Alignment. It is now possible to adjust this laser to meet the REF frequency specifications for the 5517A (or 5501B), 5517B, or 5517C, while still maintaining adequate output power. It won't make it to a 5517D though at any useful output power, if at all.

    And, I did take apart another 5517B tube/magnet/optics assembly where the tube was known to already be physically broken. But I couldn't just take a wrecking ball to it because I did want the internal organs intact - especially the mirrors for analysis. However, that was much quicker nonetheless.

    So what does affect the Zeeman beat frequency and which of these is likely to be used by HP/Agilent to control it?:

    From the above list, it would seem that options are quite limited and only the cavity loss adjustment via the OC mirror reflectivity is known to have a large effect on Zeeman beat frequency without affecting other parameters that are believed to be similar or identical for all these lasers.

    It would be best to use semi-custom tubes to achieve the proper difference frequency without torturing the tube. :) And even then, it's not clear if the other specifications including required long term stability could be achieved using the external heater. But it would certainly be adequate for educational purposes, both in terms of student projects to do the installation and analyze the behavior, as well as for general studies in laser based metrology systems.

    Whether the approach of installing a standard HeNe laser tube can be used to refurbish HP/Agilent lasers (at least 5501Bs, 5517As, and 5517Bs) at reasonable labor cost is still not clear. The rather short life expectancy of most conventional HeNe laser tubes compared to genuine HP/Agilent tubes is one major issue. However, I am investigating the possibility of offering to rebuild 5501B and 5517B lasers with all the risks spelled out up front. One option that partially deals with the short life expectancy is to charge a much lower price for a "recharge" when the replacement tube reaches end-of-life since much of the hard work will already have been done. Comments are welcome. Please contact me via the Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Email Links Page.

    Transverse Zeeman Stabilized HeNe Lasers

    Several companies have produced transverse Zeeman stabilized HeNe lasers based on PLL control of the Zeeman frequency. With this approach, a moderate transverse magnetic field (hundreds of gauss) produces a beat frequency of a few hundred kHz which varies slightly as a function of mode position on the neon gain curve and can thus be locked to a reference frequency.

    I have not found an easy to understand (either for you or for me!) explanation of the transverse Zeeman effect resulting in the beat frequency. So, here is my attempt, which may include numerous errors and misinterpretations but here goes: The beat frequency results from a combination of the natural birefringence of the mirrors (due to coating properties and orientation) and the magnetically induced birefringence of the plasma. Mode pulling is responsible for the change in beat frequency as the modes move through the gain curve:

    The following is from "Frequency Stabilized Lasers: Optical Feedback Effects" by N. Brown, Applied Optics, vol. 20, no. 21, November 1, 1981:

    "A scheme for stabilizing a laser in a transverse magnetic field was first reported by Morris et. al. in 1975. Umeda et. al. have since described a similar system. For this experiment the 2-mW laser tube was furnished with sixteen U-shaped permanent magnets. These were arranged above and below the tube to produce a transverse magnetic field of ~0.05 T along two-thirds of the tube's length. The two longitudinal modes of the tube then collapsed into a single mode over ~300 MHz of the laser tuning range. Although this mode is a single longitudinal mode of the laser cavity, it has two orthogonally polarized components, which oscillate at slightly different optical frequencies because of the magnetically induced birefringence of the plasma. This frequency difference depends on the magnetic field strength, the orientation of the field with respect to the birefringence of the mirrors, and the tuning of the cavity. It is the latter effect which can be used to control the frequency of the laser."

    So the key question becomes: How does the transverse magnetic field force the two othogonally polarized modes normally separated by the FSR to coexist only separated by the much smaller frequency offset resulting from the birefringence of the mirrors which may in fact be very close to zero?

    Here are some preliminary comments from Professor Siegman in response to my posting on alt.lasers:

    (From: A. E. Siegman" (siegman@stanford.edu).)

    "Zeeman effects in He-Ne lasers, though rich and interesting, are just messy enough to be difficult to summarize using ASCII characters only; and the whole subject dropped out of fashion long enough ago (several decades or more) that I've not kept up to date on them.

    The physics involved is not all that arcane, though it can get messy. In essence, you have multiple overlapping Zeeman-split atomic transitions or amplification lines that are nearly but not exactly degenerate; a laser cavity with multiple axial modes and almost always some residual polarization selectivity; inhomogeneous hole burning effects within each line; cross saturation between lines; frequency pulling effects between lines and modes; and mode competition (a.k.a. gain competition) between the cavity modes. Written that way it does sound pretty arcane, but it's more that each effect is individually not that complex, but when you write 'em all out it just does get messy.

    I was going to suggest Sargent, Scully and Lamb as a good (but still messy) discussion of the subject, but when I looked on my home office bookshelf I found instead an old copy of C. C. B. Garret's slim 1967 McGraw-Hill book on "Gas Lasers" (stamped inside the front cover with "Withdrawn and sold by Staffordshire County Library"; and with the Preface starting with a quote, "Hinc lucem et poscula sacra . . . MOTTO OF CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY"; maybe your Latin is better than mine.)

    Anyway, it has a lot of quite clear and readable and largely non- mathematical discussions of gas laser mechanism from a 1967 viewpoint, and on pp. 117-122 a pretty nice discussion of "Magnetic Field Effects", including good references to the literature of that era. If you can find a cheap copy on amazon or Abe Books, you might like it."

    So, I'll be searching for that text!

    But accepting the two modes in close proximity, their precise offset is affected by mode pulling, which shifts the exact frequency away from that predicted by the classic mode location depending on where they are located compared to the gain peak. So, as the modes drift through the "super" gain curve, the beat frequency will change. I've observed 10 to 20 percent but the exact amount depends on the specific tube/magnet combination and may be much larger.

    Since the difference frequency is determined by physical processes that are only weakly affected by environmental factors (including external magnetic fields), the result can be a highly stable optical frequency, potentially much better than that of the common dual polarization mode stabilized HeNe laser.

    There has been considerable research done on this phenomenon back in the glory days of HeNe lasers. :) Two interesting papers are:

    The Model 220 from "Laboratory for Science" (now out of business) included a PLL synthesizer (with thumb-wheel BCD switches to set the reference frequency) and another PLL to lock the Zeeman frequency to the reference. See the section: Laboratory for Science Stabilized HeNe Lasers, which includes additional references.

    A transverse magnetic field splits the frequency of the horizontal and vertical polarized modes so that a polarizer in the beam at 45 degrees results in the strongest and cleanest beat frequency signal from a photodiode detector. If the polarizer is aligned with either mode, there is no beat. For this laser tube with the specific magnets used, the beat frequency varies between about 150 and 200 kHz during mode sweep and any given frequency is unique with respect to position on the gain curve (subject to the conditions described below) so it should be relatively easy to phase lock the beat to a reference as is done in the Laboratory for Science Model 220 laser. So, whip up a CD4046 PLL with signal generator reference and the Zeeman beat being the VCO. Then, use the error signal to control the heater. A somewhat simpler alternative with possibly slightly lower stability is to compare the output of the F-V converter with a reference in an integrator, and use that to control the heater.

