CA1303196C - Rf excited all metal gas laser - Google Patents

Rf excited all metal gas laser

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Publication number
CA1303196C
CA1303196C CA000543102A CA543102A CA1303196C CA 1303196 C CA1303196 C CA 1303196C CA 000543102 A CA000543102 A CA 000543102A CA 543102 A CA543102 A CA 543102A CA 1303196 C CA1303196 C CA 1303196C
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laser
electrodes
gas
recited
gas laser
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CA000543102A
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French (fr)
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Peter Laakmann
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Synrad Inc
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Synrad Inc
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Abstract

AN RF EXCITED ALL METAL GAS LASER
Abstract of the Disclosure All metal RF excited gas lasers employing organic or inorganic insulating material including polyimide and aluminum oxide to provide a structurally homogeneous laser capable of low cost fabrication and broad temperature ranges suitable for military and commercial applications. A particularly novel embodiment employs an extruded housing and finned electrodes and relies almost solely upon gas convection and gas conduction cooling obviating compression heat sinking. The latter embodiment permits gas flow between the lawer cqavity and tube gas chambers through elongated gaps or spaces at the corners of the cavity. Periodically spaced insulator guides support the electrodes and facilitate simple, low cost assembly.

Description

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D_scriptlon AN RF EX~ITED ALL METAL GAS LASER

Technical Field This invention relates generally to lasers and more specifica]ly to all metal RF excited gas lasers.

B kground Art RF excited waveguide carbon dioxide lasers have found a large number of applications in the last several years because of their compact size, reliability and relative ease of manufacture. The basic patent governing 10 these lasers is U.S. Patent No. 4,169,251 issued to Katherine D. Laakmann. This patent describes the basic geometry and physics of -the device. ~n additional patent, U.S. Patent No. 4,393,506 issued to Peter Laakmann, et al.
covers the preferred implementation of such lasers as well 15 as a novel water vapor getter. U.S. Patent No. 4,373,202 issued to Katherine D. Laakmann, et al. covers a longitudinally RF excited structure.
For commercial purposes and power levels up to about 25 watts the metal/ceramic technology disclosed in 20 U.S. Paten-t No. 4,393,506 has been extremely successful because it combines low manufacturing cost with adequate performance and proven lifetime measured in years without gas replacement.
E`or military purposes, ceramic-only structures 25 are being used to eliminate differential thermal expansion between the ceramic and metal parts of the cavity. The elimination of thermal mismatch is a requirement in these applications because of the typically required operating temperature range of -40 to +50 degrees Centigrade for 30 military hardware. Similarly, high powered (above 25 wa-tts) folded lasers for commercial applications are also being bui]t from all ceramic structures to assure the ~3~3~~i greater precision required by these folded struct~res. The basic cavity structure of a longitudinally excited all ceramic laser is shown in U.S. Patent No. 4,373,202. The same physical structure has also been used with transverse RF excitation.
The all ceramic laser is intrinsically more costly to fabricate than the basic commercial metal/ceramic structure. However, for high power output or large operating temperature range, there has so far been no alternative.
An additional problem with both approaches is the fact that assembly and closure involves solder sealing. In the case of the metal/ceramic structure, relatively low temperature solder sealing must be used to avoid thermal distortion of the composite waveguide. In the base of the ceramic structure, no other method is known to seal the materials. The solder process requires a "we-t" wash afterwards which leads to long reprocessing times to remove water contamination, the enemy of carbon dioxide laser gain.
Another probLem in these prior art lasers is that the devices are difficult to "ou-tgas" because -the structures involve members under compression trapping gases, particularly water vapor.

niscLosure of Invention _ __ _,_ __ _ _ The present invention solves -the thermal mismatch problem of the prior art metaL/ceramic laser by using an all metal structure to combine the advantages of metal fabrication with -the performance advantages o~ a homogeneous structure.
An RF excited all metal laser seems at first a contradiction of terms because supporting the required electric fields generally requires insulators. An excep-tion to that rule is a waveguide (microwave) excited gas medium. Such laser action has been demonstrated in the past but has been considered to be of no commercia] vaLue.

