A red alert about cheap green lasers
National institute raises concerns over devices' infrared light leaks

Tech News Daily

updated 8/13/2010 7:28:20 PM ET

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38692291/ns/technology_and_science-innovation


Green laser pointers have become a popular consumer item, delivering 
light that's brighter to the eye than red lasers, but stories have 
circulated on the Web about the potential hazards of inexpensive models.

A team led by physicist Charles Clark at the National Institute of 
Standards and Technology (NIST) recently put some numbers to the 
problem. In one case, the group found that a green laser pointer emitted 
almost twice its rated power level of light — but at invisible and 
potentially dangerous infrared wavelengths rather than green.

A new NIST study describes the nature of the problem and offers 
instructions for a home test using an inexpensive webcam that can detect 
excess infrared light from green lasers.

Late last year, the NIST research team purchased three low-cost green 
laser pointers advertised to have a power output of 10 milliwatts (mW).

Measurements showed that one unit emitted dim green light but delivered 
infrared levels of nearly 20 mW — powerful enough to cause retinal 
damage to an individual before he or she is aware of the invisible light.

NIST’s Jemellie Galang and her colleagues repeated the tests with 
several other laser pointers and found similarly intense infrared 
emissions in some but not all units.


Technical difficulties

The problem stems from inadequate procedures in manufacturing quality 
assurance, according to the research team.

Inside a green laser pointer, infrared light from a semiconductor diode 
laser pumps infrared light at a wavelength of 808 nanometers into a 
transparent crystal of yttrium orthovanadate doped with neodymium atoms, 
causing the crystal to lase even deeper in the infrared, at 1064 nm.

This light passes through a crystal of potassium titanyl phosphate 
(KTP), which emits light of half the wavelength: 532 nanometers, the 
familiar color of the green laser pointer.

However, if the KTP crystal is misaligned, little of the 1064-nanometer 
light is converted into green light, and most of it comes out as 
infrared. Excess infrared leakage can also occur if the coatings at both 
ends of the crystal that act as mirrors for the infrared laser light are 
too thin.


Solution at hand

The NIST team says this problem could be solved by incorporating an 
inexpensive infrared filter at the end of the laser, which could reduce 
infrared emissions by 100-1,000 times depending on quality and cost.

Although these filters exist in modern digital cameras and more 
expensive green laser pointers, they often are left out of the 
inexpensive models.

The team demonstrates a home test that laser hobbyists could conduct to 
detect excessive infrared leakage, by using a common digital or cell 
phone camera, a compact disc, a webcam and a TV remote control.

Regardless, they say owners of the devices should never point the lasers 
at the eyes or aim them at surfaces such as windows, which can reflect 
infrared light back to the user — a particularly subtle hazard because 
many modern energy-saving windows have coatings designed specifically to 
reflect infrared.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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