Cleveland Crystals (Cleveland, OH) has developed a domestic
source of material for tunable lasers and high-average-power
Pockels cells. The material provides a variety of features
and a wide transmission frequency range critical for supporting
a variety of applications, including medicine, spectroscopy,
LIDAR, and materials processing.
Material for solid-state lasers.
Cleveland Crystals, now part of major optics supplier Gooch
& Housego, received funding from MDA’s predecessor agencies
via two Phase I and one
Phase II SBIR contracts.
Compared to dye lasers,
solid-state lasers based on the
material offer both cost
advantages and wide tenability.
The material could be
used in Q-switched lasers,
which are now well known
for removing tattoos, ablating
tissue in the prostate,
processing the surface of industrial materials, and providing
precision micromachining of optical, mechanical, and electrical
components.
For more information on Cleveland Crystals technology, visit
http://info.hotims.com/34461-506. (Source: Gary Catella, Gooch and
Housego, Inc./NTTC; MDA TechUpdate, Missile Defense Agency,
National Technology Transfer Center Washington Operations).
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