Hello,
I have a VCSEL which consists of 7 emitters. Each emitter has a gaussian-beam profile with approx. divergence of 20° (FWHM). I have a collimator lens. The aim is to get a collimated laser beam. Of course, due to the finite size of the VCSEL the collimated beam will always have some degree of divergence.
Setup:
In SEQ-Model each emitter is represented by a field. The Position of the fields is according to the tech. drawing of the VCSEL. I used the clear aperture specified by the supplier.
I ran an optimization using the rms-wavefront-error (OPDX) to find the distance between VCSEL and collimator to achieve a collimated beam with as little beam divergence as possible.
Afterwards I built a NSQ-model of VCSEL and collimator. The emitters are simulated by a “Source Gaussian”.
If I use this result from the optimization and apply it in the NSQ-model, the irradiance profile and beam divergence don’t match my experimental data at all.
If I reduce the clear aperture of my collimator lens and run an optimzation, than the irradiance results in the NSQ-model fit much better.
I guess this mismatch is due to the fact that the opimization doesn’t “know” about the emission profile of the emitters and therefore each ray of each emitter is weighted equally although in reality rays with higher angles contain less energy and consequently should be weighted less in an optimization. By reducing the clear aperture I “ignore” those rays with higher angles.
Question:
How can I take into account the emission profile of the 7 emitters from the VCSEL + use the total Clear Aperture of my collimator lens when running the optimization?
Is the OPDX-operand the proper one to use for this optimzation or should I use the ANCX & ANCY-Operand?
Thank you very much!
Cheers,
Felix