Ice disaster has always been a threat to the stable operation of electrical power systems, and it is a challenge to melt ice online for high-voltage composite insulator. Here, we proposed a safe and efficient method to deice a high-voltage composite insulator using high-power mid-infrared (mid-IR) laser. The laser source is a Tm-doped fiber laser, delivering a continuous-wave (CW) output power of 75 W at 1940 nm. Due to the strong vibration absorption of H2O molecule at 1940 nm, the mid-IR laser could be absorbed efficiently by ice/water with an absorption coefficient as high as 135 cm − 1. Indoor deicing experiment demonstrated that an 8-mm-diameter ice pillar could be cut off within 28 s under an incident optical intensity of 25 W/cm2. Due to the small penetration depth of 148 μm, the residual water film could prevent the laser from damaging the composite insulator. Our research results show that high-power mid-IR Tm-doped fiber laser is a potential scheme for online deicing high-voltage composite insulator.
The mode-locked fluoride fiber laser (MLFFL) is an exciting platform for directly generating ultrashort pulses in the mid-infrared (mid-IR). However, owing to difficulty in managing the dispersion in fluoride fiber lasers, MLFFLs are restricted to the soliton regime, hindering pulse-energy scaling. We overcame the problem of dispersion management by utilizing the huge normal dispersion generated near the absorption edge of an infrared-bandgap semiconductor and promoted MLFFL from soliton to breathing-pulse mode-locking. In the breathing-pulse regime, the accumulated nonlinear phase shift can be significantly reduced in the cavity, and the pulse-energy-limitation effect is mitigated. The breathing-pulse MLFFL directly produced a pulse energy of 9.3 nJ and pulse duration of 215 fs, with a record peak power of 43.3 kW at 2.8 μm. Our work paves the way for the pulse-energy and peak-power scaling of mid-IR fluoride fiber lasers, enabling a wide range of applications.
We have experimentally demonstrated a passively Q-switched Tm-doped YAG ceramic laser with black phosphorus (BP) as saturable absorber (SA). According to the measurement, the BP saturable absorber mirror has a modulation depth of 5% and a saturation fluence of 20 μJ/cm2. The generated Q-switched pulse has a maximum average power of 38.5 mW and pulse energy of 3.32 μJ, with the corresponding repetition rate of 11.6 KHz and pulse width of 3.12 μs at 2 μm wavelength. The results show that BP is a promising SA for midinfrared-pulsed lasers.
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