1. Introduction
Vortex beams with a spiral phase distribution, carrying the orbital angular momentum (OAM), have been widely applied in many areas, including optical tweezers [
1], particle manipulation [
2], photo entanglement [
3], and quantum communication [
4]. Various methods have been reported to generate the OAM-tunable vortex beam, including ring pump [
5,
6], double cavity structure [
7], metasurfaces [
8], Bragg grating [
9], and mode converters [
10]. Among these methods, the mode conversion based on an astigmatic mode converter (AMC), which consists of a pair of cylindrical lenses and could convert the arbitrary Hermite–Gaussian (HG) beam to a corresponding Laguerre–Gaussian (LG) beam (i.e., a type of vortex beam), has high conversion efficiency and could achieve the high-order vortex beam. In particular, the type of
beam could be converted to the type of
vortex beam with
OAM [
11].
It is well known that the HG mode is the intrinsic mode of a resonant cavity, and the high-order HG mode could be generated from the resonant cavity based on intra-cavity modulation. Many methods have been reported to generate the mode-tunable HG beam using the intra-cavity modulation elements (IMEs), including the moveable concave mirror [
10], deformable mirror [
12], moveable cylindrical lens [
13], and spatial light modulation [
14,
15]. A moveable concave cavity mirror is used as an IME in a plano-concave cavity [
10], and up to
beam could be generated by moving the dual off-axis displacement of the concave mirror. Two moveable cylindrical lenses are inserted into a resonant cavity as IMEs, and complex HG modes (i.e.,
with index
and
) could be obtained by moving the cylindrical lenses in certain directions [
13]. For these two methods, the high-order HG beam could be generated from the cavity by adjusting the off-axis displacement of the concave mirror in [
10] or the cylindrical lenses in [
13]. However, the modes of the generated HG beam are discontinuous (i.e., the index
and
are discontinuous) as reported, which may be caused by the limited displacement accuracy of the IME or the inherent defect of the cavity structure. An intra-cavity PZT deformable mirror is used as an IME to modulate the HG beam in a Z-shaped cavity, and the HG mode could be continuously tuned from
to
by changing the driving voltage of the deformable mirror [
12]. In this method, the high-order HG mode beam could not be generated using the intra-cavity PZT deformable mirror, which may be caused by the limited modulation range of the deformable mirror or the inherent defect of the resonant cavity structure. A spatial light modulation is used as a modulation cavity mirror [
14,
15], and the loading pattern on the spatial light modulation could be adjusted by changing the driving voltages of each spatial light modulation pixel. The mode of the HG beam up to
could be generated by loading special phase patterns in [
14]. However, researchers have to spend extensive experimental time to find the proper patterns for a given cavity in particular, as the spatial light modulation could produce numerous different phase patterns.
For these methods, the mode of the generated HG beam could be tuned by adjusting the value of the modulation parameters (i.e., the off-axis displacement in [
10,
13] or the driving voltage in [
12,
14,
15]) of the IMEs. However, in these methods, the theoretical relationship between the output light field from the cavity and the modulation of the IMEs is not investigated, and thus the influence of cavity parameters (e.g., the modulation value and accuracy, the structure parameters) on the output HG mode is unrevealed. As a result, for a given resonant cavity, it is very difficult to anticipate the modes of the HG beam generated from the cavity based on the modulation of the IMEs. Additionally, for a target HG beam, the required modulation value and accuracy are unknown, and thus it is difficult to select an IME with suitable parameters. If the modulation value or the accuracy of the selected IME is not proper, the mode of the HG beam generated from the cavity may be discontinuous. In particular, researchers have to conduct extensive and recurring experiments to find the relationship for a given resonant cavity, and the process is time-consuming. Unfortunately, if the cavity structure changes, the acquired relationship from the experiment is unsuitable for the new cavity and the experiments have to be repeated to obtain the new relationship. Furthermore, if an unsuitable IME is used in a given resonant cavity, it is possible that target HG beams could not be obtained through a time-consuming experiment. Therefore, to avoid the aforementioned problems, it is necessary to establish the theoretical relationship between the HG beam modes and the modulation parameters of the IMEs. As the generated HG beam could be converted to the corresponding vortex beam by an extra-cavity AMC of the vortex laser, the relationship between the modes of the vortex beam and modulation parameters could be revealed.
In this paper, a mode modulation regulation acquisition (MORA) method is proposed to investigate the relationship between the modes of the vortex beam and the modulation parameters for a vortex laser. This paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, the configuration of a mode-tunable vortex laser and the principle of the MORA method to acquire the mode modulation regulation are illustrated. In
Section 3, a simulation to investigate the theoretical relationship between the tunable vortex beam mode and the modulation parameters of the IMEs is carried out. In
Section 4, an experiment is conducted to verify the validity of the MORA method. The experiment results agree well with the simulation, which indicates that the mode modulation relationship obtained in the simulation could be used as a practical guidance in the experiment.