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One embodiment Or the all metal transversely excited laser consists of a structure similar to Figure 2 of U.S. Patent No. 4 373 202 but constructed from metal instead of ceramic. The structure consists of top and bottom aluminum plates separated by aluminum spacers to form a rectangular cavlty or bore of about .1 to .3 inches in width and height. A transverse electric field is created by elec-trodes running along -the bore on top and bottom. Electrode width may be 50 to 80% of the bore.
Excitation is applied by means of a bi-phase drive where -the instantaneous vol-tage of each electrode is 180 degrees out of phase relative to the other electrode when measured against re~erence ground (cavity walls). This forces the field to have a relatively uniform value along the electrode separation while cutting in half the electric field that has to be suppor-ted between electrode and ground.
The electrode pairs are created by converting the aluminum surface facing the bore to aluminum oxide by hard anodizing to a thickness of about .01 inches. The electrodes are applied by evaporation plating or other conventional processes. Additional insulator surfaces for protection of the electrode may be created by additional anodizing or a vacuum coating technique. This laser structure contains no commercial insulating materials except for wire feed-throughs and the ]ike which are not s-tructural. Anodized metal surfaces are continuous with the base metal and do not have the temperature limitations of composite materia]s.
A second embodiment also employs the aluminum sandwich configuration but uses printed circuit films to carry the electrodes for the bi-phase excitation. These filllls may ei-ther be ]aminated to the top and bottom plates or be sandwiched between the aluminum parts. A useful thickness ~or the die]ectric is 5-20 mils. The electrode surface may also be laminated behind an additiona] layer of insu]ator. Userul insulating materials may be organic or 13~3~

inorgani.c, with inorganic materials the more stable choice.
An example o[ inorganic materials woul.d be mica and an examp:Le of an organic h.igh temperature insulator would be polyimide. Technically, this printed circuit implementation is not "all metal." l~owever, because the thickness and mechani.cal properties of the insulator layer do not affect the structural characteristics, it does not suffer from differential thermal expansion that would limit the operating or process tempera-ture range of the device significantly.
A -third embodiment of the invention has been found to be most useful s.ince lt addresscs add:it:ional shortcomings of current lasers and satisfies all of the desired objectives. In this implementation no functional insulators at all are used. ~he bi-phase excitation is applied directly to two opposing walls of the bore using only a few mils of airspace as insulators in the corners of the cavity. The discharge forms between the electrodes (spaced from .1 to .4 i.nches) in a uniform way that ignores the presence of the closely spaced side wal]s. Any insulators in thi.s type of device are used only to support the electrodes and are no-t near the discharge. It has been found by measurement and ca]culati.on that the electrodes can be cool.ed using the high thermal conductivity o the lasing gas without using structural (compression) members to conduct the heat away from the plasma. This embodiment can be conveniently fabricated using aluminum extrusion techniques for both housing and el.ectrodes. Th:is embodiment al.so used bi-phase excita-tion.
A].l of the above embodiments are based on using the non-linear breakdown and ionizat.ion cllaracteristics of gases. In typical gases, breakdown and subsequent ionization occur at a particular combination of field strength (E-fi.eld) and abso:lute RF potenti.al, as wel]. as frequency. ln typical (solid) insu:lators, breakdown is a].most exc]usive]y a function oE F,-field (RF or DC).

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This means that the ionization potentia] of a gas does not change proportionally to the gap spacing. A way to visual;ze this efEect is to realize that a certain amount of absolute kinetic energy is required before ioniza-tion can occur. Therefore, a large gap spacing combinedwith a large voltage allows for a longer acceleration dis-tance and therefore facilitates ionization. Since bi-phase excitation cuts the RF potential of each electrode relative to ground -to 1/2 its total value, it can be seen that the voltage required to cause discharge -to ground is always more than 1/2 the total value required to cause discharge between electrodes as long as the spacing to ground is much less than the electrode spacing, and, of course, much larger in non-functional peripheral areas. For this reason the discharge is confined -to the electrode gap.
It has been found that this desirable situation takes on extreme values for the laser gases and pressures used in typical gas lasers. For example, experiments have shown that a gap spacing of .3 inches with each electrode being separated from ground by only .005 inches does not lead to discharge between electrode and ground while initiating and maintaining the electrode -to electrode plasma. Note that the field strength between electrode and ground in this case is 30 times greater than the field strength between electrodes. The .005 dimension is not a limiting case but simply a convenient distance that was tested.
This effect then makes possible both the insulating and cooling features of the above embodiments.
Objects of the Invention It is a principal object of the present invention to overcome the aforementioned thermal mismatch problems of prior art lasers by providing an all metal gas laser which affords the easier fabrication of a metal structure and performance advantages of a homogeneous structure.