    Transverse Zeeman HeNe Laser Experiments

    I'm not sure that I'll ever get around to actually building a transverse Zeeman stabilized HeNe laser, but I have done some experiments on characterizing the beat frequency versus mode position and magnetic field strength/configuration of the tube used in the SP-117 compatible mode stabilized HeNe laser. The primary reasons this tube was selected are that (1) it has a suitable (nearly optimal) length, (2) it is already set up for polarized mode sampling from the waste beam, and (3) it is conveniently mounted. :)

    Experiments such as these can be quite fascinating when one considers how without any special parts or equipment, it is possible to control and analyze the very fundamental aspects of laser operation. Everything below can be done using a common barcode scanner HeNe laser, a few bits of optics (beamsplitter, polarizer, photodiodes), and less a hand full of common electronic parts. Any mediocre oscilloscope can be used to display the beat frequency. The most basic of data acquisition systems can be used since all the relevant signals are slowly varying.

    Experimental setup:

    See Setup for Transverse Zeeman HeNe Laser Experiments. This is somewhat between a functional block diagram and schematic as some details are omitted for clarity. The four channel signals feed a $25 data acquisition widget from DATAQ attached to a 10 year old notebook PC. A set of transimpedance amps were added to the existing mode detection photodiodes monitoring the waste beam to boost the amplitude for channels 1 and 2. A stop with a 0.5 mm hole minimizes bore light reaching the photodiodes and blocks backreflections from the beamsplitter and photodiodes. Initially, a supposedly non-polarizing beamsplitter provided the input for both total power and beat frequency from the output beam. But this was introducing some anomalies in total power (more below) as well as reducing the amplitude of the beat frequency input signal. So later, a summer was added to compute total power from the two modes, and the beat was taken directly from the output beam (as the diagram shows). Total power is monitored on channel 3. For the beat frequency, a photodiode is mounted behind a polarizer oriented at 45 degrees to the natural axis of the polarized modes - and the magnetic field in this case. That angle produces the strongest and cleanest signal. It is AC-coupled to a Frequency to Voltage (F-V) converter consisting of a high speed voltage comparator, retriggerable monostable, and low pass filter. Gain and offset adjustments enable the limited beat frequency excursion to match the voltage range of channel 4 of the data acquisition system.

    For most of the experiments, a U-shaped aluminum frame (one half of a small Bud Minibox!) was used to provide a way of mounting multiple magnets on each side of a HeNe laser tube or laser head. This allowed for easy installation and removal as well as changing the field orientation or offset, without disturbing anything else. The separation is about 2-1/4 inches. In all cases, magnets on both sides face the same way with all South poles on one side and all North poles on the other side toward the tube. For all but the test with a super strong magnetic field, the magnets used are made of ferrite, about 2" by 5/8" by 1/4", magnetized N-S on the large faces. Their strength is estimated to be several hundred gauss.

    Experimental results

    (A collection of the sequence of plots with increasing magnetic field of the same orientation may be found in Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior Versus Transverse Magnetic Field Strength. This will open up a single new window for your viewing convenience. The field strength numbers are arbitrary but are guaranteed to increase monotonically! :) Individual plots (including all those in the PDF) are linked within the text, below.)

    First, a set of three ferrite magnets (A, C, and E) was placed on each side of the tube. The 2" x 5/8" (H x W) magnets were spaced about 5/8" apart. Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Mode Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field shows the behavior of this tube with respect to the polarization modes and total output power. The four segments of data (in addition to those with no field) correspond to the field being aligned with each of the two primary mode polarization axes and each of the two polarities (N and S). With no field, the modes are almost perfectly symmetric with the orientation of the polarization changing smoothly between P and S. But with the field applied, the modes become moderately polarized. Note how the frequency of the ripples has doubled. The mode amplitudes continue to change smoothly without flipping but they no longer want to change very much from a polarization determined by the orientation of the magnetic field. This doubling is consistent with the mode splitting where all modes appear in both oreintations. Curiously however, the polarization preference is opposite what it would be if a very strong magnetic field were applied in the same direction to cause the tube to become linearly polarized. Varying the strength of the field strength will be shown to produce some very interesting behavior.

    Before examining the effects of various magnetic fields more closely, as a reference, refer to Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 HeNe Laser Tube During Warmup (Detail). This shows a few cycles of the mode sweep with no magnetic field. For this length tube, the P-Mode (red) and S-Mode (blue) plots represent the two dominant longitudinal modes. There may be some low level additional modes contributing to these when near the peaks and the center of the gain curve, but for the purposes of this discussion, they can be ignored. So, each mode cycle here has a period of 2 FSRs or a change in tube length of 1 wavelength at 633 nm since there a mode in between. And from one peak to an adjacent peak (red to blue or blue to red) is 1 FSR. Since the modes also differ in frequency by 1 FSR which in the case of this tube is 643 MHz, there can be no low frequency beat.

    Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-3) shows the frequency of the beat obtained from a photodiode sampling the output beam with the three sets of magnets. This is the identical magnet configuration as in the plot with the multiple magnet orientations, above. The magnetic field in this case is aligned with the P-Polarization (red) axis. The brown curve is the output of the F-V converter with the approximate calibration in kHz shown on the left.

    For this peculiar double frequency mode behavior, the peaks of the P-Polarization (red) correspond to the two modes being equally spaced on either side of the (original) gain curve and maximum total power. Similarly, the peaks of the S-Polarization (blue) correspond to a single mode at the peak of the (original) gain curve and minimum total power. (This is similar to what would happen with a conventional polarized laser where adjacent modes of the same polarization are 1 FSR apart rather than 2 FSRs as is the case with a random polarized laser.) For both those cases, the frequency is approximately in the middle of its range, most rapidly increasing or decreasing, respectively. However, the beat frequency is a minimum or maximum when the polarized mode amplitudes are changing most rapidly. This does NOT correspond to where the modes are equally spaced on either side of the gain curve nor where a single mode is centered on the gain curve peak, but it is roughly half way in between.

    See Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior Versus Mode Position on Gain Curve (Hor-N-3). The purple modes on the little gain curves are referenced back to the mode locations with no magnetic field. With the field, the distinction between the P-Mode and S-Mode becomes fussy since the laser is operating in the funny single mode regime. The fat red and blue bars show the actual contributions from the P-Mode and S-Mode with the magnetic field.

