1. Introduction
In previous papers [
1,
2] we have reported the Sellmeier equations for AgGaS
2 that reproduce well the phase-matching angles of a Nd:YAG laser-pumped optical parametric oscillator (OPO) in the 2.6–5.3 μm range [
3] and those of difference-frequency generation (DFG) between the signal and idler outputs of a Nd:YAG laser-pumped LiNbO
3 OPO in the 5–12 μm range [
4] at room temperature. In addition, our Sellmeier and thermo-optic dispersion formulas [
1,
2] have also provided a good reproduction of the temperature-tuned phase-matching conditions for DFG between the two laser diodes in the 4.9–6.5 μm range [
5] and those for DFG between two Nd:YAG laser-pumped PPLN OPOs in the 5–12 μm range [
6] at elevated temperatures. However, this thermo-optic dispersion formula [
2] constructed from the original work of Bhar et al. [
7] has given dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT three times larger than the experimental values of Aggarwal and Fan [
8] at 308 K (35 °C).
In order to clarify this large discrepancy, we measured dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT at 0.6328, 1.0642, 1.1523, 2.052, and 3.3913 μm by using a prism method and found that our experimental values of dn
o/dT = 6.048 × 10
−5 °C
−1 and dn
e/dT = 6.549 × 10
−5 °C
−1 at 1.0642 μm agree well with dn
o/dT ≃ 5.5 × 10
−5 °C
−1 and dn
e/dT ≃ 6.0 × 10
−5 °C
−1 at 1.06 μm measured by Aggarwal and Fan (Figure 1 of [
8]). Thus, we have used our measured dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT and have constructed the new thermo-optic dispersion formula that provides a good reproduction of the abovementioned experimental results when coupled with our new Sellmeier equations that reproduce correctly the 90° phase-matched second-harmonic generation (SHG) wavelength of λ
1 = 1.7718 μm at 20 °C.
2. Experiments and Discussion
We used three different samples in the present experiments. One sample was cut at θ = 90° and φ = 45°. The other two samples were cut at θ1 = 37.2° (θ2 = 52.8°) and φ = 45°, and θ1 = 39.7° (θ2 = 50.3°) and φ = 0°. They were shaped as parallelepipeds with four polished surfaces corresponding to the two directions defined by the two values of the polar angle given. The dimensions of these samples are ~10 × 10 × 10 mm3.
These samples were mounted on a temperature-controlled copper oven, which was set on a Nikon stepmotor-driven rotation stage having an accuracy of ±0.02° to vary only the polar angle θ. The temperature stability of the oven was ±0.1 °C. By using a Nd:YAG laser-pumped KTiOPO
4 (KTP) OPO as a pump source, we first measured the 90° phase-matching wavelengths for type-1 SHG by heating a θ = 90° and φ = 45° cut crystal from 20 °C to 120 °C at 20 °C intervals. The resulting tuning points (open circles) are shown in
Figure 1. As can be seen from this figure, these results give dλ
1/dT = +0.16 nm/°C and λ
1 = 1.7718 μm at 20 °C. Since dλ
1/dT is defined as
we obtain ∂n
2e/∂T − ∂n
1o/∂T = +1.0777 × 10
−5 °C
−1 when using our Sellmeier equations presented in [
1]. This is 27% lower than ∂n
2e/∂T − ∂n
1o/∂T = +1.4692 × 10
−5 °C
−1 given by our thermo-optic dispersion formula (T/K) presented in [
2].
We next measured the temperature variation of the phase-matching angles for SHG and sum-frequency generation (SFG) of a CO
2 laser (Coherent DEOS, Model EOM-10) and its SHG and third-harmonic generation as a pump source under the same experimental conditions as described in [
9]. For reliable determination of a zero-angle of incidence, a reference He-Ne laser beam reflected from the entrance face of the crystal was aligned on a 0.2 mm slit located 2 m from the crystal.
The observed phase-matching angles and the temperature phase-matching bandwidths (Δ
T·
l) at full width at half-maximum (FWHM) that were determined from the temperature variation of the phase-matching angles (Δθ
ext/ΔT) and the angular acceptance angles (Δθ
ext·
l) calculated with the following new Sellmeier equations, are tabulated in
Table 1.
where λ is in micrometers. The phase-matching angles tabulated in
Table 1 agree well with the values presented in [
1,
2]. We did not measure the temperature phase-matching bandwidth for type-1 THG of a CO
2 laser because the polarization directions of λ
1 and λ
2 were mutually orthogonal in the experimental setup, in which the 5.2955 μm input (λ
2) was generated by a type-1 SHG process. This index formula was obtained by adjusting the Sellmeier constants of Equations (1) and (2) presented in [
1] to give the best fit to the type-1 90° phase-matched SHG wavelength of λ
1 = 1.7718 μm at 20 °C and the type-1 90° phase-matched DFG wavelength of λ
i = 5.333 μm generated by mixing λ
p = 661.183 nm and λ
s = 754.752 nm at 20 °C [
10]. It reproduces correctly the phase-matching angles of a Nd:YAG laser-pumped OPO in the 2.6–5.3 μm range [
3] and those of DFG between the signal and idler outputs of a Nd:YAG laser-pumped LiNbO
3 OPO in the 5–12 μm range [
4] described above.
