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FrozenGate by Avery

Laser Diode Pulsing Question

CHPCHP

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Jan 14, 2025
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Many high-power laser diodes’ Power vs Current curves show the thermal rollover. I’m guessing some of this is due to the dwell time required for the detector’s thermopile to thermally stabilize to provide an accurate reading.

Have any of you tried pulsing the laser diode with a short pulse to get even higher peak power?

I’m guessing the pulse width is related to the transient thermal impedance of the system.

Here are my initial concerns with this high-power pulsing idea:

1) The high peak current will create thermal/mechanical stresses in the laser chip. This may be mitigated by using a slow current rise time.

2) The higher peak output power may damage the dielectric mirrors.

3) The higher current may stress the bond wire connection to the laser chip. This may be a long-term effect.

4) The higher peak output power may crack the laser diode window.

Any other concerns?

I did super pulsing on a CO2 laser rifle 15-20 years ago, where I’d double the initial current to the tube and quickly drop down to rated current. This extra optical oomph could help initiating ablation of the surface to allow the normal laser power to penetrate.
 





Have you done a search, here's just a couple results.


 
I appreciate the search, but I didn’t see anything close to what I was asking. The laser diode technology in 2008 was much different than now, and I don’t need help building a power supply.

I was focusing on our new high power laser diodes (445nm at ~6 watts rated from the manufacturer) which do not have a pulsed ratings on their spec sheet. The physics of the new laser dies and the intended application is different than the old style laser diodes.
 
The obvious answer is purchase a few diodes and experiment with them to determine unconventional data you want to determine for whatever reasons.
The data developed for diodes that were not meant for or designed for the use you want to play with is not available or has not been established/developed. There is no significant diode marketing reason for same so if the makers have some date on pulsed use they do not bother to publish it. No $ reason to they are sold by the hundreds of thousands for the purpose/use they were intended for.

Get a couple of these which seem to be robust and take more abuse than other when pushed beyond their intended 6W output rating. https://laserpointerforums.com/threads/jlasers-gh04c06v9g-true-10w-diode.111815/#post-1633139
 
he obvious answer is purchase a few diodes and experiment with them to determine unconventional data you want to determine for whatever reasons.
The data developed for diodes that were not meant for or designed for the use you want to play with is not available or has not been established/developed. There is no significant diode marketing reason for same so if the makers have some date on pulsed use they do not bother to publish it. No $ reason to they are sold by the hundreds of thousands for the purpose/use they were intended for.

Get a couple of these which seem to be robust and take more abuse than other when pushed beyond their intended 6W output rating.
Which is exactly why I was asking if anyone here had experience pulsing the new high-power laser diodes as a head start.

BTW, I'm not a new member here. I've been here since 2007 or so. My previous username CHP was hacked and I had to re-register.
 


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