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It is an additlonal object of the present invention to provide a gas laser the structure of which can be sealed by welding without requiring costly and potentially disadvantageous wet processing.
It is still an additional object of the present invention to provide a gas laser structure which more substantially eliminates traps and virtual leaks to improve gas cleanliness and outgassing.
It is still an additional object of the present invention to provide a novel gas laser of reduced complexity and which is easier to fabricate and assemble as compared to prior art gas lasers.
The aforementioned objects and advantages of the present invention, as well as additional objects and advantages thereof, will be more fully understood hereinafter as a result of a detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention when taken in conjunction with the following drawings.

Brief Description of the Drawings Figure 1 is a cross-sectional exploded view of a first embodiment of the invention.
Figure 2 is a cross-sectional exploded view of a second embodiment of -the invention.
Figure 3 is a cross-sectional view of a third embodiment of the invention.

Best Mode for Carrying Out the Invention Referring first to Figure 1, it will be seen that the first all metal gas laser embodiment 10 of the present invention comprises -top and bottom aluminum plates 12 separated by a pair of aluminum spacers 13 to form a rectangular cavity or bore 16. The plates and spacers are shown separated to better illustrate the structure of the invention. However, in the final structure the plates and spacers may be in contact or separated by small air gaps.
In typical applications, cavity or bore 16 would have :~3~

dimensions of 0.1 to 0.4 inches in both width and height.
A transverse electric field is created by electrodes 18 running along the top and bottom of bore 16. The electrodes 18 may, by way of example, be 50~ to 80% of the bore width. Excitation is applied utilizing a bi-phase drive where the instantaneous voltage of each electrode is 180 degrees out of phase with respect to the other when measured against re~erence ground at -the cavity walls.
Such bi-phase drive forces the field to have a sufficient value along the electrode separation while halving the electric field that must be supported between the electrode and ground. The electrodes 18 are provided on a pair of polyimide printed circuit films 14 which may be either laminated to the top and bottom plates 12 or sandwiches between the aluminum parts. A typical thickness for the polyimide printed circuit film dielectric is 5-20 mils.
The electrode surface may also be laminated behind an additional layer of polyimide. Polyimide is a proven vacuum material of excellent electrical and thermal properties. Its expansion coefficient closely matches that of aluminum. ~lowever expansion match is not an issue as the thin film is not structural in nature and cannot distort the underlying metal structure.
The second all metal gas laser embodimen-t 20 of the present invention is represented in Figure 2. This embodiment comprises a pair of aluminum plates 22, a pair of aluminum spacers 23, the latter forming a rectangular cavity or bore 26 and a pair of electrodes 28 all of which function and serve the same purpose as -the corresponding elements of the first embodiment of the invention illustrated in Figure 1. However, in the second embodiment of Figure 2, instead of using a pair of printed circuit films, the electrode pairs are created by converting the aluminum surfaces facing the bore 26 to aluminum oxide by hard anodizing aLuminum plates 22 to form corresponding aluminum oxide suraces 2~ which may be of about 0.01 inches in depth. The electrodes 28 are applied by ~ 3~83 ~ ~ ~

