Paper
24 September 1987 Research On Catalysts For Long-Life Closed-Cycle CO2 Laser Operation
Barry D. Sidney, David R. Schryer, Billy T. Upchurch, Robert V. Hess, George M. Wood, Irvin M. Miller, Lewis G. Burney, Kenneth G. Brown, John D. Van Norman, Jacqueline Schryer
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Long-life, closed-cycle operation of pulsed CO2 lasers requires catalytic CO-02 recombination both to remove 02, which is formed by discharge-induced CO2 decomposition, and to regenerate CO2. Platinum metal on a tin-oxide substrate (Pt/Sn02) has been found to be an effective catalyst for such recombination in the desired temperature range of 25°C to 100°C. This paper presents a description of ongoing research at NASA-LaRC on Pt/Sn02 catalyzed CO-02 recombination. Included are studies with rare-isotope gases since rare-isotope CO2 is desirable as a laser gas for enhanced atmospheric transmission. Results presented include 1) the effects of various catalyst pretreatment techniques on catalyst efficiency 2) development of a technique, verified in a 30-hour test, to prevent isotopic scrambling when C180 and 1802 are reacted in the presence of a common-isotope Pt/Sn'02 catalyst and 3) development of a mathematical model of a laser discharge prior to catalyst introduction.
© (1987) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Barry D. Sidney, David R. Schryer, Billy T. Upchurch, Robert V. Hess, George M. Wood, Irvin M. Miller, Lewis G. Burney, Kenneth G. Brown, John D. Van Norman, and Jacqueline Schryer "Research On Catalysts For Long-Life Closed-Cycle CO2 Laser Operation", Proc. SPIE 0783, Laser Radar II, (24 September 1987); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.940592
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Gas lasers

Carbon monoxide

Carbon dioxide lasers

Pulsed laser operation

Carbon dioxide

Platinum

Chemical species

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