Patents by Inventor Michael Mielke

Michael Mielke has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20120152915
    Abstract: Systems and methods for processing, selectively ablating, and singulating layered materials. According to some embodiments, methods for selectively ablating a layered material may include selectively varying a wavelength of at least a portion of a primary ultrafast laser beam to create a secondary ultrafast laser beam with a second wavelength, the primary ultrafast laser beam being configured to ablate a layer of the layered material, the secondary ultrafast laser beam being configured to ablate an additional layer of the layered material and applying the first and second ultrafast laser beams to the layered material to create a singulated product.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 16, 2011
    Publication date: June 21, 2012
    Inventors: Ramanujapuram A. Srinivas, Michael Greenberg, David Gaudiosi, Michael Mielke, Tim Booth
  • Publication number: 20120156875
    Abstract: Systems and methods for laser based processing of layered materials. Methods may include selectively adjusting ultrafast laser output of an ultrafast laser device based upon one or more physical attributes of a layer of the layered material, applying the ultrafast laser output of the ultrafast laser device to the layer of the layered material along a tool path to ablate the layer along the tool path, and then re-executing the steps to ablate one or more additional layers, the re-execution occurring for each distinct layer of the layered material that is to be ablated.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 16, 2011
    Publication date: June 21, 2012
    Inventors: Ramanujapuram A. Srinivas, Michael Greenberg, David Gaudiosi, Michael Mielke, Tim Booth
  • Publication number: 20120082410
    Abstract: A hybrid waveguide device includes a hollow core fiber having a core formed by a combination of solid material and gases. The hybrid nature of the core allows the hybrid device to transport a high energy high power laser beam having an ultra-short pulse width without damage to the hybrid device due to a higher tolerance of irradiance than single-matter cores. A waveguide device having a core with gases in addition to solid matter is characterized by a lower nonlinear refractive index coefficient (n2), lower numerical aperture, larger delivering laser beam size, and higher ionization potential of the gases. As a result, the hybrid waveguide fiber can transport ultra-short laser pulses having ablative energy levels and power levels, for example from a laser generating subassembly to a laser material-modification subassembly.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 30, 2010
    Publication date: April 5, 2012
    Inventors: Xiang Peng, Michael Mielke, Timothy Booth
  • Publication number: 20120037609
    Abstract: An apparatus for athermal ablation of a workpiece. The apparatus may include a laser device to direct a laser beam at the workpiece to remove a plurality of sections from the workpiece by athermal ablation. The removal may occur in a plurality of discrete motions that cause the laser beam to trace along outer perimeters of the sections in a specific order maintaining mechanical stability of the plurality of sections. The apparatus may further include a process gas nozzle to deliver process gas coaxially with the laser beam to clear debris and cool the workpiece, and a workpiece holder to hold and maneuver the workpiece during the removal of the plurality of sections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 11, 2011
    Publication date: February 16, 2012
    Inventors: David Gaudiosi, Michael Greenberg, Michael Mielke, Tim Booth, Gordon Masor
  • Publication number: 20120035600
    Abstract: Systems and methods for transforming biological materials utilizing ultrafast laser light. According to some embodiments, a method for transforming a biological material may include calculating an ablation profile for the biological material by comparing initial characteristics of the biological material to desired characteristics for the biological material, and applying an output of an ultrafast laser to the biological material to transform the biological material using the ablation profile in such a way that collateral damage to remaining biological material is reduced.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 5, 2011
    Publication date: February 9, 2012
    Inventors: David Gaudiosi, Carolyn Martinez, Michael Armas, Michael Mielke, Michael Greenberg, Tim Booth
  • Patent number: 7787175
    Abstract: A chirped pulse amplification (CPA) system and method is described wherein a pulse selector is added after a final amplifier in the system. The pulse selector is configured to select amplified pulses such that the system output repetition rate of the CPA system is below an ASE-limiting repetition rate of the amplifiers. The system may also comprise pulse pickers placed before the final amplifier to control pulse energy of the amplified pulses.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 28, 2006
    Date of Patent: August 31, 2010
    Assignee: Raydiance, Inc.
    Inventors: James F. Brennan, III, Laurent VaissiƩ, Michael Mielke, Tolga Yilmaz
  • Patent number: 7675674
    Abstract: The high-power-optical-amplifier of the present invention uses a number of spaced, thin slabs (e.g., disc-shaped doped-slabs that are stacked, with a space between discs), aligned to give an amplifier both with a high active cross-section and a very high surface area to volume ratio. More specifically, the present invention provides several methods that include the steps of aligning at least two or four slabs having a thickness dimension of less than one centimeter, substantially parallel to, and spaced from adjacent slabs, wherein the slab surfaces are rendered essentially non-reflective, optically pumping the slabs and passing an input beam through the surfaces wherein the beam is optically amplified in the slabs, and wherein the input beam is of an eye-safe wavelength.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 11, 2004
    Date of Patent: March 9, 2010
    Assignee: Raydiance, Inc.
    Inventors: Jeff Bullington, Richard Stoltz, Michael Mielke
  • Patent number: 7593441
    Abstract: The present invention generally concerns the use of Bragg optical fibers in chirped pulse amplification systems for the production of high-pulse-energy ultrashort optical pulses. A gas-core Bragg optical fiber waveguide can be advantageously used in such systems to stretch the duration of pulses so that they can be amplified, and/or Bragg fibers can be used to compress optical signals into much shorter duration pulses after they have been amplified. Bragg fibers can also function as near-zero-dispersion delay lines in amplifier sections.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 7, 2008
    Date of Patent: September 22, 2009
    Assignee: Raydiance, Inc.