evaporation p]ating or other conventional processes.
Additional insulator surraces for protection of the electrodes can be provided by additional anodizing or vacuum coating techniques.
This second embodiment of the invention contains no commercial insulating materials except wire feed-throughs and the like, all of which are not structural.
Anodized metal surfaces are continuous wi-th the base metal and therefore do not have temperature limitations. The aluminum oxide integral dielectric does not introduce any new elements into the laser that may contaminate it.
Lasers routinely operate with anodized surfaces in direct contact with the plasma. Furthermore, the dielectric strength of anodized surfaces easily supports the 100 volts or more of radio frequency signal strength required.
Excellent laser operation and performance life can therefore be anticipated. Figure 2 also shows the plates and spacers separated only for purposes of better illustrating the inventive structure.
A third all metal gas laser embodiment of the present invention is shown in cross-section in Figure 3.
This embodiment is a convection/conduction gas insulated laser structure designed to use an extruded aluminum housing 32. Aluminum housing 32 forms a pair of grounded wall members 34 which provide two of the four surfaces forming a rectangular cavity or bore 38. The other two surfaces forming bore 38 are provided by a pair of finned electrodes 36 which may also be extruded aluminum components of the third embodiment. Aluminum housing 32 may, by way of example, be a two inch square extrusion and the two finned electrodes 36 may, by way of example, also be aluminum extrusions. The electrode extrusions are provided with longitudinal fins 42 to facilitate convention cooling. Spaces or gaps 46 are provided at the corners of the rectangular cavity or bore 38 in a dimension of about .001 to .05 inches space between the bore facing surfaces of the electrodes 36 and the bore facing surfaces o~ the ~3U3~6 grounded wall members 34. Gaps 46 may be made equal to zero by relying on anodizing as insulation. Such a closed periphery bore is desirable in -true waveguide lasers hav;ng bore sizes near 0.1 inches to limit diffraction losses. A
"true waveguide" laser is one in which the laser electromagnetic mode is substantially independent of the optics and is instead substantially dependent only on the laser bore geometry and wherein the laser operates in the fundamental mode. Gaps 54 between the electrodes 36 and the housing 32 provide gas conduction cooling. Electrodes 36 are provided with anodized discharge facing surfaces 50 in the form of a thin, hard anodized coating to reduce hot spots. The anodized layer may, by way of example, be 0.0005 to 0.002 mils in thickness.
The electrical capacity of the structure of the third embodiment of the invention shown in Figure 3 is about ~.5 picoFarads per linear inch measured across the discharge. The temperature rise of each electrode is about 22 degrees Centigrade at a power input of 10 watts per linear inch. Because the top and bottom electrodes are directly connected to the outside of the housing 32, the average temperature rise of the rectangular cavity or bore 3~ is therefore abou-t 11 degrees Centigrade. Because the plasma core has a temperature rise of about 150 degrees Centigrade, it is evident that more than adequate heat removal is attained by the structure of the third embodiment.
Electrical excitation is provided by the radio frequency generator 44 connected to the electrodes 36.
Electrical excitation frequency is normally in the range of 20-200 MHz and more typically would be one of -the authorized ISM frequencies at 27 or 40 MHz. The RE
excitation is applied in a balanced bi-phase form so that each electrode carries only one-half of the total voltage 3~ to ground.
Æ]ectrodes 36 are supported by Teflon~ or polyimide spacers or insulator guides 40 at periodic C~ti lo int~rvals Or severa:L inches along the ]ength of the Laser.
rnsulator guides 40 also act as bearings during the assembly of the third embodiment 30 which consists of sliding the electrodes 36 into the housing extrusion recesses 52. Inductioll coils (not shown) to neutralize the capacity at the operating frequency may be applied at both ends of the assembly prior to closing the tube with the end plate optical assemblies (not shown) as is typical in current state-of-the-art lasers. Alternatively, the coils ]0 may be applied externally where the bi-phase radio frequency excitation is applied to the s-tructure of the laser. Insulator guides 40 hold the electrodes 36 spaced from the side walls of the aluminum housing 32 thereby forming a pair of open space insulating gaps 54 on either side of the housing.
It has been found by measurement and calculation that the electrodes 36 can be cooled using the high thermal conductivity of the lasing gas which is typically about 70%
helium. Accordingly, it is not necessary to use structural compression members to conduct away the heat from the plasma. Therefore this type of device can be conveniently fabricated using easily manufactured aluminum extrusion techniques for both the housing and electrodes.
Essentially all interior surfaces of the laser are in direct contact wi-th -the lasing gas. Therefore, outgassing during laser processing is much more effective leading to a cleaner gas, longer life and making it possible to provide gas lasers that are more sensitive to contamination such as carbon monoxide lasers.
Because the dielectric constant of the insulating medium is 1.0 instead of 8.9 for the typically used alumina ceramic, electrical standing waves along the laser bore are increased in wavelength by up to ~ 9, thereby leading to more uniform E-field, longer lasers and higher useful excitation frequencies. Elimination of thermal expansion mismatch makes possible an all welded, dry process device that can withstand high bakeout temperatures and military :~L3~ 3~
1~.

