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Article

Insights of the Qualified ExoMars Laser and Mechanical Considerations of Its Assembly Process

by
Pol Ribes-Pleguezuelo
1,*,†,
Denis Guilhot
2,†,
Marta Gilaberte Basset
1,†,
Erik Beckert
1,
Ramona Eberhardt
1 and
Andreas Tünnermann
1
1
Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF, Albert-Einstein-Str. 7, 07745 Jena, Germany
2
Worldsensing, C/ Viriat, 47 10th Floor, 08014 Barcelona, Spain
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally to this work.
Instruments 2019, 3(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020025
Submission received: 1 April 2019 / Revised: 17 April 2019 / Accepted: 17 April 2019 / Published: 19 April 2019
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Photonic Devices Instrumentation and Applications)

Abstract

:
1960 is the birth year of both the laser and the Mars exploration missions. Eleven years passed before the first successful landing on Mars, and another six before the first rover could explore the planet’s surface. In 2011, both technologies were reunited with the first laser landing on Mars as part of the ChemCam instrument, integrated inside the Curiosity Rover. In 2020, two more rovers with integrated lasers are expected to land on Mars: one through the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Mars 2020 mission and another through the European Space Agency (ESA) ExoMars mission. The ExoMars mission laser is one of the components of the Raman Spectrometer instrument, which the Aerospace Technology National Institute of Spain (INTA) is responsible for. It uses as its excitation source a laser designed by Monocrom and manufactured in collaboration with the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering (IOF). In this paper, we present for the first time the final flight module laser that has been installed in the rover’s onboard laboratory and validated to be shipped to Mars in 2020. Particular emphasis is given to mechanical considerations and assembly procedures, as the ExoMars laser assembly has required soldering techniques in contrast to the standard adhesive technologies used for most laser assembly processes in order to fulfill the environmental and optical requirements of the mission.

1. Introduction: Martian Exploration

The first attempt to reach Mars took place in 1960, when the USSR launched the Marsnik 1 mission, although this mission failed to approach the red planet [1]. The NASA Mariner 4 mission was the first successful flight to approach Mars and the first 21 close shot photos of the planet were taken on the 14th of July 1965, showing cratered areas. The Mariner 6 and Mariner 7 missions also returned pictures of the planet during 1969, showing mainly cratered areas. In November 1971, photos taken by the Mariner 9 mission revealed that the surface was not only covered by craters but also presented dormant volcanoes and a huge rift across the surface of the planet [2].
The first successful landing was achieved by the USSR on the 3rd of December 1971, although the lander only worked on the surface for a few seconds. The 1975 Viking mission confirmed that some of the meteors found on Earth originated on Mars and in 1997 the Mars Global Surveyor reached Mars to reveal ancient signs of water [3].
Sojourner was the first rover to navigate on Mars, which it reached in July 1997 through the NASA Mars Pathfinder mission [4]. It was followed in 2004 by Opportunity and Spirit, who provided confirmation of the past presence of water on Mars. The communication was lost with Spirit in 2010 while Opportunity remained active until the beginning of 2019 [5].
Curiosity landed on Mars in 2012 and is the only rover still active on Mars’ surface [6]. Its main achievement has been finding evidence of a past habitable environment such as methane and organic compounds. The European Space Agency (ESA) also sent the Schiaparelli lander as part of the ExoMars mission in 2016. It crashed on the surface but was successfully able to transmit important data during its descent which will enable successful landing of the Rover in the second half of the mission [7]. Indian missions have reached orbit but not yet the planet, while Japan and China have also tried to reach Mars, albeit unsuccessfully to date. Both NASA and ESA have a mission to Mars planned for 2020 (Mars 2020 and ExoMars respectively).
One of the key objectives of Martian exploration is to explore the possibility of past, present or even future life on Mars in order to understand the evolution of our planet and to plan future manned missions to the Red Planet. To do so, different spectroscopy approaches are being used. The laser devices sent (or planned on being sent) use different design and scientific approaches specific to the mission requirements and budgeting.