    The relationship of the beat frequency to the phase of the mode amplitudes remains the same regardless of which of the four magnet orientations are used (from the first plot), lagging the P-Polarization by about 90 degrees and leading the S-Polarization by about 90 degrees. For example, Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Ver-N-3) has the magnetic field at 90 degrees compared to the previous plot. As can be seen, the various amplitudes and frequency excursion do change slightly.

    The shape and amplitude of the total power waveform in these and the following two plots may not be quite correct due in part to some peculiarity of the supposedly non-polarizing beamsplitter used to split the total power and beat frequency beams so it may actually have a slightly smaller ripple than shown. That beamsplitter definitely has enough of a polarizing effect to be annoying (probably about 10 percent at 633 nm). I originally suspected this because the shape changes noticeably when using the transmitted or reflected beam for the total power photodiode. For all subsequent plots, I added a summer to the mode op-amps to calculate the total power from them rather than to measure it separately. The gains were equalized so the the measured total power (without the beamsplitter) and the computed total power were the same.

    I also tried orienting the same sets of magnets at 45 degrees with respect to the primary mode axes. This resulted in little or no beating over any part of the mode cycle regardless of output polarizer orientation.

    Later, I repeated the same experiment with only 2 magnets on each side of the tube. With this setup, no matter how they were arranged, there was a detectable beat over only a very limited part of the mode cycle, two small to be of use and rather boring. We return to this later.

    So, then I went to a larger number of similar magnets - 4 magnets (A, B, C, and E, equally spaced about 3/16" apart. They were individually taped in place on the aluminum frame so as not to jump away, as they tended to do being oriented with like poles pairs repelling each other on the sides. I took data in the original (Hor-N) orientation. The frequency excursion increased by about 15 or 20 percent, but the center frequency was virtually unchanged. This is shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-4). Note the increased excursion of the frequency and also that the two mode amplitudes are much closer to being equal with slightly less ripple. The scale factors for all three sets of plots are approximately the same.

    Next, I squeezed 5 magnets side-by-side touching (A-E) with the results shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-5). The modes are closer to being overlapping. The beat frequency excursion has increased by a few percent (note frequency scale change to make it fit on this and the next two plots!).

    Now a little wiggle or dip has developed on the rising edge of each cycle of the frequency waveform. With 3 and 4 magnets, that was just a momentary reduction in slope. Here, it actually reverses direction. That also coincides with the point of smallest beat signal amplitude. During the first few cycles of warmup, the signal drops out momentarily around that point and for a stronger magnetic field, the signal becomes too small or non-existent on every cycle. That dipsydoodle behavior is also mentioned in the Laboratory for Science Model 220 manual as a possible place the PLL feedback loop will get stuck (if the particular tube/magnet combination has it). Their solution is to manually open the feedback loop, allow the tube to warm up or cool off for one half of a mode cycle, then close the feedback loop so it locks on the large falling slope. Well, whatever works. :)

    Adding a sixth pair of magnets next to the others had no significant effect. But, placing an additional magnet on each side cross-wise at the center of the stack of 5 magnets (A-E with F on taped on top of them) did allow the modes to completely overlap as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-6). The ripples have decreased in amplitude significantly. I'm beginning to be convinced that the size and relative amplitude of the ripples is affected to some extent by the uniformity of the magnetic field.

    Pushing the magnet array slightly to one side (which must increase the field seed inside the bore) forced the modes to start to move apart, continuing in the same direction as the field increased as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-7). The dip has become larger but not much else has changed. Then, pushing the magnets further to one side results in the ripple becoming larger as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-8). And, the beat frequency can be seen to disappear twice each time around the location of the now very pronounced dip.

    As expected, adding a 7th set of magnets pushed the modes still further apart but interestingly, the beat frequency now does not disappear entirely at any time but does have some serious wiggles and a much greater excursion within the wiggles as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-9) (note another scale change). However, observing the waveform on an oscilloscope reveals that the time waveform during that transition region of rapidly varying frequeniecs is not a pure tone but a mixture of at least two frequencies.

    Then, removing the magnets from the frame altogether so they could be placed closer together pushed the modes even further apart to the point where the laser is almost totally polarized but now the beat does disappear for about 30 percent of the mode cycle as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-10).

    And, for completeness, I went back and moved the magnets 8 inches apart to reduce the field to a very low value. I used the 6 magnet array for convenience since at this large distance, the field seen by the bore of the tube will be quite uniform regardless of the specific magnet configuration. The result is shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-1). Note how the modes have just begun to flip into the double frequency behavior. There is no beat except for a glitch of random height just where the modes would have crossed if no field was present. Increasing the field slightly by moving the magnets 5 inches apart results in a beat for part of the mode cycle as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N-2).

    There's also one other quirk worth mentioning: Without a magnetic field, both modes tend to increase in power during warmup, along with the ripples, and of course the total power. But here, after the first minute, the P Mode and its ripples are virtually constant in amplitude, or slightly decreasing. In fact, if allowed to run out to 20 or 30 minutes, the envelope of the P Mode goes down by another 5 percent while the S-Mode remains constant.

    And I'm sure you were wondering what would happen with an even more powerful magnetic field. You were, weren't you? :-) With the single pair of super strength rare earth magnets that will convert a random polarized tube to a linearly polarized tube, there was absolutely no detectable beat frequency. (The orientation was similar to F but on a frame that produced a separation of only about 1-1/2 inches.) The lack of any beat isn't surprising considering that when linearly polarized, the amplitude of the required orthogonally polarized mode is very close to zero. See Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Mode Behavior in a Strong Transverse Magnetic Field (Hor-N). So, there's a range of magnetic field strength and configuration where there is any beat, and an even smaller range where the beat is present during the entire mode cycle as in these plots.

    However, note from the plot that although the S-Mode (blue) is quite close to 0, the P-Mode (red) and total power are rather lumpy. Of course, this is probably not the ideal magnetic field configuration to force linear polarization being only a single pair of magnets. And, the polarization ratio is probably only about 50:1, not the 500:1 or 1000:1 of a normal linearly polarized HeNe laser.

    In the future, I intend to return to these experiments filling in some of the missing pieces with better control of magnetic field. Perhaps, I'll find a nice 10 ton electromagnet on eBay. :)

    Summary of Zeeman beat observations

    So, here is the behavior for this specific laser tube, a Spectra-Physics 088, serial number blah blah :), outputting about 1.4 mW, random polarized. The cavity length is such that normally, only two modes will oscillate simultaneously except when a mode is very close to gain center. Then, there may be a small contribution from two modes out on the tails of the gain curve but this can be ignored. The mode spacing is nominally 643 MHz.