4. Experiment Results
To investigate the validity of the MORA method, a mode-tunable vortex laser with primary parameters, which is set as the same with the simulation model (
Table 1), has a similar configuration to
Figure 1 and is built as shown in
Figure 13. In the experiment setup, the classic plano-concave resonant cavity part is composed of an IC mirror (AR at 976 nm and HR at 1064 nm), an Yb:CALGO crystal (Altechna, 5 at%, a-cut, AR at 1064 nm), and a concave
OC mirror (HR at 976 nm, transmittance is 2% at 1064 nm). The pump beam, generated by a fiber-coupled LD (20 W, 976 nm, 105 µm core diameter, 0.22 NA, BWT Beijing Ltd., Beijing, China), is focused into the gain medium (Yb:CALGO) with the beam waist radius of 200 μm by the couple lenses. In the vortex beam generation beamline, the HG beam passes through a dichroic mirror (HR at 976 nm and HT at 1064 nm), a beam splitter BS1 (transmittance is 10% at 1064 nm), a lens L3 (focal length 175 mm), and an AMC. Then, it is converted to the corresponding LG vortex beam. In the reference beam acquisition beamline, the laser beam, reflected by the reflective mirror M2 (HR at 1064 nm), passes through the pinhole PH (hole diameter 5 mm) and two spherical lenses (L4 and L5 set as non-confocal, focal length 25 and 125 mm), and is selected as a reference spherical wave. The reference spherical wave passes through the beam splitter BS2 and interferes with the vortex beam reflected by the reflective mirror M1 (HR at 1064 nm). The interference pattern is focused by lens L6 (focal length 30 mm) and recorded by a CCD (Point Grey, Grasshopper3 GS3-U3-14S5M).
In the experiment, the OC mirror, which is set as the IME in the cavity, will be moved away from its initial position and the IPF of the OC mirror will be changed to achieve the high-order HG beam under the off-axis pumping condition. The initial position of the OC mirror is set strictly in the co-axis with the cavity to generate the fundamental mode. The increment value and the maximum value MV of the modulation parameter (i.e., the displacement of the OC mirror) are set as 1 and 350 μm, respectively, which is ensured by the adopted high-precision displacement stage.
Figure 14 shows the experiment results at the condition of the
OC mirror off-axis, which is moved along the
X-axis. The 1st and 3rd rows represent the HG beam generated from the resonant cavity, while the 2nd and 4th rows represent the interference pattern of a reference spherical wave interfering with the vortex beam that is converted from the HG beam in the 1st and 3rd rows, respectively. As shown in the 1st and 3rd rows, it could be seen that the mode of the generated HG beam could be continuously tuned from
to
within the displacement range [0, 350 μm]. Based on the HG beam, the vortex beams from
beam with
OAM to
beam with
OAM are obtained by an AMC and are shown in the 2nd and 4th rows. For each generated HG beam, the off-axis displacement value
in the experiment and simulation is listed in
Table 3. It could be seen from
Table 3 that the maximal difference
between the experiment and simulation is as small as 5 μm, which indicates that the experiment results agree well with the simulation.
Figure 15 shows three typical HG and LG beams, which are achieved in the experiment with different dual off-axis displacement values
. The white arrows represent the off-axis directions of the
OC mirror in the mode tuning experiment, which are calculated based on the off-axis displacement values
by Equation (14). It could be seen that the HG beam splits along the off-axis direction of the
OC mirror, which is the same as the simulation results. The comparison of the off-axis displacement values
in the simulation and experiment is shown in
Table 3, where the maximal differences
and
are as small as 3 and 4 μm, respectively. The comparison in
Table 3 indicates that the mode modulation regulation obtained in the simulation could be used as a practical guidance to realize the target mode of the HG and vortex beams in the experiment.
Figure 16 shows the experiment results of the evolution process from
to
beam and the stable region for the
beam. In
Figure 16, the 1st row represents the HG beam, which is generated from the resonant cavity when the
OC mirror is moved along the
X-axis in the experiment. The 2nd row represents the interference pattern of a reference spherical wave and the vortex beam, which is converted from the HG beam as shown in the 1st row. Within the displacement range [114 μm, 133 μm], it could be seen that the generated
beam is clear and the spiral fringe identifying the vortex could be clearly observed in the interference pattern. When the off-axis displacement value
is adjusted to 113 μm, the two split spots of the laser beam are blurred and the generated
beam becomes deteriorated. The spiral fringe in the interference pattern is obscured and the values of the vortex parameters
and
could not be identified. When the off-axis displacement value
is adjusted to 132 μm, a new blurred spot emerges and the spiral fringe in the interference is also deteriorated. Of note, the laser beam evolves into the
beam when the off-axis displacement value
is adjusted to 144 μm. The evolution process of the
beam in the experiment agrees well with the simulation results. As the increment value of the modulation parameter (i.e., displacement in the experiment) is selected as small as 1 μm, the continuity of the generated vortex beam mode is achieved and the stable region for a target vortex beam is obtained in the experiment.
In the experiment setup, the pumping power is set as 10 W, which is the maximum output power of the LD. For all of the modes obtained in the vortex laser, the maximum output powers are tested and listed in
Table 4. It could be seen that the maximum output power of the generated vortex laser decreases from 1.222 to 0.291 W with the mode order increasing from
to
, while the optical−optical conversion efficiency decreases from 12.22% to 2.91%.
