Compact Laser Driver for Ultrasonic Arbitrary Position and Width Pulse Sequences Generation

14Citations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Laser ultrasound offers several benefits in comparison to immersion or air-coupled ultrasound: it directly generates stress on the sample surface; it has a wide bandwidth and a small acoustic source can be produced. Conventionally, high-power pulsed lasers are required therefore equipment is bulky and expensive. Here we propose to use mid-power laser diodes, which are small and low cost. To solve the low signal amplitude problem with lower power lasers, the use of spread spectrum signal, arbitrary position, and width binary pulse sets is proposed. To date, a laser driver for this task has not been available. This article describes the development of such a compact driver, where the essential electronics occupy an area of $10\,\,\times20$ mm. The whole system with a fixture for kinematic mount is comparable in size to a conventional piezoelectric ultrasonic transducer. The driver can supply pulse sets of up to 40 A. Individual pulse duration can vary between 20 and 1000 ns (0.5-25-MHz ultrasound range) and the total pulse train duration is limited by the laser type used. Experiments show that up to 10- $\mu \text{s}$ long pulse sets can be used at 10-A current, without laser degradation. Current waveforms, beam profile, and optical response signals were measured for three rectified topologies. It was concluded that the GaN-based constant current switch topology has the best performance, but a power MOSFET in a source current feedback topology can also be used to generate pulses down to 20 ns. Photoacoustic response signals from chirp and phase shift keying modulation have been demonstrated.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Svilainis, L., Chaziachmetovas, A., Eidukynas, V., Aleksandrovas, A., & Varatinskas, M. (2021). Compact Laser Driver for Ultrasonic Arbitrary Position and Width Pulse Sequences Generation. IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, 70. https://doi.org/10.1109/TIM.2021.3120144

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free