    Inventors: James F. Brennan, III, Laurent Vaissie, Michael Mielke
  • Publication number: 20080159346
    Abstract: The present invention generally concerns the use of Bragg optical fibers in chirped pulse amplification systems for the production of high-pulse-energy ultrashort optical pulses. A gas-core Bragg optical fiber waveguide can be advantageously used in such systems to stretch the duration of pulses so that they can be amplified, and/or Bragg fibers can be used to compress optical signals into much shorter duration pulses after they have been amplified. Bragg fibers can also function as near-zero-dispersion delay lines in amplifier sections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 7, 2008
    Publication date: July 3, 2008
    Inventors: James F. Brennan, Laurent Vaissie, Michael Mielke
  • Patent number: 7349452
    Abstract: The present invention generally concerns the use of Bragg optical fibers in chirped pulse amplification systems for the production of high-pulse-energy ultrashort optical pulses. A gas-core Bragg optical fiber waveguide can be advantageously used in such systems to stretch the duration of pulses so that they can be amplified, and/or Bragg fibers can be used to compress optical signals into much shorter duration pulses after they have been amplified. Bragg fibers can also function as near-zero-dispersion delay lines in amplifier sections.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 22, 2005
    Date of Patent: March 25, 2008
    Assignee: Raydiance, Inc.
    Inventors: James F. Brennan, III, Laurent Vaissie, Michael Mielke
  • Publication number: 20070253455
    Abstract: The present invention comprises, in various embodiments, systems and methods for shutting down a laser system in an intelligent and flexible manner. An intelligent laser interlock system includes both hardwired components, and intelligent components configured to execute computing instructions. The hardwired components and the intelligent components are configured to shutdown the laser system to one or more alternative shutdown states in response to one or more interlock signals.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 26, 2007
    Publication date: November 1, 2007
    Inventors: Andrew Stadler, David Goldman, Mark Farley, Michael Mielke
  • Publication number: 20070041082
    Abstract: The high-power-optical-amplifier of the present invention uses a number of spaced, thin slabs (e.g., disc-shaped doped-slabs that are stacked, with a space between discs), aligned to give an amplifier both with a high active cross-section and a very high surface area to volume ratio. More specifically, the present invention provides several methods that include the steps of aligning at least two or four slabs having a thickness dimension of less than one centimeter, substantially parallel to, and spaced from adjacent slabs, wherein the slab surfaces are rendered essentially non-reflective, optically pumping the slabs and passing an input beam through the surfaces wherein the beam is optically amplified in the slabs, and wherein the input beam is of an eye-safe wavelength.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 11, 2004
    Publication date: February 22, 2007
    Inventors: Jeff Bullington, Richard Stoltz, Michael Mielke
  • Publication number: 20060126679
    Abstract: The present invention generally concerns the use of Bragg optical fibers in chirped pulse amplification systems for the production of high-pulse-energy ultrashort optical pulses. A gas-core Bragg optical fiber waveguide can be advantageously used in such systems to stretch the duration of pulses so that they can be amplified, and/or Bragg fibers can be used to compress optical signals into much shorter duration pulses after they have been amplified. Bragg fibers can also function as near-zero-dispersion delay lines in amplifier sections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 22, 2005
    Publication date: June 15, 2006
    Inventors: James Brennan, Laurent Vaissie, Michael Mielke
  • Publication number: 20060056480
    Abstract: A system and method for generating an optical laser pulse train of constant ultrashort pulse duration and low timing jitter in a fiber ring laser system (resonator) while keeping the laser resonator resilient to environmental conditions like temperature, humidity and pressure. The laser resonator may be actively mode-locked with a periodic electrically driven modulation at a specific frequency that corresponds to the inverse of the transit time inside the resonator. The optical pulse train quality may be monitored in real time, and the frequency of the modulation may be dynamically tuned in real time to compensate for resonator length changes due to changes in the environmental conditions.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 15, 2005
    Publication date: March 16, 2006
    Inventors: Michael Mielke, Ismail Yilmaz, David Goldman, Mark Farley
  • Publication number: 20050215985
    Abstract: The present invention provides a method of generating an ultra-short pulse in a ring oscillator by amplifying a series of wavelength-swept-with time pulses using one or more amplifiers, compressing the amplified wavelength-swept-with time pulses, reducing the compressed pulses to sub-picosecond pulses, stretching the sub-picosecond pulses into wavelength-swept-with time pulses and returning the stretched pulses to the one or more amplifiers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 13, 2005
    Publication date: September 29, 2005
    Inventors: Michael Mielke, Peter Delfyett
  • Publication number: 20050213630
    Abstract: The present invention provides a method of amplifying a beam of laser pulses by producing an amplified collimated beam of pulses using an amplifier, spatially spreading the amplified collimated beam of pulses into an expanded beam of pulses, introducing the expanded beam of pulses into the amplifier a second time to produce a twice amplified beam of pulses, recollimating the twice amplified beam of pulses to produce a twice amplified collimated beam of pulses such that the twice amplified collimated beam of pulses is of essentially the same cross-section as the amplifier, and introducing the twice amplified collimated beam of pulses into the amplifier a third time to produce a thrice amplified collimated beam of pulses such that the re-collimated beam sweeps essentially the entire volume of the amplifier.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 13, 2005
    Publication date: September 29, 2005
    Applicant: Raydiance, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael Mielke, Jeff Bullington