2. Martian Lasers

2.1. Specific Scientific Lasers for Mars Exploration

In 2011, NASA sent the Curiosity Rover to Mars, which contained the ChemCam instrument, which is capable of analysing the composition of rocks and soils samples up to 7 m away. The ChemCam used the laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) technique, with a pulsed laser of ≥10 MW/mm2 power density that vaporized selected targets, and a spectrometer device to characterise the generated plasma. The ChemCam laser emitted optical pulses at 1067 nm thanks to three Neodymium-doped Potassium-Gadolinium Tungstate (Nd:KGW) crystals pumped independently by three 700 W diode stacks. The lasers had an approximate mass of 600 g. The LIBS approach allowed the ChemCam instrument to analyse the Martian surface samples but not to detect low presence of organic molecules [8].
The next NASA Mars mission, to be launched in 2020, will implement improved research devices compared to those used in the Curiosity rover. The SuperCam, the successor of the ChemCam, can not only perform LIBS but also Raman spectroscopy in a range up to 12 m away from the rover, to search for organic compounds. The SuperCam laser (manufactured by Thales) uses a Neodymium-doped Yttrium Aluminum Garnet (Nd:YAG) crystal instead of a Nd:KGW crystal. It emits two different laser beams, one at 1064 nm for LIBS spectroscopy, and its frequency-doubled signal (532 nm) for Raman spectroscopy [9]. Moreover, the NASA 2020 mission will implement the Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman & Luminescence for Organics & Chemicals (SHERLOC) installed in a robotic arm that uses an ultraviolet (UV) laser to perform proximity Raman. The SHERLOC is built with a narrow linewidth 248.6 nm laser (∼400 g) generated from a Neon-Copper Transverse Excited Hollow Cathode laser made by Photon Systems Inc. [10,11,12].
The next European Martian mission, the ExoMars mission, will also be launched in 2020. The instrument used differs from the NASA ChemCam in its capability to analyse Martian samples extracted 2 meters below the surface, instead of performing distance and surface analysis. The next ExoMars mission will carry an analytical laboratory, which includes two laser devices [13]:
  • The Mars Organic Molecule Analyser (MOMA) to conduct broad-range searches for organic molecules,
  • The Raman Laser Spectrometer (RLS) to identify mineral phases and search for the presence of carbon.
The MOMA uses a high-power ultraviolet laser emitting at 266 nm to study large molecules, inorganic minerals and volatile organic molecules with an adjustable irradiance beam between 35 to 250 MW/cm2. The laser crystal is pumped at 806 nm, resulting in a passively pulsed beam provided by a Neodymium/Chromium Doped YAG (Nd:Cr:YAG) media. The resulting 1064 nm beam is then frequency-quadrupled to 266 nm [14]. The designed laser device has a length of 13 cm and a mass of 113 g (pumping diodes and input fibre not included) [15].
On the other hand, the ExoMars RLS, also operating inside the rover analytical laboratory, aims at detecting a wide range of organic functional groups, which will help assess which samples should later be analysed in depth by the MOMA instrument [13]. This laser device is an 808 nm diode-pumped solid-state laser (DPSSL), intracavity frequency-doubled, and with an output emission wavelength of 532 nm. The laser design basically consists of two twin lasers mounted side by side for redundancy purposes, two independent laser resonators with ceramic Nd:YAGs as active medium, pumped by two independent laser-diodes, and two second-harmonic generator (SHG) Beta Barium Borates (BBO) crystals.