Of note, due to the experimental alignment errors of the elements, including the optical components and the mechanical displacement stage, a slight difference still exists between the results of the experiment and the simulation. In the experiment, the maximal off-axis displacement is limited within 350 μm and the highest vortex beam is realized. According to the MORA method, a gain medium with larger size and an off-axis displacement with larger range might help in achieving the high-order mode vortex beam.
5. Discussion
The method based on an extra-cavity AMC and IMEs to generate the mode-tunable vortex beam is a typical method [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15]. In this paper, the proposed MORA method could be used to investigate the theoretical relationship between the modes of the vortex beam and modulation parameters of IMEs for a designed vortex laser. Different from the experimental investigation to generate the mode-tunable vortex beam [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15], the theoretical relationship obtained by the MORA method in simulation could be used to help researchers in particularly obtaining a target vortex beam by selecting suitable IMEs and setting suitable modulation parameters of IMEs, which avoids the enormous experimental exploration and waste of time. If a target vortex beam could not be generated from a designed laser with inherent defect, it could be clearly and quickly judged from the obtained relationship rather than the extensive replicated experiments. Moreover, the investigation of the theoretical relationship based on the MORA method could avoid experimental limitations and complex operations, including the modulation values or the accuracy of off-axis displacement [
10,
13], the modulation ranges of driving voltages [
12,
14,
15], the optimization of structure parameters, etc. The property of the MORA method could help researchers in designing a suitable laser or optimizing a laser. In particular, the influence of the modulation accuracy of IMEs on the generated vortex beams could also be investigated and help researchers in selecting the IMEs with a suitable modulation accuracy to generate the target vortex beam.
As the simulation shown in
Section 3.2, the theoretical relationship between the modes of the vortex beam and the off-axis displacement of
OC is investigated and revealed by the MORA method. It clearly shows that the modes could be generated from the laser within the simulation conditions. Meanwhile, of note, the influence of different increments of
OC off-axis displacement on the output is investigated and the stable region for a target vortex beam is obtained, which could be used to help researchers in selecting a suitable modulation accuracy of
OC to obtain a target vortex beam. It is well known that the mode generated from a resonant cavity depends on the intra-cavity gain and loss. For the vortex laser described in the paper, there is a stable region for each generated mode, within which the intra-cavity loss brought by the off-axis displacement of the
OC could be considered as unchanging. If the off-axis displacement exceeds the stable region, the intra-cavity loss will be distinct and cause the beam mode to change. As the intra-cavity loss is related to the structure of the laser cavity, it is possible to reduce the range and increase the availability of more vortex modes by optimizing the cavity structure (e.g., the curvature radius of the
OC, length of the resonant cavity, and position of the gain medium).
The efficiency and maximum power of the generated vortex laser beam are determined by the gain and loss in the resonant cavity. For different HG modes, the intra-cavity losses and the corresponding efficiencies are different. From the experiment results, the maximum output power of the generated vortex laser is 1.222 W at the mode with 12.22% optical−optical conversion efficiency. If the high power vortex laser is required for certain applications, several methods could be adopted, including optimizing the cavity structure, using the gain medium of larger size, and improving the pumping power.
6. Conclusions
In conclusion, a novel MORA method to investigate the relationship between the tunable vortex beam mode and the modulation parameters of a vortex laser is proposed and the validity is verified by simulation and experiment. The presented MORA method consists of three major processes, including the resonant cavity equivalent, intra-cavity iteration and light field output, as well as vortex beam generation and identification. In the MORA analysis method, the resonant cavity equivalent is first carried out to obtain the equivalent straight cavity for a given cavity. The light field, propagating through all of the optical mediums, outputs from the equivalent straight cavity after the intra-cavity propagation iteration process and is converted to a vortex beam by an AMC. Finally, a recognition algorithm is carried out to identify the mode of the vortex beam. In the simulation, a mode-tunable vortex laser is used as the analysis object, consisting of a classic plano-concave straight cavity, a vortex beam generation beamline, and a reference beam acquisition beamline, while the OC mirror is set as the intra-cavity modulation element and the off-axis pumping is achieved by adjusting the off-axis displacement of the OC mirror. In the simulation, the theoretical relationship between the modes of the vortex beam and modulation parameters is investigated, including the vortex beam generation abilities, the influence of the modulation accuracy, and the stable region of the tuned mode. In the experiment, a mode-tunable vortex laser with primary parameters, which is set as the same with the simulation model, is built. In the experiment, within the displacement range, the HG beam mode could be continuously tuned from the 1st to the 14th row, and the converted vortex beam from to could be continuously obtained. The experiment results agree well with the simulation and the validity of the MORA method is verified. Based on the theoretical relationship obtained by the MORA method, it is possible to anticipate the modes of the vortex beam generated from a given cavity based on the modulation of the IMEs. Moreover, the MORA method could be used as a guidance for researchers in optimizing the practical vortex laser to obtain the target vortex beam by the configuration optimization and parameter selection.