temperatllre ranges. The elimination of machined ceramic parts and the ease of assembly due to the elimination of compression heat sinking design, significantly reduce the cost of fabrication. By using convection and conduction cooling of the electrodes, the absence of the high dielectric constant insulators found in prior art lasers, reduces the electrical capacity, thereby resulting in the opportunity to use higher operating frequencies and maintaining higher electrical efficiencies. The corner gaps 46 permit transverse gas exchange between the plasma and the tube gas contained within chambers 49 ad~acent the cooling find 42. This provides additional gas convection cooling as well as a continuous supply of fresh gas. soth of these effects increase the laser efficiency.
The convection/conduction cooled gas insulated laser structure of Figure 3 is ideally suited as a replacement for metal-ceramic gas lasers of the prior art such as that disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,393,506 because both of these devices use similar low cost fabrication techniques. However, the all metal extruded design of Figure 3 is also capable of operating within the military temperature range and obviates -the need for prior art all ceramic struc-tures. Each of the novel embodiments of the invention herein disclosed including the third embodiment illustrated in Figure 3, can be provided in a folded configuration for better packaging and higher power levels.
Furthermore, the anodized and printed circuit configurations of the embodiments illustrated in Figures 1 and 2, would find very advantageous use in small, rugged devices exposed to severe shock and vibration such as in missiles and munitions where only short operating times are required.
It will now be understood that what has been disclosed herein comprises all metal RF excited gas lasers which are at least as cost competitive as comparable gas lasers, the structures of which combine ceramics and metal components. However, the performance of the disclosed 13~
l2 invention, particularly in regard to broad operating temperature ranges, is comparable to more expensive and more complex all ceramic structures. The present invention overcomes the prior art thermal mismatch problems of ]ess expensive lasers of the prior art by providing an all metal gas laser which affords the easier fabrication of an all metal structure while providing the performance advantages of a homogeneous prior art structure. Furthermore, the present invention provides a gas laser structure which can be sealed by welding without requiring costly and potentially disadvantageous wet processing. It eliminates traps and leaks to improve gas cleanliness and outgassing, and it is of reduced complexity and is easier to fabricate and assemble as compared to prior art gas lasers. Three alternative embodiments have been disclosed. One such embodiment utilizes a novel printed circuit configuration and another utilizes a nove] anodized surface configuration.
The third embodiment represents a particularly advantageous and radical departure from prior art laser structures because of the use of readily fabricated extruded par-ts and furthermore because of the unique capability to rely entirely upon gas convection/conduction cooling.
Those having skill in the art to which the present invention pertains will now as a result of the applicant's teaching herein perceive various modifications and additions. By way of example, alternative materials used as insulators and electrodes will now become apparent and, in addition, alternative structural configurations utilizing the novel concepts of the present invention will now become apparent. I~owever, all such modifications and additions are deemed to be within the scope of the invention which is to be limited only by the claims appended hereto.

Claims (53)

