Research project

Deep UV high-value manufacturing laser instruments

Project overview

In this instrument development project we will be designing, constructing and testing two laser systems producing UV light pulses with sufficient energy to mark, cut or drill various non-ferrous engineering materials, be it removing small amounts precisely or in a wholesale manner that accompanies an explosion of the target material. The key advantages of the proposed systems are that they will be efficient and offer unique properties for the emitted light that cannot be found in any other laser system in the world. The first is the colour, or wavelength, of the light that will be shorter than almost all other solid-state laser systems; next and for just one of the instruments, the energy in each pulse and their frequency of arrival will be comparable to the smaller industrial-standard excimer gas lasers, which are used for many processes in the electronics manufacturing industry but rely on toxic and corrosive gases and very high voltage discharges to generate the UV light; while the second instrument will have one thousand times less energy per pulse than the first, it will deliver the same number more pulses per second, making it very useful for rapid precision micro-processing, where speed and accuracy are a premium. For us to be able to make these novel laser systems we will exploit an old technology that has re-emerged as a potential platform architecture, cryogenic cooling. Cryogenic cooling applied to high energy laser systems with high average powers has become accepted as the credible route toward laser driven fusion reactors and extreme-peak-power laser facilities (NIF - https://lasers.llnl.gov/, DiPOLE - at STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) http://www.stfc.ac.uk, HiLASE - http://www.hilase.cz), clearly evidence of the potential efficiency of the approach. Employing this method we will develop a platform technology that underpins both of the systems detailed above and will enable the unique characteristics of our proposed manufacturing laser instruments. At the end of the project we will have developed a clear route for transferring the knowledge to enable the manufacturing of these lasers and begun testing their performance for materials processing in collaboration with UK laser micro-processing industrial partners.

Staff

Lead researchers

Dr Jacob Mackenzie

Associate Professor
Research interests
  • Waveguide amplifiers and lasers
  • Cryogenically cooled lasers for peak and average power scaling
  • Ultra-fast high repetition rate compact lasers
Connect with Jacob

Other researchers

Professor Andy Clarkson

Professor of Optoelectronics Research
Connect with Andy

Professor Yifeng Yang

Prof. of Cryogenics & Superconductivity
Research interests
  • Superconducting devices and machines
  • Enabling sciences of applied superconductivity
  • Material properties at low temperature for applications
Connect with Yifeng

Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups

Research outputs

Silvia Cante, Stefano Valle, Sung Jin Yoon & Jacob Mackenzie, 2019, Applied Physics B: Lasers and Optics, 125(7), 1-6
DOI:
Type: article
Silvia Cante, Stefano Valle & Jacob Mackenzie, 2018
Type: conference
Silvia Cante & Jacob Mackenzie, 2018
Type: conference
Silvia Cante, Stephen J. Beecher & Jacob Mackenzie, 2018, Optics Express, 26(6)
DOI:
Type: article
Luigi Cini & Jacob Mackenzie, 2017, Applied Physics B: Lasers and Optics, 123
DOI:
Type: article
Henry George Stenhouse, Stephen J. Beecher & Jacob Mackenzie, 2017
DOI:
Type: conference
Henry G. Stenhouse, Stephen J. Beecher & Jacob I. Mackenzie, 2017
DOI:
Type: conference