2.2. Requirements for the ExoMars Laser

The 2020 ExoMars rover from the ESA mission to Mars will, with the help of a mechanical drill, extract samples from the planet subsurface down to a depth of two meters and proceed to their subsequent analysis [16]. The RLS instrument performs the micro analysis of these samples once they have been reduced to powder to precisely identify the mineral phases and detect potential organic compounds. The Raman spectral range goes from 150 to 3800 cm−1 with a spectral resolution of 6 cm−1 below 2000 cm−1 [17]. To perform the Raman spectroscopy, a narrow 532 nm laser with the following requirements had to be designed and assembled:
  • 20 and 35 mW of optical output power,
  • Mass of less than 50 g,
  • Redundant design (two lasers assembled on the same breadboard),
  • Pulse width stability of 30 pm,
  • Irradiance of 0.8 and 1.2 kW/cm2.
Moreover, the space mission requires for the laser to withstand the following environmental conditions [18]:
  • Thermal non-operational range between −60 C and +70 C,
  • Vibration and shock as seen in Table 1,
  • Space radiations.

3. Laser Design and Assembling Method

3.1. Laser Design

To fulfill both optical and environmental requirements, the final design of the ExoMars DPSSL developed by Monocrom S.L. (Figure 1) contains commercial CW (continuous-wave) q-mount diodes emitting at 808 nm from Compound Photonics [20]. Micro-lens fast axis collimators (FAC) from LIMO GmbH are used to obtain a high energy density on the first millimetre of the laser active medium, a ceramic Nd(1%):YAG from Baikowski with a front facet HT808 nm and HR1064 nm (High Transmission and High Reflection; respectively) coating and a back facet HT1064 nm and HR532 coating. This crystal choice allows intrinsically for a narrower output linewidth emission and provides a better thermal conductivity [21]. The Second Harmonic Generation is performed by a BBO crystal from Castech Inc with HT1064&532 nm coating on both sides. This material provides a higher doubling efficiency, lower sensitivity to temperature changes, and higher radiation resistance levels than its competitors [22]. Finally, a final output mirror made of fused silica with HR1064 nm and HT532 nm coatings (Layertech GmbH) is used to complete the cavity.
The optical path of the laser beams after they exit the resonator cavities towards the Martian samples to be analysed is defined by extra steering optics and a Mini-AVIM fibre from DIAMOND GmbH [20]. The design includes the following optics:
  • a steering mirror to redirect the laser beam propagation at a 90 angle;
  • λ /2 waveplates to shift the laser beam polarization and be able to combine both beams through a polarizer cube;
  • a double polarization beam splitter, to steer the laser beam another 90 while redirecting 5% of the light to a power feedback-control photodiode (in charge of stabilizing the laser output power);
  • a pinhole-mirror element, used to couple both coaxial beams inside the output fiber while reflecting the back scattered light from the sample to an autofocus photodiode in charge of adjusting the focus of the light onto the Martian sample.
Environmental Finite-Element-Method (FEM) simulations were performed by our partner LIDAX and demonstrated that the assembly process did not induce any plastic strain or irreversible deformation of the breadboards and components [19].