1. An RF-excited gas laser, comprising:
a pair of spaced, parallel metal plates;
a pair of metal spacers separating said plates, said plates and spacers forming an elongated laser bore;
a laser gas medium within said bore; and a pair of metal discharge electrodes located upon opposing surfaces within said bore and parallel to the longitu-dinal axis of said bore, said electrodes being excitable by a source of RF-excited voltage, said electrodes being electri-cally insulated from said opposing surfaces by nonconductive films between said electrodes and said opposing surfaces, respectively.
2. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein said non conductive films comprise an inorganic material such as polyimide.
3. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein said non conductive films comprise an inorganic dielectric material such as mica.
4. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein said non conductive films comprise an oxide of the electrode metal.
5. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein said non conductive films comprise an oxide of the metal of said opposing surfaces.
6. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein the metal of said plates and of said spacers have substantially equal thermal expansion coefficients.
7. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein the metal of said plates and the metal of said spacers are the same metals.
8. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein the metal of said plates, the metal of said spacers and the metal of said electrodes are the same metals.
9. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein said electrodes are excited by oppositely phased excitation voltages relative to ground potential.
10. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein said bore has a width and a height within the range of 0.1 to 0.4 inches.
11. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein the material used to form plates, spacers, electrodes and insulators is aluminum.
12. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein the electrodes are anodized.
13. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein an additional insulator is applied to the electrode surface facing the bore.
14. The gas laser recited in claim 1 wherein the said metal spacers are separated from the said metal plates by an air gap.
15. The gas laser recited in claim 14 wherein the laser gas medium within the plasma communicates with external gas by convection transverse to the bore axis.
16. The gas laser recited in claim 14, further comprising a source of RF-excited voltage connected to said pair of metal discharge electrodes, the voltage generating a plasma in said elongated laser bore, substantially all of the heat generated by the plasma being carried away from the laser bore by conduction, convection and radiation through the laser gas medium.
17. An RF-excited gas laser comprising a plasma discharge section formed by a plurality of longitudinal elec-trodes separated from and contained within a larger envelope containing a laser gas medium, at least two of said electrodes surrounding and forming an axial laser bore, said electrodes being excitable by a source of RF voltage and being electri-cally insulated from each other in the discharge region by the laser gas medium.
18. The gas laser recited in claim 17, further comprising a source of RF voltage exciting said plurality of electrodes to generate a plasma in said plasma discharge section and means for transferring the heat generated by the discharge in said plasma from said plurality of electrodes to said larger envelope substantially by conduction, convection and radiation through the laser gas medium.
19. The gas laser recited in claim 17 wherein the plurality of longitudinal electrodes comprise two orthogonally oriented pairs of electrodes, a first pair of said electrodes being driven by oppositely phased excitation voltages and a remaining pair being substantially at the instantaneous mean of the oppositely phased excitation voltages.
20. The gas laser recited in claim 19 wherein the plasma discharge section formed by said pairs of electrodes is substantially square in cross section except for corner gaps serving as insulators, said gaps being a small fraction of the electrode width.
21. The gas laser recited in claim 17 wherein said driven electrodes have insulated surfaces.
22. The gas laser recited in claim 19 wherein the envelope and the remaining pair of electrodes are formed from a unitary aluminum extrusion and the first pair of electrodes are made from oppositely facing pieces of additional aluminum extrusions.
23. The gas laser recited in claim 22 wherein said additional extrusions are provided with surfaces of large cross section to substantially optimize both conduction and convection cooling.
24. The gas laser recited in claim 17 wherein the laser gas medium contained within said envelope communicates with the laser gas medium in the plasma discharge section by convection transverse to the laser bore axis.
25. The gas laser recited in claim 17 wherein the position of the first pair of electrodes is defined by insulators located away from the axial laser bore.
26. The gas laser recited in claim 25 wherein the said insulators are located at periodic longitudinal intervals and said insulators are of minimum contact area in order to reduce trapped gases.
27. The gas laser recited in claim 25 wherein the insulators serve as bearings during assembly, said assembly consisting of sliding the insulated electrodes into said envelope.
28. The gas laser recited in claim 27 wherein the insulators are made of a high temperature plastic.
29. The gas laser recited in claim 28 wherein the insulators are made of glass, ceramic or other inorganic substances.