    For the following, refer to the fabulous PDF which combines the mode plots in Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior Versus Transverse Magnetic Field Strength. This will open up a single new window for your viewing convenience. The field strength numbers are arbitrary but are guaranteed to increase monotonically! :) And recall that the ripple frequency with a magnetic field is double that of the normal mode sweep shown in the first plot. The horizontal scale factors are not all quite equal on these plots, but they are fairly close on the first pair so that provides a good comparison of no field and moderate field behavior with respect to ripple. And, it really doesn't take much of a magnetic filed to destroy that wonderful symmetry in the first plot!

    Stick-slip noise

    Note the glitches in time on several cycles of Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field with Stick-Slip Noise (Hor-N-6, Heating). I have always believed that these are a manifestation of sudden miniscule changes in the length of the SP-088 laser tube but the exact source wasn't obvious. Hypothesis #1 was that the thick glass capillary (bore) where the plasma discharge is concentrated is supported near the cathode-end by a metal structure called a "spider" - a bunch of sheet metal fingers attached to the cathode-can which prevent the bore from moving sideways either due to gravity or a physical shock. The plasma discharge heats the bore, which is the first thing to expand. It pushes on the anode-end of the tube directly and the cathode-end through the spider support in the cathode-can. Eventually, the force is such that the bore slips in the spider and the overall length of the tube (the distance between the mirrors) gets smaller. In all cases where such a glitch is observed, it's similar to jumping back in time. So far so good. That's what the plot shows. But it was unsatisfying. One reason that I was not totally convinced of this explanation is that the decrease is always on the order of a small fraction of a wavelength of the 633 nm light. (The length change for a complete cycle of either mode with no magnetic field is 1 wavelength or 2 FSRs.) That small size and relative consistency doesn't seem totally credible for a metal-to-glass friction fit that's usually quite tight. In addition the transition time is around 1/10th of a second which seems a bit slow. Similar glitches occur from time-to-time during warmup. So tight that there might not even be a single slip during warmup of a typical tube. So, hypothesis #2 is that the source is the heater blanket on this tube which includes multiple layers of insulating plastic sheet in addition to the copper coil. Only portions of it are taped and nothing is glued. The plastic of the blanket has a coefficient of thermal expansion which is much much larger than that of the glass. So, even though it is not being heated directly by the plasma but rather from the outer glass, it will still expand faster than the glass. And there are many places where there could be very small slippage. As a test, allowing the tube to heat up with the external heater on and then shutting off only the external heater produces a similar set of jumps as shown in Plot of Spectra-Physics 088 Zeeman Frequency Behavior in a Moderate Transverse Magnetic Field with Stick-Slip Noise (Hor-N-6, Cooling). These are also back in time as the plastic now cools and contracts faster than the glass, which is consistent with this explanation. If it were the bore-spider interface, the jumps should be forward in time because the bore temperature remains relatively constant or at most is slowly decreasing (when the heater power is turned off but the plasma is still lit), but the blanket/outer tube temperature is declining repidly and the bore would be holding it back until the slip. This is has never been observed to happen.

    These unsightly blemishes occur somewhat randomly but their frequency has been increasing as the tube is temperature cycled, implying that whatever is moving is loosening up. At first I thought the magnets were the cause, since it only started happening when I was playing with the sets of 3 magnets. But the tube does the same thing now without any magnets. In fact, it has become difficult to find a clean run of more than 15 or 20 seconds. The portions of the data used for some of the earlier plots had to be carefully selected to not include any glitches. :)

    Avoiding stick-slip behavior is highly desirable in stabilized lasers since it can result in unpredictable effects on the feedback loop. In the case of this tube, reworking the heater blanket would probably be all that is needed. Gluing a thin film heater to the tube would be one solution. Removing it and running some more tests is the obvious way of obtaining confirmation, but that's not going to happen. :) I may try another similar tube without a heater though any negative results (no glitches) would not be absolute proof of the blanket hypothesis. But a positive result would indicate that the stick-slip is happening inside the tube and hyposthesis #2 is wrong.

    Some tubes have internal stick-slip due to a spider or other bore support that's loose enough to result in periodic micro-movements of the bore relative to the support. Since the entire change in length is a small fraction of 1 mm, a compliant structure that doesn't permit any slip would suffice. Thus, Laboratory for Science had special tubes made which either has no support (except where it's fused into the anode-end of the tube) or a compliant bore support, and their external heater is well glued to the tube. Driving the heater coil on my SP-088 reduces the incidence of the glitches significantly during at least part of the warmup period by causing the outer tube envelope to expand at a rate much closer to that of the bore. I suppose there is some optimum "heater power function" for this. :)

    Transverse Zeeman Laser Testbed 1

    Using the natural thermal expansion of the SP-088 tube provides a fine means of data collection for a fixed magnetic field. However, it's too slow to enable real-time manipulation of the magnetic field to readily determine how it interacts with the lasing modes and Zeeman beat frequency. In addition, the period of the mode cycles increases as the tube warms up and eventually become too long to be useful, so it's necessary to allow the tube to cool for approximately the same amount of time it was powered on.

    Therefore, it would be nice to have an apparatus for experimenting with the mode and Zeeman frequency behavior in real-time. Rather than depending on thermal expansion, the Zeeman Laser Testbed (ZLT) would use a tube with (preferably) two perpendicular windows super AR coated on both surfaces to minimize any orientation preference. See Transverse Zeeman HeNe Laser Testbed. (A less desirable but acceptable alternative would be a tube with a single perpendicular window and an internal HR at the other end.) (A Brewster window tube cannot be used for this purpose because it automatically results in a polarized beam and there would be no beat signal.) The OC mirror would then be external and mounted on a PieZo Transducer (PZT) to move it back and forth by a few wavelengths at 633 nm, and on a pan-tilt adjustable mount for alignment and a rotary mount to adjust orientation.. The HR mirror (for the two-window tube) would be similarly mounted, but without being on a PZT. With the rotary mounts, it would then be possible to explore mirror birefringence in depth, both for the transverse Zeeman laser, and to see what effect it has on mode flipping behavior. The best type of tube would be of side-arm construction where the bore is fully exposed over its entire length. This would enable much more precise control of the magnetic field configuration with less poerful magnets. However, I don't know of the existence of such a beast and doubt one was ever built except possibly for research purposes. Melles Griot does list perpendicular window tubes of normal construction, thought they apparently are not generally available except as a special order. A Melles Griot 05-WHR-570 might be suitable though it is a bit long - about 10 inches - and may not like to oscillate on a suitably small number of modes even with the output mirror nearly in contact with the window. The resonator length would then be 10 inches, about 3/4" longer than that of the SP-088.