3.2. Assembling Method

After gathering the RLS device scientific requirements relevant to investigate traces of life in the Martian subsurface (especially laser wavelength, stability and power) and translating the optical requirements into a suitable laser design, the next step was to assure that the final assembled laser could withstand the stringent environmental requirements.
The selected final Flight Module (FM) for the ExoMars mission is presented in Figure 1. During the very first attempts, this laser was assembled using adhesive means. The glues (Masterbond UV22 and Masterbond EP21TDCHT-LO) failed due to their organic composition as, although the laser resonators could be initially aligned to fulfil the optical requirements, the components became misaligned over time due to the tensions created by the drying of the adhesive [19]. To overcome this problem, the assembly method was changed to a low-stress soldering technique called Solderjet Bumping. Although Solderjet Bumping is considered a low-stress soldering technique, it can eventually provoke a stress-induced birefringence effect on the soldered laser resonator components (∼mm range) that could lead to fatal results. For that reason, an intense study to achieve the best soldering approach and also to minimize the stress-induced birefringence had to be carried out.
After positioning the Solderjet Bonding capillary (Figure 2) next to the joining geometry, using an articulating robot arm, the solder alloy is melted by an infrared laser pulse and jetted out of the capillary by applying nitrogen pressure. The irradiation produces reflow and melting of the solder alloys. The infrared laser pulse energy is precisely tuned to adapt to the spherical solder preforms’ materials (tin-based lead-free solders, low melting indium alloys or high melting eutectic gold-tin, gold-silicon, gold-germanium solders, etc.) and diameter [23]. The spherical solder preform diameters can range from 40 μ m to 760 μ m. This process is particularly adapted to the soldering of fragile and brittle materials, such as laser components, thanks to the limited thermal stress applied.
By definition, a soldering process interconnects metallic materials. To solder non-metallic optical components to the baseplate, lenses and laser crystal facets were coated with a metallic layer by a physical vapour deposition (PVD) process, obtaining a solderable and wettable surface on the components. The wetting surface on which the liquid solder droplets can be bonded is produced by sputtering a three-layer systems using a titanium adhesion layer, a platinum diffusion barrier, and a noble gold finish to prevent oxidization, as illustrated in Figure 2.
To compensate for thermal expansion coefficient (CTE) mismatch between the different components, which can affect the stability of the laser, most of the components were soldered on KOVAR pads (see grey pads under the components in Figure 1). However, the laser diodes and laser active medium crystals were assembled over copper pads (see orange pads under the components in Figure 1) since they have low heat dissipation factors. The copper pads are originally bonded to an aluminium nitride (AlN) base plate by Curamik. Therefore, some of the copper pads were chemically removed to be replaced by pre-assembled KOVAR pads at IOF.

4. Laser Assembly Process

4.1. Alignment and Soldering Processes

A DPSSL is composed by different optical components and materials, which require different alignment accuracies and assembling methods. When the resonator cavity is short (in our case about 12 mm long), and even more so in the case of an intra-cavity SHG component that has to result in a narrow line-width output wavelength (30 pm), special attention has to be payed to alignment and assembly of the components. For the current ExoMars laser, different approaches have been used, according to the criticality of each component’s alignment. The first differentiation can be done between the active laser resonator components numbered from 1 to 5 in Figure 1, which need high alignment resolution, and the passive components numbered from 6 to 9 in Figure 1 which are less critical in terms of alignment.
In the first category, we can differentiate between the components which have been soldered to copper pads for better heat dissipation (pumping-diode and active media Nd:YAG, 1 and 3 in Figure 1; respectively) and the components without heat dissipation needs (FAC lenses, BBOs and output mirrors) that have been soldered over KOVAR pads. Once the aluminium nitride (AIN) ceramic baseplate is prepared with the corresponding copper and KOVAR pads, the components are assembled according to the different alignment and soldering requirements. The two ceramic Nd:YAGs are soldered first because YAG is a really strong material [21] and because of its heat dissipation needs. Fifteen 200 μ m AuSn spherical preforms are bumped on their lower sides. Using a Fine Placer device, the ceramics are then picked, positioned and soldered by applying a thermal ramp of 20 s, 360 C and a pressure of 10 N. The Alfalight diodes are then positioned in a similar fashion and soldered using a Sn95.5Ag3.9Cu0.6 (SAC305) 3.048 mm × 3.048 mm × 0.040 mm preform, which required applying a temperature ramp up to 240 C for 10 s. The q-mount die bonding process was performed at Monocrom s.l.
For the correct components alignment, we used a reference HeNe laser pointing to the already mounted Nd:YAG front facet. The HeNe laser was mounted 4.5 m away from the setup and the laser beam was used for the initial components alignment by overlapping the position of the beam reflected by each one of the components’ front facet. First, the FAC microlens was aligned, by holding it with a vacuum gripper and moving it with a Pi Hexapod (F-206 Physik Instrumente GmbH) with a ±2.5 angular travel range in all 3 rotational degrees-of-freedom (DOF) and a resolution of 0.0001 .
Next, the SHG-BBO and the output mirror were aligned. Their alignment resolution is very critical (0.001 ) so a fused silica semi-spherical component is previously soldered to them to provide smooth movement, increased stability and improved precision. Achieving the smallest spacing possible between the components and the KOVAR pads (10 μ m) allows possible tip and tilt alignment (Figure 3) [23], and provides better control for the alignment and reduced movement during the actual soldering. The components were aligned and soldered onto their respective KOVAR pads by using two different Pi Hexapods (Figure 4). In this case, and because of the system capabilities, the AIN baseplate was flipped upside down and the components soldered by applying Solderjet Bumps through the AIN backside. The resulting assembly is seen in the components cross-section in Figure 5.
Once both redundant laser resonators have been aligned and soldered successfully, both beams had to be propagated towards the coupling optics and into the output fiber. The steering optical components (6 to 9 in Figure 1), which do not require heat dissipation, were soldered 30 μ m over the KOVAR pads by using 300 μ m SAC305 bumps.
Each of the different laser material components requires different soldering parameters for a correct Solderjet Bumping soldering process. The necessary energy needs to be applied in order to reflow the soldering alloys without damaging the optical components, while guaranteeing solder robustness at the joints [25,26]. The Solderjet Bumping parametrization energy study results are summarized in Table 2 where the different spherical preform sizes to bond the optical materials BBO, YAG and FS to the different substrate materials KOVAR and copper are shown.
Validation of the final assembled components was achieved by performing push tests using a Zwick Roell Z020. The devices successfully passed equivalent mechanical load tests (Table 1) required by the mission specifications [18].

