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Osram PL530 - Tiny 530nm OPSL

diachi

0
Joined
Feb 22, 2008
Messages
9,700
Points
113
Hey guys,

Received my tiny Osram OPS laser from eBay last week and managed to get it up and running. These things are tiny, real interesting piece of engineering. These aren't you're typical Nd:YAG/YVO4 green; they use a semiconductor chip pumped by an 808nm diode instead. The result is a very compact form factor and fantastic beam specs. Perfect TEM00, 0.3mm diameter at aperture (4-8mRad divergence) and up to 100mW or so output power. One of the nicest beams I've seen out of a solid state laser, arguably better than the beam from my old Coherent Compass 115M.

Here's what they look like (hand for scale):

q1YyZNt.jpg


And here's what's inside:

9DutLF7.png


Note: The labels on this diagram are somewhat inaccurate. The LD is 808nm, the part labeled "DBR" is the OPS chip. Everything else should be fairly accurate.

I opted to buy one without the driver seeing as they were $40 cheaper, so I had to build my own. Not much is required, just ~450mA constant current for the diode and 1.5-2.0V for the crystal heater. Used a pair of LM317s. Decided to go with SMD resistors for the current setting so had to use 4 as a single 0805 wouldn't handle the power, the less holes I have to drill the better! Here's the result:

Schematic:

7NDsvWu.png


Board:

wu10RiQ.png


To make the PCB I used the toner transfer method:

lsgZdHT.jpg


Transfer wasn't the best, but it turned out good enough the first time so I rolled with it.

Board etched, toner removed and tinning added:

MKGEndl.jpg


Components soldered (turns out I missed an SMD resistor, and left the indicator LED off because I didn't see a need for it in the end):

ogl5up8.jpg


TxVhKKW.jpg


Etch was done using hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide.

Mounted to a heatsink with flying leads and a little breakout board sort of thing. The leads from the driver were too thick to solder direct to the module, so I used this approach. AA battery for scale.

YkJJMbM.jpg


OywDWEs.jpg


Light! Fired up perfectly the first time. Diode current is ~365mA.

eCqd6Oa.jpg


Spot at the other end of my living room:

eeBGBCU.jpg


Obligatory beamshot and a closeup:

74kZXme.jpg


TcGSWZg.jpg


Hope you all enjoyed, feel free to ask any questions!
 
Last edited:





Joined
Jul 10, 2015
Messages
9,880
Points
113
WOW that's a fantastic raw output, you will be able to lens that into a very low divergence beam of good quality, nice TEMOO

How hard is it to regulate the heater and how stable is it, any mode hop ?
 

diachi

0
Joined
Feb 22, 2008
Messages
9,700
Points
113
WOW that's a fantastic raw output, you will be able to lens that into a very low divergence beam of good quality, nice TEMOO

How hard is it to regulate the heater and how stable is it, any mode hop ?

Yeah, would make a real nice tight beam with the correct optics on it.

I didn't do any (measured) adjustment to the heater. Just hooked it up at 1.5V and let it run, seems very stable (again, not measured). Definitely don't see any changes in mode, power may be less stable but that's harder to see with the naked eye. Seller suggested that the heater was some sort of "self regulating" heater, another person said that his were very sensitive to heater voltage. The datasheet seems to point to the "self regulating" explanation so I'm going with that (seems to be working just fine!). Research paper that I found said the heater needs 50-100mW, so quite low power requirements.

The $75 option with driver has a DC-DC converter for the heater.

Looks like the seller has some left if anyone is interested.

Without driver

With driver
 

Anthony P

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 7, 2018
Messages
529
Points
63
I recently acquired one of these for holography use. Mine came prewired. It seems to have a very good coherence length as on interferometer I was able to move mirror 18" and still get nice bullseye fringes ( ran out of room on set up to go farther). I am running mine very conservatively at about 40mW optical output. It stays cool with just passive heatsink similar to yours.

Well shoot! Tried to add photos of ring pattern and interferometer... says file too large 2.8MB JPEG. I will have to figure out how to do that.
 
Joined
Jun 3, 2007
Messages
2,560
Points
113
Well shoot! Tried to add photos of ring pattern and interferometer... says file too large 2.8MB JPEG. I will have to figure out how to do that.
If you're running Windows 10, I've resized using the built in photo editor.
 

diachi

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Joined
Feb 22, 2008
Messages
9,700
Points
113
I recently acquired one of these for holography use. Mine came prewired. It seems to have a very good coherence length as on interferometer I was able to move mirror 18" and still get nice bullseye fringes ( ran out of room on set up to go farther). I am running mine very conservatively at about 40mW optical output. It stays cool with just passive heatsink similar to yours.

