Paper
26 May 1997 Short-pulse excimer laser performances and its applications: I. ophthamology
Marius Przybylski, Gabriel Simon
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 2971, Ophthalmic Technologies VII; (1997) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.275097
Event: BiOS '97, Part of Photonics West, 1997, San Jose, CA, United States
Abstract
A new very small powerful air-cooled excimer laser (193, 248, 308 nm) with metal-ceramic technology was developed by ATL Lasertechnik in Germany. The laser won 1995 Prize for the best innovation awarded by German federal states of Berlin & Brandenburg. The pulse energy of 10 - 20 mJ at high rep rates (200 - 500 Hz) from an active volume of only 1 cm3 are reached. The raw laser beam produces energy density of > 100 mJ/cm2 which is comparable to the performance of standard (large) excimer lasers. Its very short pulse length (3 ns), permits extremely high peak power density (30 MW/cm2). The ATLEX SP laser uses a new type of pre-ionization technique providing high beam homogeneity at low discharge voltages. Small footprint and weight, low operation costs opens up new industrial (micro-machining) and biomedical applications. Recently the ATLEX SP laser (193 nm) has been used for corneal refractive surgery. The setup consists of splitting a 193 nm laser beam into couples of beams which simultaneously ablates the corneal surface in a symmetrical scan-like fashion. Refractive changes up to 20 diopters were realized. Results of an analysis by corneal topography showed homogeneous ablation throughout the entire ablation zone.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Marius Przybylski and Gabriel Simon "Short-pulse excimer laser performances and its applications: I. ophthamology", Proc. SPIE 2971, Ophthalmic Technologies VII, (26 May 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.275097
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KEYWORDS
Excimer lasers

Laser ablation

Surface plasmons

Cornea

Pulsed laser operation

Laser development

Laser therapeutics

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