4.2. Stress Analysis

The obvious potential consequence of the soldering approach, and more specifically the application of thermal energy to reflow the soldering alloys, is the generation of a crack or even material abrasion inside the optical components. However, this was thouroughly studied during the solderjet bumping laser parametrization process (results in Table 2), in order to avoid such damage on the components. Even more, we created a stress analysis process using different softwares; ANSYS to analyze the mechanical created stress and VirtualLab Fusion to later import the stress analysis and identify whether the light propagation was affected by stress-induced birefringence effects [27].
The induced stress could create a component birefringence effect that can be explained through changes in the component reflective indexes by the following equation:
B ij = B 0 , ij + Δ B ij ,
where the second-rank tensor B0,ij represents the free-of-stress indicatrix tensor, and ΔBij represents the indicatrix changes produced due to induced stress, which can also be expressed as,
Δ B ij = π ijkl σ kl ,
where the fourth-rank tensor πijkl is the piezo-optic constant tensor for each material, and σkl is the second-rank tensor for the stress measured in ANSYS. The stress simulations in ANSYS were moreover compared with experimental stress data measured by using a polarimeter device (Illis GmbH) as seen in Figure 6.
Once the resulting birefringence was calculated by obtaining Bij, we could calculate the dielectric constant tensor ϵij with,
[ ϵ ij ] = [ B ij ] 1 ,
ϵij was later imported in VirtualLab Fusion software, which was used to analyze the effects on the different laser wavelength propagation’s across the stressed laser materials. The VirtualLab Fusion results helped to understand if the laser beam was affected due to the stress on components because of the soldering packaging processes [28].

