Numéro
J. Phys. IV France
Volume 07, Numéro C4, Octobre 1997
XXIIIrd ICPIG
XXIIIrd International Conference on Phenomena in Ionized gases
Page(s) C4-167 - C4-174
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/jp4:1997412
EUROPEAN SYMPOSIUM ON MARTENSITIC TRANSFORMATION AND SHAPE MEMORY PROPERTIES

J. Phys. IV France 07 (1997) C4-167-C4-174

DOI: 10.1051/jp4:1997412

Modelling of the Parametric Behaviour of a Self-Heated Copper Vapour Laser : Issues Governing the Thermal Runaway Behaviour of the Plasma Tube Wall Temperature

R.J. Carman

Centre for Lasers and Applications, Macquarie University, North Ryde, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia


Abstract
A computer model has been used to simulate the discharge kinetics and parametric behaviour of a selfheated copper vapour laser for a wide range of optimum and non-optimum conditions. The results indicate that the ground state copper density and the peak electron temperature are the two most important parameters that affect laser performance. The results also confirm the existence of a threshold wall temperature (or threshold copper density) above which the plasma tube becomes thermally unstable with respect to the deposited electrical power, the wall temperature and the copper density, ultimately leading to thermal runaway. At low pulse repetition frequency (prf < 8kHz), the thermal instability restricts the copper density (and laser output power) to values well below optimum.



© EDP Sciences 1997