    The OC mirror would be glued to a PZT on a rotary adjustable mount attached to a low expansion baseplate, as would the HR (except for lack of a PZT). The tube would be mounted to the same baseplate but supported at one end on a compliant mount so that it is free to move axially by a few tenths of a millimeter. Then, one end would move freely and smoothly due to thermal expansion. This would be most important if using a one-window tube with internal HR so the length of the cavity would not change and there would be no chance of externally induced stick-slip noise either. However, it won't hurt in the two-window tube system and eliminates one (if small) unknown. The PZT would be driven with a function generator in the same manner as a Scanning Fabry Perot Interferometer (SFPI). This would then permit a real-time display of several modes. But unlike the SFPI, the ZLT display would be similar to plots shown above, but in real-time. An SFPI could be set up as well and would aid in correlating the mode amplitudes with lasing line position. However, both the ZLT and SFPI wouldn't be driven at the same time. With the rotary mounts, it would be easy to change the relative orientation of the two mirrors as well as their orientation with respect to the magnet. (With a one-window tube, this is stll possible but the tube would need to be rotated in the magnet. And, only the one instance of the internal HR mirror would be available.

    Ideally, the ZLT would use a superconducting magnet. OK, just kidding. :) The maximum field strength only needs to be a few hundred gauss. However, it would be nice to have an electromagnet with wide pole pieces attached to an adjustable DC power supply, rather than stacks of permanent magnets. This would allow for more precise control of the field strength and a more uniform field. But I doubt such a thing will materialize.

    A mode sensor assembly similar to the one on the SP-088 setup would be attached to the same preamps for monitoring on an oscilloscope or fast data acquisition system. A photodiode for the Zeeman beat would mounted in the output beam behind a polarizer oriented at 45 degrees to the magnet and polarization axes.

    The same type of PC-based data acquisition system could serve as the instrumentation but a much higher capture rate would be required. An alternative might be a 4 channel digitizing oscilloscope (something else what probably won't happen). Realistically, the real-time display is only needed while experimenting with parameters like magnetic field. The data for any specific configuration can be acquired slowly.

    Another desirable feature would be for both the tube and OC mirror to be on rotatable mounts so that the birefringence of the HR and OC mirrors could be tested and adjusted (by rotating the OC relative to the HR) before a magnetic field is applied.

    I did a quick experiment (well, actually it took an entire morning!) using an 05-LHB-270 one-Brewster tube with a 60 cm RoC OC mirror glued to a piezo beeper element. See One-Brewster HeNe Laser Tube with External OC Mirror on PZT. That worked quite nicely but with a polarized beam, only the total power fluctuations could be seen. My ancient Wevetek function generator provided more than enough voltage swing to get 4 or 5 full mode cycles in one sweep (each being one half of 633 nm). I added a differential driver to boost the PZT voltage for good measure (taking the rest of the day!). This consisted of a pair of op-amp stages - a gain of 2 followed by a gain of -1 with the PZT connected between the op-amp outputs. The resulting differential signal of more than 50 V p-p increased the mode display to at least 10 complete cycles. The only problem with this setup is that the alignment is quite critical to avoid amplitude changes during the sweep, but this is also easy to adjust while watching the scope display. See Effect of Mirror Alignment on Scanning Cavity HeNe Total Power Display. The p-p amplitude of the power variation is about 4 percent of the total power. The difference between the three scope traces is simply one of very slight tilt of the PZT/OC mount. Such behavior may be inherent with a setup such as this. Or, my cheap PZT may not be moving perfectly along the optical axis. I do have a higher quality PZT cylinder with a mirror already attached, but that would almost certainly require a much higher drive voltage.

    There is another peculiarity that would be hard to attribute to the mediocre PZT characteristics: The shape of the total power waveform, especially at the dip or mode hop location, on the forward stroke of the PZT is not the mirror image of the waveform on the reverse stroke of the PZT as would be expected if there were no time dependence. And, the differences increase with PZT sweep/slew rate. The asymmetry is quite noticeable when scanning at 100 Hz but disappears when moving slowly. For example, in the traces, above, there is a negative going spike on the left side of each total power bump and the amplitude is slightly lower for the positive ramp compared to the negative ramp. (I can't tell if the positive ramp corresponds to the forward or reverse stroke though.) Under some conditions, this may be even more apparent. I can only hypothesize that this behavior is due to the cavity relaxation time following the mode hop. No deficiency in the PZT operation or cavity itself can account for the asymmetry, but I am surprised that there is anything noticeable even at millisecond time scales when dealing with the laser dynamics! So, perhaps there is a more mundane explanation. But it's not a problem with the photodiode (an expensive Thorlabs DET210 and $2 one produce identical results) or the scope response.

    I did notice a couple other things that were confusing at first but then made perfect sense. (These relate to the experimental setup but not to the Zeeman effect or PZT specifically.) The first was an oscillation on the photodiode signal that I first thought was due to my vintage Tek 465B scope which I know to have a bit of high frequency ripple on the vertical amplifier. However, it turned out to be caused by high frequency ripple in the HeNe laser power supply affecting the output power. Since the p-p amplitude of the variation in total power is only about 4 percent of the absolute total power, slight changes in tube current are in effect amplified and become quite noticeable. Substituting a linear HeNe laser power supply (an SP-256) quieted this down but replaced it with 60 Hz ripple. Arrrrg. After trying several other supplies, I found one that is much better. It is a 12 VDC input brick and runs nicely from an ancient Toshiba laptop power pack.

    The second effect was periodic major drops in output power more or less at random but averaging every few seconds. These were as much as 5 or 10 times the p-p amplitude of the variation in total power with the entire trace sometimes dropping off the scope screen momentarily. I rearranged anode wiring, tried a different HeNe laser power supply, tried a different photodiode, made sure the scope wasn't noisy using a 9 V battery, and finally invoked some little known incantations reserved for this purpose. :) Nothing helped. Then the light bulb went off: This is an open cavity laser without any cover between the Brewster window and mirror mount, and my "lab" isn't exactly dust-free. The setup was acting as a nice particle detector so that any time a speck of dust wondered through the intracavity beam path, it caused a momentary dip in output power, which could be quite significant depending on its size.

    I now have been able to borrow a dual perpendicular window HeNe (gain) tube and hope to shed light (no pun...) on some of these issues. The first priority will actually be related to determining what causes some HeNe lasers to be flippers and others to be well behaved. (See the section: HeNe Mode Flipper Observations.) This is apparently one of those grand mysteries of the Universe that even the Ph.D. types at major laser companies have been pondering for eons without resolution. :)

    You've heard of an optical bread-board and may have used one or more. Well, this Transverse Zeeman Laser Testbed is built on an optical butcher-block as shown in Photo of Transverse Zeeman Test Bed Using Dual Perpendicular Window HeNe Laser Tube. It's not quite as fancy as the diagram, above, and the arrangement of components differs somewhat, but all the functions are there - and more. The antique walnut-stained butcher-block slab really does have more than adequate stability for the laser resonator and I'm not limited to putting stuff on 1 inch centers - they will go wherever my cordless drill takes them! :)

    From left to right we have:

    This is tube is much longer than optimal so that the distance between the mirrors of the laser resonator is about 18 inches. I would have much preferred something less than 10 inches so that the FSR would be more than approximately 600 MHz and only at most 3 modes at most would oscillate. For this long laser, without additional restrictions, 4 to 6 longitudinal modes will be oscillating. I'm getting about 3 mW out each end with both the left and right mirrors being 99%@633nm with a Radius of Curvature (RoC) of 60 cm.