5. Results

The final choice of solder material was: 6 mg of AuSn to solder the ceramic Nd:YAGs and 12 mg of SAC305 for the rest of the optical components [19]. Due to the short length of the resonator cavity (around 12 mm), the alignment of the SHG-BBO and the FS output mirror were the most critical. We were able to solder these components with a precision of 0.001 through the use of Hexapod PI instruments and specifically customized and manufactured vacuum grippers (Figure 4); which represented a final success on the components assemble. The final laser assembly is presented in Figure 7.
An experimental stress analysis was performed to evaluate the effect of the soldering assembly procedure on the final laser resonator. A polarimeter device was used to measure the stress suffered by each component. For instance, the assembled FS mirror shown in Figure 6 shows a stress of 0.1 MP at the laser beam propagation area (centre of the mirror). Together with the stress results extracted from ANSYS, we introduced this information in VirtualLab Fusion software using Equations (1)–(3). After applying new material conditions with the calculated permeability matrix information introduced in VirualLab, we simulated an Ex-polarized Gaussian 50 μ m beam at 523 nm propagating through the FS component, for which we studied the output beam. A value of 0.1% for the beam depolarization was obtained, which is negligible for the laser optical performance (Figure 8) [27].
As seen in Figure 8, the results for a single component hardly showed any influence on the output beam performance. One could argue however that the sum of the effects for each of the laser resonator components for the multiple passes through the laser resonator could lead to total non-negligible birefringence effects. Since such simulation would be more time-consuming than the experimental evaluation, we continued with the laser assembly process. We can see in Figure 9 that a laser resonator assembled by the proposed soldering technique achieved a 95.44% Gaussian output beam with the required power of more than 35 mW at 532 nm. The output beam displayed in Figure 9 was measured after the FS output mirror.
The spectra requirements, that could not be achieved when the assembly process was performed using adhesives, have now also been demonstrated by using the solderJet Bumping-based assembly process described above, as well as all the optical requirements of the mission [19].

6. Conclusions

The Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF reports here for the first time the successful delivery and qualification of the final ExoMars laser designed by the Spanish company Monocrom s.l. (Figure 10a), according to the mission specifications. Several Flight Module (FM) lasers were delivered in 2017 to the company for optical validation and were later transferred to the National Institute of Aerospace Technology (INTA), Spain, where they were optically and environmentally tested. The devices qualified for the Martian mission by achieving the optical specifications and withstanding the environmental tests performed [19]. One of these devices was finally mounted inside the Analytical Laboratory Drawer with the rest of the Raman Laser Spectrometer devices and later qualified by Thales Alenia Space-Italy, to be all finally mounted on the Rosalind Franklin ExoMars rover depicted in Figure 10b [29]. The next ESA ExoMars mission, which contains the DPSSL that will help perform the Raman Spectroscopy of underground Martian samples in the search for evidence of past and present life on the red planet will be launched from Baikonur, Kazakhstan in July 2020.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, P.R.-P.; methodology, P.R.-P.; software, P.R.-P.; validation, M.G.B.; formal analysis, P.R.-P.; investigation, P.R.-P.; writing–original draft preparation, P.R.-P., M.G.B. and D.G.; writing–review and editing, P.R.-P., M.G.B. and D.G.; visualization, P.R.-P. and D.G.; supervision, E.B. and R.E. and A.T.; project administration, P.R.-P.

Funding

The ExoMars Laser Spectrometer is a project funded by Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO), Spain, and supervised and followed by Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Aeroespacial (INTA), Spain (project AYA-2008-04529). The activities related to the laser assembly were performed under a contract with Monocrom s.l, Spain, and under the ExoMars project MINECO funding. The rest of test to prove low-induced stress, components damage or push tests were funded by the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF, and by the Friedrich-Schiller-University of Jena, Germany.