Although our Sellmeier and thermo-optic dispersion formulas presented in [
2] reproduce well the temperature-dependent phase-matching conditions for the 90° phase-matched DFG between the two laser diodes in the 4.9–5.0 μm range [
5] and those for the critically phase-matched DFG between the two PPLN OPOs pumped by a Nd:YAG laser in the 5–12 μm range [
6], we found large differences between the temperature phase-matching bandwidths (Δ
T·
l) for SHG of a CO
2 laser and its harmonics that are tabulated in
Table 1 and those listed in Table 1 of [
2]. For instance, Δ
T·
l = 35.8 °C cm observed in the present experiment at λ
2 = 5.2955 μm is a factor of ~4 smaller than the Δ
T·
l = 139 °C cm value observed in previous experiments [
2]. This may account for the systematic error in previous measurements of Δθ
ext/ΔT.
Aggarwal and Fan [
8] have reported that dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT at 308 K (35 °C) measured by using the temperature-induced shift in the frequency of the interference fringes in the Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) transmittance spectrum of AgGaS
2 etalon are ~1/3 of our calculated values and those of Bhar et al. [
7] and Zondy and Touahri [
11]. Hence, we attempted to measure dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT at 0.6328, 1.0642, 1.1523, 2.052, and 3.3913 μm by using a minimum deviation method with a prism cut at an apex angle of 20°48’.
Using the raw data obtained by heating the prism from 20 °C to 140 °C at 20 °C intervals, we constructed a tentative thermo-optic dispersion formula to extrapolate dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT at 5.2955 and 10.5910 μm. The interpolated and extrapolated values were then iteratively adjusted to give the best fit to the measured temperature phase-matching bandwidths (Δ
T·
l) tabulated in
Table 1. The newly constructed thermo-optic dispersion formula is expressed as
where λ is in micrometers. Note that Equation (3) gives ∂B/∂T = ∂n
e/∂T − ∂n
o/∂T = 6.4991 × 10
−5 − 5.9924 × 10
−5 = 5.067 × 10
−6 °C
−1 at 1.1523 μm, which is a factor of 1.7 larger than the value ∂B/∂T ≃ 3 × 10
−6 °C
−1 which was reported by Suslikov et al. [
12].
For reference, we have plotted dn
o/dT and dn
e/dT given by Equation (3) in
Figure 2 together with the values at 20 °C (closed circles) estimated from the data points of Aggarwal and Fan at 308 K (35 °C) and 97 K (−176 °C) [
8], and our experimental points (open circles). As can be seen from this figure, our calculated at 10.5910 μm are about 20% lower than the experimental values of Aggarwal and Fan [
8].
In order to check the utility of Equations (2) and (3), we calculated the 90° phase-matching temperatures for type-1 DFG between the two diode lasers (λ
s = 0.791116 μm, λ
p = 0.68162–0.68290 μm). The resulting tuning curve (K) is shown in
Figure 3 together with the experimental points (closed circles) of Willer et al. [
5] and the tuning curves (Z/T), (H/K), and (R) that were calculated with the Sellmeier equations of Zondy and Touahri [
11], Harasaki and Kato [
1], and Roberts [
13] coupled with our new thermo-optic dispersion formula (Equation (3)). Our tuning curve (K) reproduces the experimental points of Weller et al. [
5] within an accuracy of ±5 °C except near 30 °C.
We next calculated the phase-matching temperatures at θ
pm = 34.30° for type-1 DFG between two Nd:YAG laser-pumped PPLN OPOs operating at λ
p = 1.60 μm and λ
s = 1.846−2.353 μm [
6]. Since we found that our calculated values at θ
pm = 34.20° reproduce well the experimental points of Haidar et al. [
6], we inserted our tuning curve (K) at θ
pm = 34.20° into
Figure 4. It should be noted that our calculated values at θ
pm = 34.30° are ~12 °C larger than those of the tuning curve (K) because the phase-matching temperatures around the retracing point are strongly dependent on the phase-matching angle θ
pm. Also note that the dashed line (T/K) was formerly presented in Figure 3 of [
6] by Haidar et al. and it agrees with fairly well with our tuning curve (K) at θ
pm = 34.20°. On the other hand, the Sellmeier equations of Roberts [
13] give no retracing point for this process (Figure 1 of [
6]). They give the phase-matching angles of θ
pm = 28.90°, 30.38°, and 33.24° to generate λ
i = 5.0, 8.5, and 12.0 μm at 20 °C, respectively. Hence, we did not use his index formulas for the present calculations.
In order to check further the utility of our Sellmeier and thermo-optic dispersion formulas, we measured the phase-matching angles for type-2 DFG at λ
i = 7.5190 μm between the signal (λ
p = 1.8645 μm) and the idler (λ
i = 2.4793 μm) of a Nd:YAG laser-pumped CsTiOAsO
4 OPO [
9,
14] in a θ
1 = 39.7° (θ
2 = 50.3°) and φ = 0° cut crystal. The measured phase-matching angles of θ
pm = 38.2 ± 0.2° at 20 °C and θ
pm = 39.3 ± 0.2° at 100 °C agree well the calculated values of θ
pm = 38.24° and 39.21°, respectively. Thus, we demonstrated the utility of Equations (2) and (3) in this wavelength range.