    The PZT on which the left mirror is glued directly to the type of beeper used in a digital watch. The PZT will be driven by a function generator to enable the effects of cavity length on polarized modes to be displayed in real time rather than depending on thermal expansion to produce mode sweep. With the addition of a dual op-amp boost circuit, the output will be almost 60 V p-p, more than enough for several FSRs of scan range.

    There is an adjustable aperture in the cavity directly in front of the left mirror so it can be stopped down to force TEM00: When stopped way down, it's low enough power that maybe only a couple modes are oscillating. Or, a bunch may be oscillating at low power. I haven't checked this out yet.

    The right mirror is on a rotatable mount to see if mirror orientation will affect polarization orientation, polarization flip, and Zeeman beat frequency. Unfortunately, it's not precise enough to avoid needing realignment after anything but a small angle change. But I doubt even a fancy expensive mount would be much better.

    The tube itself can be rotated between the two sets of 4 fastening screws to see if the polarization preference sticks with the tube. If the bore is centered, the rotation shouldn't require other adjustments. ;-)

    And the polarizing beam sampler (both modes) can also be rotated to locate the polarization axes and orient it with them. The beam sampler feeds my DATAQ PC-based data acquisition system. It will run fast enough to be used with an oscilloscope, but I can't take photos off of that easily.

    Presently, this setup is really intended to investigate issues of polarization orientation and mode flipping, but lacks a couple features needed for the transverse Zeemain experiments. One of these would be a way of rotating the left mirror (on the PZT). And for the actual transverse Zeeman experiments, another photodiode behind a polarizer at 45 degrees to the polarization axes (wherever they end up) will be fed from the beam exiting the left end of the laser.

    Some very preliminary results

    With the setup as shown above, I set out to begin to characterize its behavior with respect to polarized modes and mode flipping. For this, a maximum of 3 longitudinal modes should be oscillating at the same time so that the variation in mode amplitude from the PZT-induced mode sweep can be easily displayed. The two OC mirrors (rather than an OC and HR) increases the cavity losses and raises the lasing threshold. And by closing down the aperture, the laser could be forced to run single spatial mode (TEM00). There comes a point where it indeed is only oscillating on 2 or 3 longitudinal modes. The adjustment is somewhat finicky but has resulted in some initial observations:

    What specific characteristic of the two-window tube is locking the polarization axes to it isn't obvious. It could be asymmetry in the AR-coated windows, very slight tilt of the windows, or something to do with the bore profile or straightness. However, since the lasing mode with the aperture stopped down should not be near the walls of the bore, the latter seems less likely.

    More to come including more and better photos.

    Transverse Zeeman Laser Testbed 2

    However, then it occurred to me that there are ways of changing the distance between mirrors that will work with any internal mirror HeNe laser tube. Some are downright low tech. Of course, the thermal expansion approach discussed extensively above is one such technique. But it's slow. While it's easy to heat the tube quickly, cooling it would require blowing cool air on it (as some stabilized HeNe lasers do) or some type of close fitting thermo-electric enclosure. Even so, getting sub-second response would be difficult.

    But based on the Young's modulus for borosilicate glass, the amount of force required to change the length of a typical HeNe laser tube like an SP-088 by a few wavelengths is on the order of a small number of pounds. So, what about a totally mechanical system that squeezes the tube based on an applied voltage? A cylindrical PZT could do this but not a beeper-type PZT. And my inventory of cylindrical PZTs is rather bare. What about an electromagnet? This might work. In principle, a speaker voice coil type affair pushing on one end of the tube could apply enough force but it might be quite challenging using available junk parts. But what about simply using a lever system to push on one end of the tube? Then, an electromagnet in the form of a solenoid attracting a plunger can be located away from the tube itself (to keep it's magnetic field from interfering with the transverse magnetic field under study) and the lever system would add some mechanical advantage as well.

    A scheme such as this has some other advantages as well, most notable being that it would be relatively easy to quickly test a variety of tubes as long as they are approximately the same length. With the 1-W tube, the selection (at least as a practical matter) is quite limited. As presently exactly 0.00. Perhaps one of these tubes will materialize someday, but not a box of them. Of course, it is more limited in the sense that the mirror birefringence for any given tube is fixed, while it could be changed with the 1-W tube by rotating the OC mirror or replacing it. In addition, intracavity birefringent control optics like waveplates could be added. However, sometimes it's necessary to do experiments with what you have, not what you might want. :)

    So, Plan B is to provide a lever where the short arm presses on the non-output-end mirror mount and the long arm of the lever will be pulled by a solenoid or an eccentric motor driven cam. Initial tests have been promising. My lever is mounted on the ball bearing assembly from a defunct hard drive with sheet metal screwed to it in place of the disk heads. Not surprisingly, Siemens HeNe laser tubes seem to work better than Spectra-Physics tubes due to their lighter thinner construction which means that less force will result in th4e same length change. It's quite easy to apply enough force with the lever to go through several complete mode cycles, Some care needs to be taken to assure that the force is applied as much as possible along the axis of the tube to avoid a significant change in alignment that would affect total output power. But, by eye at least, that so far does not seem to be a major problem.

    Stay tuned (but it might be awhile).

    Transverse Zeeman Laser Testbed 3

    This one takes advantage of an existing laser which already has a fast cavity length adjustment, specifically the HP-5500C or HP-5501A interferometry lasers. These have the same tube, whose rear mirror is mounted on a PZT with a range of about 2 FSRs for a voltage input of 0 to 1,500 V. A high voltage ramp generator can be used to drive the PZT but it has to have a range of near 1,500 V. I tried an SP-476 scanning Fabry-Perot interferometer driver but even on the 1 kV range, it could barely move the mirror through 1 FSR. Another alternative might be a PMT power supply. However, the HP lasers include a convenient controllable PZT HV power supply module that can be adapted for this purpose and they have a full 1.5 kV range.

    HP-5501A lasers often appear on eBay and although they are likely high mileage and well below spec'd power, there may still be enough life remaining for any reasonable experiments. However, it should be confirmed that there is some output before buying as it's possible for them to have extremely hard-start or no-start tubes, or be too weak to be useful even here. HP-5500Cs also turn up, though less frequently, but they are older and the tubes are even less likely to work well enough for experiments.