30. The gas laser recited in claim 25 wherein the insulators are an oxide of the extrusion metal.
31. An RF-excited gas laser comprising a discharge section within a larger envelope containing a laser gas medium, said discharge section forming a laser bore and being defined by a plurality of longitudinal electrodes surrounding said laser bore, each carrying a different RF potential, substantially all surfaces contained within the envelope being directly exposed to the laser gas medium.
32. The gas laser recited in claim 31 wherein said envelope and said electrodes are aluminum.
33. The gas laser recited in claim 31 wherein the surfaces of said electrodes are covered with an oxide film.
34. The gas laser recited in claim 31 wherein the laser gas medium within the discharge region communicates transversely to the laser bore by convection.
35. An RF-excited gas laser comprising a metal envelope, at least one pair of oxidized metal electrodes surrounding and forming a plasma discharge section within an axial laser bore formed by such electrodes, metal oxide insulating material between adjacent electrodes forming the laser bore, and a laser gas medium within said bore.
36. A gas laser as recited in claim 35 comprising an envelope consisting of a first aluminum extrusion having two projections forming two opposed electrodes of a first set of electrodes, a second set of opposed electrodes being formed by two sections of a second extrusion and held in fixed relationship to the envelope to complete a laser bore having a square cross section, said second set of electrodes being insulated from said first pair by metal oxide.
37. A gas laser as recited in claim 36 wherein substantially all heat is transferred from said metal electrodes to said envelope by conduction, convection and radiation through the laser gas medium.
38. The gas laser recited in claim 17 wherein the bore has a width and a height between about 0.1 and 0.4 inches.
39. The gas laser recited in claim 31 wherein the bore has a width and a height between about 0.1 and 0.4 inches.
40. The gas laser recited in claim 35 wherein the bore has a width and a height between about 0.1 and 0.4 inches.
41. A gas laser as recited in claim 36 wherein said additional extrusion has an enlarged surface area to optimize both conduction and convection cooling through the laser gas medium.
42. A gas laser as recited in claim 41, further comprising a plurality of support insulators located in areas away from the discharge to position the insulated electrodes.
43. The gas laser recited in claim 19 wherein the plurality of longitudinal electrodes comprise two orthogonally oriented pairs of electrodes, a first pair being excitable by a source of RF-excited voltage connected to said pair.
44. The gas laser recited in claim 17 comprising a plurality of electrodes to form a hollow discharge section of substantially closed circumference and having a plurality of RF
voltages applied to said electrodes.
45. An RF-excited gas laser as recited in claim 17 wherein the heat transfer from the plasma to the envelope is accomplished by heat conduction through an electrically insulat-ing layer of the laser gas disposed away from the discharge region.
46. An RF-excited gas laser comprising an axial tube containing an internal plasma discharge section wherein all surfaces contained within the tube are directly exposed to a laser gas medium, a plurality of longitudinal metal electrodes excitable by a source of RF voltage, and one or more separate insulators interposed between an electrode and discharge plasma.
47. An RF-excited gas laser, comprising:
means defining at least one elongated chamber of substantially closed perimeter having a cross-sectional diameter less than about three percent of the chamber length, said chamber including a plurality of metal electrodes for establishing a transverse electric field, said electrodes extending in the length dimension, and insulating means for electrically insulating the electrodes from each other;
a laser gas medium disposed in said at least one chamber; and means for establishing an alternating electric field along a direction transverse to the length of said at least one chamber, the alternating electric field having a frequency ranging from 10 MHz to 1 GHz to establish a laser-exciting plasma.
48. The gas laser of claim 47 wherein said insulating means includes said laser gas medium.
49. The gas laser of claim 48 wherein said at least one elongated chamber is located within a sealed envelope and substantially all surfaces contained within the envelope are directly exposed to the laser gas medium.
50. The gas laser of claim 47 wherein said insulating means is formed by an oxide of the metal forming the electrodes.
51. The gas laser of claim 50 wherein substantially all of the heat generated in the plasma is conducted from the plasma to the envelope by conduction through the laser gas medium.
52. The gas laser of claim 47 wherein said insulating means is formed by coatings applied to said electrodes.
53. The gas laser of claim 47 wherein said elongated chamber is part of a sealed envelope and substantially all surfaces contained within said envelope are directly exposed to the laser gas medium.
CA000543102A 1986-04-30 1987-07-27 Rf excited all metal gas laser Expired - Lifetime CA1303196C (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000543102A CA1303196C (en) 1986-04-30 1987-07-27 Rf excited all metal gas laser
US07/110,125 US4805182A (en) 1986-04-30 1987-10-19 RF-excited, all-metal gas laser

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US85735486A 1986-04-30 1986-04-30
CA000543102A CA1303196C (en) 1986-04-30 1987-07-27 Rf excited all metal gas laser

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