Abstract:
A shock-tube investigation was made of a gasdynamic CO2–H2O–N2 laser. The gas mixture escaped through a slit. A probing beam, produced by a separate electricdischarge CO2 laser, was used to study the gasdynamic laser. The parameters of the gaseous mixture, heated by a reflected shock wave, were T5 = 1300–2250°K and p5=5–88 atm. The main task was to establish whether population inversion could be achieved in the case of high water content in the active mixture of the gasdynamic laser when the [H2O] concentration was comparable with the [CO2] concentration. Gain was observed right up to [H2O]/ [CO2] = 1 for a mixture with [N2]/[CO2]=4 at T5=2250°K and p5=22 atm. In this case the maximum gain was observed at a distance of 25 mm from the slit and it amounted to 0.4·10–2 cm–1.