    The PZT HV power supply runs on 15 VDC. In the original laser, the pinkish wire is -15 VDC and the black wire is ground or 0 VDC. The control input, PZT CON (white wire with a red stripe), is referenced from -15 VDC and has a calibration of 10 V/kV. This input has a rather low impedance (about 1K ohms) so I added a 200 ohm series resistor from the function generator output just for insurance to not load down its output too much. This cuts down the input signal somewhat but it covers the full 1.5 kV range. There is also a monitor signal, PZT MON (white wire with a yellow stripe) that tracks the actual HV output and has a calibration of 1 V/kV referenced to ground. Its impedance is rather high so a Hi-Z meter or scope probe is needed to get an accurate reading. PZT MON may just be a 1:1000 ratio tap on a really high resistance voltage divider from the HV output, which also serves as a safety bleeder.

    It's a simple matter to drive PZT CON with a triangle wave from a function generator at a convenient frequency to observe the mode and Zeeman beat frequency behavior in real time without dealing with silly things like heaters and thermal time constants. I haven't attempted to generate a scope display at high speed since I'm not sure how happy the PZT power supply will be with a hundred Hz control signal and I don't have a 4 channel scope anyhow, which would be desirable to view the two Zeeman modes, the PZT voltage via PZT MON, the beat frequency (converted to a voltage), and perhaps the total output power. But running at 5 to 10 seconds per cycle into a PC data acquisition system is fine.

    To use the HeNe laser tube with an external magnetic field rather than the axial magnetic field of the HP lasers requires removing it from the existing magnet assembly. None of that is needed or wanted, only the tube. The waveplates were used to convert circular polarized modes to linear modes but the transverse Zeeman laser already produces linear modes. The beam expander just adds an annoyance in terms of requiring the beam to be precisely centered. And, the magnet assembly restricts the orientation of the tube to what it was originally due to the anode connection, but for the transverse Zeeman laser, the linear polarization axes will want to be aligned with X and Y.

    It does take a bit of care and effort to gouge out the rubbery filler compound and RTV silicone sealing the tube to the magnet but since there are 3 magnets and they can be removed as gouging progresses, no extraordinary means are required to get at anything. The tube is shown in HP-5501A Laser Tube Removed From Magnet and Output Optics Assembly. It could conveniently be used without the magnets, and could be oriented to align the original polarization axes with the beam sampler. A pair of O-rings centers it inside the magnet when used there. The beam expander was removed since a narrow beam is easier to align with the photodiodes. But the waveplates were retained since they are needed to convert the circular polarized Zeeman modes to linear polarized modes, and align them with the X and Y axes. The bare tube was positioned on a wooden V-block when used without the magnet.

    For the modes, I used the same polarizing beam sampler from the Transverse Zeeman Laser Testbed 2, above, which has a polarizing beam splitter and a pair of silicon photodiodes. Since the only beam from the HP laser tube is the main output beam, a non-polarizing beamsplitter was added to divert part of the beam to the beam sampler and send the rest to an HP-10780A optical receiver. Its output, which is the Zeeman beat frequency logic signal, is applied to the frequency-to-voltage converter. Four channels of data (X and Y modes, PZT drive voltage, and beat frequency converted to a voltage, when present) are captured by the DATAQ data acquisition system on my ancient KIWI laptop. For the beat frequency plots, regions where there is no beat at all or where the frequency is way off scale due to multiple modes are not shown to reduce clutter. Total power would also have been nice, but the DATAQ unit only has 4 channels.

    The PZT was driven with a 1.5 kV p-p triangle wave in all cases. This was generated by the PZT power supply from an HP-5500C fed a 15 p-p signal from a Wavetek function generator. The noise in the PZT drive plots may be due to the fact that it is the actual PZT MON output of the HV power supply, which comes from a Hi-Z voltage divider, and no attempt was made to filter or shield it. Since the plots of the modes and beat frequency are generally noise-free, I assume the actual HV is clean it's simply an artifact of the measurement setup and not actually in the PZT voltage.

    The only problem with this setup is that the response of the PZT in the tube seems to have significant hysteresis. As the voltage increases, the first part is stretched and likewise when the voltage decreases. So, the display is compressed and distorted. It's quite repeatable so as a practical matter it doesn't make that much difference, but is simply ugly. I do not know if this is a characteristic of all these tubes, or just this sample. I do not have another healthy tube to check at the moment. From the plots, it can be seen that the high voltage triangle drive waveform is reasonably linear and is thus not responsible. Running at a speed of 10X or 0.1X on the PZT drive doesn't seem to make any significant difference so it's not an issue of a time constant (electrical or otherwise). It can also be seen that despite its larger FSR range, the effect is not as severe with Tube 2. The cause could be electrical polarization of the PZT material itself or something along those lines, but this behavior does seem strange.

    Of course, this same approach can be used to study the normal (non-Zeeman) modes of the tube (without any magnets), as well as the axial Zeeman modes using the original magnet/waveplate assembly (as above), or any number of variations limited only be one's imagination (and free time).

    Intensity Stabilized HeNe Laser

    Although the schemes described above are directed toward achieving single frequency stabilized operation of a HeNe laser, they either will provide intensity stabilization as well (or as a side effect) or can be adapted to this objective fairly easily. However, where the only thing desired is a power output that is constant without regard to frequency or modes, it is possible to use simple light feedback controlling power supply current or an external modulator. This approach would compensate for output power variations due to mode cycling, small changes in power due to mirror alignment as the tube warms up, and of course, any lack of regulation in the power supply. What it (or the schemes above) can't do anything about is the high frequency noise inherently present in a HeNe laser.

    Current control using optical feedback should have a range of at least 15 percent. Thus, the basic HeNe laser tube must have a power fluctuation range of less than what results from this. The relevant specification would be the "mode sweep percentage" or something like that. For very small tubes, it could be as high as 20 percent (no good for our purposes). So, what you want is a long tube since these have a typical variation of 2 to 5 percent. What this also means is that this scheme will be able to intensity stabilize a high power HeNe laser, something not possible (or at least not very easy) with mode stabilization approaches since the variation in mode amplitudes or ratios for feedback become much smaller as the tube length increases.

    An alternative to controlling power supply current is to add an external modulator at the output of the laser. There are several types including acousto-optic, electro-optic, and LCD. The first two would certainly work and have adequate bandwidth to deal with the higher frequency amplitude variations and noise, but may be costly. An LCD modulator will likely be limited to 10 to 100 Hz, but this should be adequate for removing the mode sweep and slow power variations.

    A simple photodiode based feedback scheme should work by controlling current to the tube via the power supply's regulator. The specific design of the power supply will determine whether this is straightforward or even possible. A linear regulator is probably better for this than a switchmode type (which adds high frequency ripple of its own).