Acknowledgments

The authors want to acknowledge other members of Fraunhofer IOF as well as Robert Eckardt for the (Figure 10a) and other published elsewhere. The authors also want to acknowledge Monocrom SL, particularly Miguel Galan, the brain of the laser design, Sergi Ferrando Margalet, Jordi Juliachs for the support driver and electronics, David Montes for the mechanical designs and Dani Torbisco. Also to Aoife Brady for double checking the text. Finally to INTA and Fernando Rull for bringing the challenge to us.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are used in this manuscript:
NASANational Aeronautics and Space Administration
ESAEuropean Space Agency
INTANational Institute of Aerospace Technology
IOFInstitute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering
USSRUnion of Soviet Socialist Republics
LIBSLaser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy
Nd:KGWNeodymium doped Potassium-Gadolinium Tungstate
Nd:YAGNeodymium-doped Yttrium Aluminum Garnet
SHERLOCScanning Habitable Environments with Raman and Luminescence for Organics and Chemicals
UVUltraViolet
MOMAMars Organic Molecule Analyser
RLSRaman Laser Spectrometer
Nd:Cr:YAGNeodymium/Chromium Doped YAG
DPSSLDiode-Pumped Solid-State Laser
SHGSecond-Harmonic Generation
BBOBeta Barium Borate
FACFast Axis Collimator
HTHigh Transmission
HRHigh Reflection
AINAluminium Nitride
FSFused Silica
FEMFinite-Element-Method
FMFlight Module
PVDPhysical Vapour Deposition
SAC305Sn95.5Ag3.9Cu0.6
DOFDegrees-of-freedom

