Hi there. I'm toying with the idea of using a cheap blue/green diode to check my homemade submersible isn't heading towards anything that isn't water. Not a Lidar system, just measuring the reflected light. My back-of-envelope calculations suggest a 1-2W laser will give me a detectable photocurrent out to 50-100m BUT I have two problems....
1) what should i be looking for in an LD for getting a great collimation (445/450 or 532 - don't really mind - although I would get a stronger photocurrent from the green per watt of laser power) is there an obvious candidate?
2) the diode is going to be in a vacuum and I want to run it continuously. Can you do that with a copper host? I'd mount it on a TEC and get the heat elsewhere but are the hosts sufficiently efficient to keep lasing continuously (for an hour or more)?
Bit of a random first post but there seems to be a depth of wisdom on these forums that is worth tapping
Many thanks for any insights/tips you guys may have....
1) what should i be looking for in an LD for getting a great collimation (445/450 or 532 - don't really mind - although I would get a stronger photocurrent from the green per watt of laser power) is there an obvious candidate?
2) the diode is going to be in a vacuum and I want to run it continuously. Can you do that with a copper host? I'd mount it on a TEC and get the heat elsewhere but are the hosts sufficiently efficient to keep lasing continuously (for an hour or more)?
Bit of a random first post but there seems to be a depth of wisdom on these forums that is worth tapping

Many thanks for any insights/tips you guys may have....