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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

My new power meter: Laser Precision RK-5710 with RkP-575 probe

Joined
Aug 15, 2009
Messages
1,443
Points
48
I finally have the power meter of my dreams. It may not have a huge fancy color graphic display, the perfomance is the best I have seen so far:

A spectral flatness better than +/- 1% for 0.25um-2.0um and very flat beyond over the large 0.2um-20um it covers. Nearly all thermal detectors still vary 5% over such a wavelength range, but because the RkP-575 has a cavity absorber the light gets trapped. This means nearly 100% absorbtion and thus no need for calibration constants for a wavelength dependency.

10W max power with 100W/cm^2 maximum power density. Plenty for most lasers. A precision 1cm^2 aperture makes irradiance measurements easy, just directly read the power as W/cm^2. And 10W is plenty for most lasers out here.

And now the best part: it has a 100nW/sqrt(hz) noise level and a 10nW resolution! Even the most expensive high sensitivity thermal power meters I've seen have tens to hundreds of microwatts of noise and drift. I can measure lasers or even broadband light sources with only microwatts of power accurately and just as easy as lasers with watts of power on the same power meter.

I can now measure all the way from 10nw resolution on the lowest range to 10W on the highest range. The dynamic range from the noise level of 100nW to the full power of 10W is a factor 10^8, comparable to most photodiode based power meters. Typical thermal power meters like the ophir thermopiles or laserbee have a dynamic range of 10^3 to 10^4, that's 10,000 to 100,000 smaller.

And still the risetime is in milliseconds, comparable to fast thermal power meters, better than high sensitivty power meters (a few seconds) and far better than DIY peltier based power meters or laserbee's (a few more seconds to >10seconds).

Needless to say I'm very happy with this power meter, I can measure practically every CW laser except CO2 lasers and diode bars. It's a chopped pyroelectric power meter, so low reprate pulsed lasers won't register properly, but I don't have many of those.

I plan to do desctructive testing of laser safety eyewear. With the 10^8 dynamic range I can easily measure up to OD 7, no need for a photodiode based power meter for that. But with the 10W range I can determine how the eyewear keeps it's OD in case of a direct hit with a high power laser, a photodiode power meter would be damaged by such a laser. The power will be connected via GPIB to my computer for the logging of the power vs time.

Measuring my 473nm laser:
dscf2927_s.jpg


Measuring a 445nm laser I build for my university:
dscf2939_s.jpg
 





Trevor

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Joined
Jul 17, 2009
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10nW of resolution... so you can actually see your readings being skewed by ambient light.

Nifty! ;)

-Trevor
 
Last edited:

Trevor

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Joined
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Messages
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Based on the top of the sensor, it looks like it might be second hand. Know how recently it was calibrated? Is this from the seller on ebay?

Might have to reorganize my summer purchases... ;)

-Trevor
 
Joined
Aug 15, 2009
Messages
1,443
Points
48
How much did that thing cost:drool:
Based on the top of the sensor, it looks like it might be second hand. Know how recently it was calibrated? Is this from the seller on ebay?

Might have to reorganize my summer purchases... ;)

-Trevor
I bought the probe and readout separately, is there like THE seller on ebay for this stuff? The probe was from the US, the readout a few months later from France. Total costs were 188 euro. Laser Precision isn't very well known, so auctions are rare and don't end up very high, also because hardly anybody offers a complete set. The buy it now prices are always ridiculously high.
I haven't checked the calibration, but as nothing is damaged I don't think it would be off significantly.

For those that don't know, that only works if the beam's diameter is 11mm or more.
True, for situations like determining the irradiance of a light bulb one meter away. The probe has a holder for a filter that is placed after the chopper (the small protruding black thing on the top front of the sensor), with the right filter you can do photometry. I now have a glass window in it, in case I want to narrow the sensitivity to the visible spectrum.
 




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