    The loop response will need to deal with the following:

    These are similar to the requirements for light feedback in ion lasers. Some of these use fairly fancy loop filters though it would appear that this is not really needed under most conditions. I would suggest starting with simple proportional feedback to get the system to be stable, then add some integral feedback to reduce the residual error, and finally some differential feedback to see if higher frequency noise can be reduced.

    The upper and lower limits on the current must be clamped between a value less than the current for maximum output power at the high-end and well above the point where the tube drops out and restarts at the low-end.

    An external modulator is potentially simpler and eliminates issues of power supply melt-downs from design errors. :) But, a polarized laser may be required depending on the specific type.

    Sam's Intensity Stabilized HeNe Laser Using External Modulator

    An LCD-based variable attenuator or low speed modulator has been showing up on eBay from Meredith Instruments (eBay ID: mi-lasers). So, I decided to see how well this would work as an amplitude stabilizer for a low power polarized red HeNe laser. The main objective here is to minimize the power variation due to mode sweep. Since the bandwidth of the LCD is limited, nothing can be done about high frequency noise with this approach.

    A photo of the module is shown in LCD-Based Variable Attenuator. The LCD panel is in the large black square thing. (Note that I don't know for sure that the active element is an LCD, only from appearance and behavior.) To the right of it is a weak cylindrical lens which can be popped off if not desired. (At close range it doesn't make much difference in the beam, but it does reduce the power slightly.) The black plastic cylinder contains a dielectric-coated plate at a steep angle which acts as both a polarizer and a filter that passes red/orange and blocks green and beyond (and maybe yellow). This is followed by a beamsplitter plate near the Brewster angle and aligned with the polarizer so that only a very small amount (order of 1 percent) of the beam is directed toward a silicon photodiode. For some reason, there is also a piece of sheet polarizer oriented the same way just in front of the photodiode. (I eventually removed it because with that low a percentage of sampled power, every photon counts!)

    Applying a low voltage (0 to 5 V typical) causes the LCD to change the polarization of the incident beam. With the polarizer and beam sampler oriented at 45 degrees as shown in the photos, it will switch between a pass or block state with up to a 50:1 extinction ratio by applying 0 to 3 V. The phase (i.e., 0 V is pass or blocked) will depend on whether the input beam polarization is vertical or horizontal. However, it's not a pure rotation, as orienting the polarizer at other than 45 degrees results in a lower extinction ratio. And, the response is not even remotely linear with voltage and the LCD response drifts with applied voltage over time. While applying 3 V will cause the the state to change, only a 0.5 V or so range results in nearly all the action between roughly 2 and 2.5 V initially, drifting up with time. In other words, if 2.2 V results in a given transmission, it will be necessary to gradually increase the voltage to maintain the same transmission. The drift will be evident in seconds but may take an hour or more to change the required input by a couple of volts.

    For my stabilized laser, an Aerotech OEM1P polarized laser head (actual output power about 1.8 mW after warmup) and the attenuator were mounted on a metal baseplate. The input needs to be polarized and this laser makes a good candidate for amplitude stabilization. It is short enough to have a large mode sweep resulting in annoying power variations with warmup. The attenuator was positioned to center the beam and aligned in X just slightly offset to minimize backreflections. The laser head and the attenuator's polarizer/beam sampler were both oriented with the polarization vertical (rather than the 45 degree setting shown in the photos above). A photo of the setup is shown in Sam's Externally Amplitude Stabilized HeNe Laser 1. A cover over the beam sampler was removed for the photo, but is needed to prevent ambient light from overwealming the relatively weak photodiode signal.

    With no voltage applied, the attenuation is about 70 percent, so the transmission is about 30 percent. Increasing voltage from 0 V results in the transmission increasing, then decreasing, then increasing asymptotically to a maximum beyond which the voltage has negligible effect. I decided to use the portion of the response near that end. The circuit includes a bias adjust pot. So it is set so the operating point of the LCD is beyond the minimum transmission point where it is nearing its max. If it were desired to have a different output polarization orientation, the bias would need to change to adjust the operating point.

    The circuit is shown in Sam's Laser Amplitude Stabilizer 1 (SG-AS1). It consists of a network for the photodiode with a pot (PSet) to set the desired output power level, an op-amp unity gain buffer, and a PID (Proportional/Integral/Differential) Error AMP op-amp stage for the control loop. The op-amp is the common LM358. A CMOS rail-rail op-amp would be better but this was one was the first to fall out of my analog junk drawer. :) The values of the feedback resistors and capacitors were carefully chosen at random to result in satisfactory behavior. :) More careful selection and/or (gasp!) modeling and simulation of the overall system behavior could be useful. The PID Error Amp applies its output to one of the LCD inputs though a voltage divider which allows the gain to be adjusted. The other LCD input gets the fixed bias voltage. (I don't know how polarity affects the LCD behavior. I just used the same polarity as in my initial experiments. Why complicate life!)

    Note that component values for R3 and R4 were selected based on the beam sampler percentage and laser power.

    The bandwidth of the LCD is not very high - 10 to 20 Hz or so based on some simple tests with a function generator. So, playing with the PID parameters would be desirable to optimize loop response, especially when the laser is just turned on and the mode sweep is fastest. The circuit generally works quite well, reducing the amplitude of the mode sweep variation by at least a factor of 50, to 1 µW or less for a 1 mW output from a 1.8 mW laser. It locks within a few seconds of power-on - once the laser's output power has sufficient headroom compared to the set-point power. (Much of the difference between the 1.8 mW of the laser after warmup and the 1 mW output selected for these experiments is due to losses in reflections from optical surfaces, the polarizer, and the fact that I didn't try setting it higher!)

    The main problem though is the drift of the LCD. I doubt this could run continuously (as in days) even with careful management of the gain and bias settings. I also don't know whether the LCD itself likes to see a nearly constant DC voltage across it continuously. But so far, after testing for many hours on and off, the LCD hasn't seemed to change behavior in any obvious way.

    While the LCD drift doesn't show up in the output since the main feedback loop is an integrator, there is another slow drift which may be due to very small changes in the beam pointing of the HeNe laser head. The beam sampler appears to be very sensitive to this. I would recommend replacing the original polarizer and beam sampler with a Polarizing BeamSplitter Cube (PBSC) followed by an angled plate at 90 degrees to the polarization orientation or 5 or 10 percent beamsplitter so that it deflects a higher percentage of light to the photodiode which is less sensitive to changes in reflection at the critical Brewster angle as well as from specks of dust or contamination on the surface. The slight sacrifice in output from the beam sampler would probably be more than offset by the increased transmission of the PBSC and would be worth it in any case to have more stable long term behavior. And, without the red filtering effect of the original plate polarizer, the system could probably be used with shorter wavelength lasers.



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