The
dyes used in these lasers contain rather large organic molecules which fluoresce. Most dyes have a very short time between the absorption and emission of light, referred to as the fluorescence lifetime, which is often on the order of a few nanoseconds. (In comparison, most solid-state lasers have a fluorescence lifetime ranging from hundreds of microseconds to a few milliseconds.) Under standard laser-pumping conditions, the molecules emit their energy before a
population inversion can properly build up, so dyes require rather specialized means of pumping. Liquid dyes have an extremely high
lasing threshold. In addition, the large molecules are subject to complex
excited state transitions during which the
spin can be "flipped", quickly changing from the useful, fast-emitting "singlet" state to the slower "triplet" state. The incoming light excites the dye molecules into the state of being ready to emit
stimulated radiation; the
singlet state. In this state, the molecules emit light via
fluorescence, and the dye is transparent to the lasing wavelength. Within a microsecond or less, the molecules will change to their
triplet state. In the triplet state, light is emitted via
phosphorescence, and the molecules absorb the lasing wavelength, making the dye partially opaque. Flashlamp-pumped lasers need a flash with an extremely short duration, to deliver the large amounts of energy necessary to bring the dye past threshold before triplet absorption overcomes singlet emission. Dye lasers with an external pump-laser can direct enough energy of the proper wavelength into the dye with a relatively small amount of input energy, but the dye must be circulated at high speeds to keep the triplet molecules out of the beam path. Due to their high absorption, the pumping energy may often be concentrated into a rather small volume of liquid. Since organic dyes tend to decompose under the influence of light, the dye solution is normally circulated from a large reservoir. The dye solution can be flowing through a
cuvette, i.e., a glass container, or be as a
dye jet, i.e., as a sheet-like stream in open air from a specially-shaped
nozzle. With a dye jet, one avoids reflection losses from the glass surfaces and contamination of the walls of the cuvette. These advantages come at the cost of a more-complicated alignment. Liquid dyes have very high
gain as laser media. The beam needs to make only a few passes through the liquid to reach full design power, and hence, the high transmittance of the
output coupler. The high gain also leads to high losses, because reflections from the dye-cell walls or flashlamp reflector cause
parasitic oscillations, dramatically reducing the amount of energy available to the beam. Pump cavities are often
coated,
anodized, or otherwise made of a material that will not reflect at the lasing wavelength while reflecting at the pump wavelength. A benefit of organic dyes is their high fluorescence efficiency. The greatest losses in many lasers and other fluorescence devices is not from the transfer efficiency (absorbed versus reflected/transmitted energy) or
quantum yield (emitted number of photons per absorbed number), but from the losses when high-energy photons are absorbed and reemitted as photons of longer wavelengths. Because the energy of a photon is determined by its wavelength, the emitted photons will be of lower energy; a phenomenon called the
Stokes shift. The absorption centers of many dyes are very close to the emission centers. Sometimes the two are close enough that the absorption profile slightly overlaps the emission profile. As a result, most dyes exhibit very small Stokes shifts and consequently allow for lower energy losses than many other laser types due to this phenomenon. The wide absorption profiles make them particularly suited to broadband pumping, such as from a flashtube. It also allows a wide range of pump lasers to be used for any certain dye and, conversely, many different dyes can be used with a single pump laser. File:Cuvette for a dye laser.JPG|A cuvette used in a dye laser. A thin sheet of liquid is passed between the windows at high speeds. The windows are set at
Brewster's angle (air-to-glass interface) for the pump laser, and at Brewster's angle (liquid-to-glass interface) for the emitted beam. File:Stokes shift- Rh6G.png|
Stokes shift in Rhodamine 6G during broadband absorption/emission. In laser operation, the Stokes shift is the difference between the pump wavelength and the output. ==CW dye lasers==