Well shoot! Tried to add photos of ring pattern and interferometer... says file too large 2.8MB JPEG. I will have to figure out how to do that.

Upload to imgur.com and the link them here using the add image button in the text editor (or copy paste the
 
Joined
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Messages
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I single positive lens can be used.

A two lens expander would make for a nice far reaching low divergence beam, but a single lens and a needle thin beam with a bit higher divergence would also look great, just depends on what you want to do, the length of your device, ect...
 
Joined
Sep 20, 2013
Messages
17,386
Points
113
The coherence length on these lasers is said to be very long. That means the wavelength is very narrow and has a bandwidth of no more than several MHz. I see these are still listed for $35.00 each, but I really don't need one for my holography and it is not really unique enough otherwise to make me want one for my collection. If you are planning on making full color holograms, this would be a useful laser along with a 632.8nm HeNe and a long coherence length blue laser........maybe a single line argon.

Nice job setting yours up, Adam. You went into far more detail than I would have done as I normally take photos after I have proven the build will work. Thanks.
 

CurtisOliver

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LPF Site Supporter
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Jun 12, 2015
Messages
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Didn't have time to reply to this thread yesterday, but good work Adam.
This little laser is very good indeed. The beam specs look better than my HeNe.
 
Joined
Sep 20, 2013
Messages
17,386
Points
113
Anthony, if you use the lens only on the side of the beam splitter that will show the interference pattern you can get the beams to overlap more precisely. You don't add the lens until you have a single dot from both mirrors, on the wall in this case, then add the lens to see the fringes. If you have questions about setting it up this way, PM me and I can go into greater detail.
 
Joined
May 1, 2009
Messages
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nice review! Thanks a lot for sharing! Also bought one of these tiny modules. I'm sure you won't get something like this in a couple of years from now.
 

manatree

New member
Joined
Jan 25, 2019
Messages
9
Points
3
Hey guys,

Received my tiny Osram OPS laser from eBay last week and managed to get it up and running. These things are tiny, real interesting piece of engineering. These aren't you're typical Nd:YAG/YVO4 green; they use a semiconductor chip pumped by an 808nm diode instead. The result is a very compact form factor and fantastic beam specs. Perfect TEM00, 0.3mm diameter at aperture (4-8mRad divergence) and up to 100mW or so output power. One of the nicest beams I've seen out of a solid state laser, arguably better than the beam from my old Coherent Compass 115M.

Here's what they look like (hand for scale):

q1YyZNt.jpg


And here's what's inside:

9DutLF7.png


Note: The labels on this diagram are somewhat inaccurate. The LD is 808nm, the part labeled "DBR" is the OPS chip. Everything else should be fairly accurate.

I opted to buy one without the driver seeing as they were $40 cheaper, so I had to build my own. Not much is required, just ~450mA constant current for the diode and 1.5-2.0V for the crystal heater. Used a pair of LM317s. Decided to go with SMD resistors for the current setting so had to use 4 as a single 0805 wouldn't handle the power, the less holes I have to drill the better! Here's the result:

Schematic:

7NDsvWu.png


Board:

wu10RiQ.png


To make the PCB I used the toner transfer method:

lsgZdHT.jpg


Transfer wasn't the best, but it turned out good enough the first time so I rolled with it.

Board etched, toner removed and tinning added:

MKGEndl.jpg


Components soldered (turns out I missed an SMD resistor, and left the indicator LED off because I didn't see a need for it in the end):

ogl5up8.jpg


TxVhKKW.jpg


Etch was done using hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide.

Mounted to a heatsink with flying leads and a little breakout board sort of thing. The leads from the driver were too thick to solder direct to the module, so I used this approach. AA battery for scale.

YkJJMbM.jpg


OywDWEs.jpg


Light! Fired up perfectly the first time. Diode current is ~365mA.

eCqd6Oa.jpg


Spot at the other end of my living room:

eeBGBCU.jpg


Obligatory beamshot and a closeup:

74kZXme.jpg


TcGSWZg.jpg


Hope you all enjoyed, feel free to ask any questions!


Are you purchasing Osram PL530 laserdiodes? I have large quantities available. Let me know :)
 




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