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  29. ESA. Available online: http://exploration.esa.int/mars/60918-rover-laboratory-inside-test-chamber/ (accessed on 17 April 2019).
  30. ESA. Available online: http://www.esa.int/spaceinimages/Images/2017/03/ExoMars_rover (accessed on 28 February 2019).
Figure 1. Exomars laser drawing with all the components assembled. (1) Pumping diodes. (2) FAC. (3) Active crystal. (4) SHG-BBO. (5) Fused Silica (FS) output laser cavity mirror. (6) Folding mirror. (7) Lambda half and polarization combiner cube. (8) Folding mirror in front of a power feedback photodiode. (9) Pinhole-mirror in front of an autofocus photodiode.
Figure 1. Exomars laser drawing with all the components assembled. (1) Pumping diodes. (2) FAC. (3) Active crystal. (4) SHG-BBO. (5) Fused Silica (FS) output laser cavity mirror. (6) Folding mirror. (7) Lambda half and polarization combiner cube. (8) Folding mirror in front of a power feedback photodiode. (9) Pinhole-mirror in front of an autofocus photodiode.
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Figure 2. (a) Schematic of Solderjet Bumping process [20]. (b) Schematic of the three PVD layer system deposited on the optical components with the Solderjet bump bonded on the Au layer (not to scale) [20].
Figure 2. (a) Schematic of Solderjet Bumping process [20]. (b) Schematic of the three PVD layer system deposited on the optical components with the Solderjet bump bonded on the Au layer (not to scale) [20].
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Figure 3. Misalignment study due to alloy shrinkage depending on a semi-sphere base radius (yellow) and KOVAR pad hole diameter (blue) [24]. The soldering alloy SAC305 is ejected onto the semi-sphere and the KOVAR pad though the pad conical aperture.
Figure 3. Misalignment study due to alloy shrinkage depending on a semi-sphere base radius (yellow) and KOVAR pad hole diameter (blue) [24]. The soldering alloy SAC305 is ejected onto the semi-sphere and the KOVAR pad though the pad conical aperture.
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Figure 4. (a) Two Pi Hexoapods have been used to align the BBO and output mirror. Vacuum gripers were used for that purpose. (b) Detailed image with the two components being positioned after the Nd:YAG and on their respective KOVAR pads.
Figure 4. (a) Two Pi Hexoapods have been used to align the BBO and output mirror. Vacuum gripers were used for that purpose. (b) Detailed image with the two components being positioned after the Nd:YAG and on their respective KOVAR pads.
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Figure 5. Cross section of an output mirror after soldering. (1) Output mirror pre-soldered to the (2) semi-spherical body made of fused silica and (3) soldered by a 760 μ m SAC305 alloy to the (4) KOVAR pad. All the components have been locally metallized with Ti/Pt/Au layer on the areas that have to be bonded.
Figure 5. Cross section of an output mirror after soldering. (1) Output mirror pre-soldered to the (2) semi-spherical body made of fused silica and (3) soldered by a 760 μ m SAC305 alloy to the (4) KOVAR pad. All the components have been locally metallized with Ti/Pt/Au layer on the areas that have to be bonded.
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Figure 6. (a) Soldering-induced stress applied on components simulation results (ANSYS). (b) Real created stress measured with a polarimeter device after components soldering [20].
Figure 6. (a) Soldering-induced stress applied on components simulation results (ANSYS). (b) Real created stress measured with a polarimeter device after components soldering [20].
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Figure 7. Resulting soldered laser assembly.
Figure 7. Resulting soldered laser assembly.
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Figure 8. FS mirror output beams for Ex and Ey (depolarization). The scale in the output signal Ey, evidence just a small effect on the beam depolarization from the input beam.
Figure 8. FS mirror output beams for Ex and Ey (depolarization). The scale in the output signal Ey, evidence just a small effect on the beam depolarization from the input beam.
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Figure 9. Results of the laser beam shape measurement 30 cm away from the laser cavity. Assembled lasers could achieve a 95.44% Gaussian fit.
Figure 9. Results of the laser beam shape measurement 30 cm away from the laser cavity. Assembled lasers could achieve a 95.44% Gaussian fit.
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Figure 10. (a) A final FM assembled laser. (b) Photo: ESA/ ATG medialab. Schematic of the ExoMars Rover (named Rosalind Franklin) which contains the ExoMars laser [30].
Figure 10. (a) A final FM assembled laser. (b) Photo: ESA/ ATG medialab. Schematic of the ExoMars Rover (named Rosalind Franklin) which contains the ExoMars laser [30].
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Table 1. Exomars mission vibration requirements for the laser unit. Table reproduced from [19].
Table 1. Exomars mission vibration requirements for the laser unit. Table reproduced from [19].
Sine5 Hz1 g/1 gIn-plane/out-plane
30 Hz20 g/25 g
100 Hz20 g/25 g
Random20 Hz to 40 Hz+6 dB/OCTIn-plane/out plane during 120 s
40 to 450 Hz0.16
450 to 2000 Hz−6 dB/OCT
grms11
Shock100 Hz25 gPerformed per axis
200 Hz1500 g
10,000 Hz1500 g
Table 2. Solderjet Bumping energy necessary to reflow and melt the spherical preform alloys of different sizes for subsequent bonding of the different combinations of optical and substrate materials.
Table 2. Solderjet Bumping energy necessary to reflow and melt the spherical preform alloys of different sizes for subsequent bonding of the different combinations of optical and substrate materials.
300 μ m Bump400 μ m Bump760 μ m Bump
Energy (mJ)Energy (mJ)Energy (mJ)
BBO/KOVAR150205389
YAG/Copper217232398
FS/KOVAR217232441

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MDPI and ACS Style

Ribes-Pleguezuelo, P.; Guilhot, D.; Gilaberte Basset, M.; Beckert, E.; Eberhardt, R.; Tünnermann, A. Insights of the Qualified ExoMars Laser and Mechanical Considerations of Its Assembly Process. Instruments 2019, 3, 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020025

AMA Style

Ribes-Pleguezuelo P, Guilhot D, Gilaberte Basset M, Beckert E, Eberhardt R, Tünnermann A. Insights of the Qualified ExoMars Laser and Mechanical Considerations of Its Assembly Process. Instruments. 2019; 3(2):25. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020025

Chicago/Turabian Style

Ribes-Pleguezuelo, Pol, Denis Guilhot, Marta Gilaberte Basset, Erik Beckert, Ramona Eberhardt, and Andreas Tünnermann. 2019. "Insights of the Qualified ExoMars Laser and Mechanical Considerations of Its Assembly Process" Instruments 3, no. 2: 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020025

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