Pulsed Laser Diode Test Bench Consolidation

You are here:

The Problem

Pulsed laser diode test typically requires two separate instruments on the bench: a sub-nanosecond shaped-pulse source for waveform fidelity, and a high-current pulser for direct laser-diode drive. The common setup pairs a Keysight 81160A with an Avtech AVR-EHV5 (or equivalent). That means two SKUs, two vendors, two support paths, two firmware update cycles, and two trigger-and-timing chains to keep synchronized. Rack space and BOM cost both take the hit.

The Berkeley Nucleonics 686 Arbitrary Waveform Generator as a Solution

One vendor, one support line, integrated trigger and timing. The BNC 686 delivers sub-nanosecond Gaussian pulses at 5 Vpp into 50 Ω and up to 100 mA sub-ns current pulses. Paired with the BNC high-voltage pulse generator (50 V / 1 A square pulses for direct diode drive), the stack covers the full pulsed laser diode test envelope from a single source.

Two-Vendor Setup vs. BNC Stack

Two-vendor pulsed laser diode test stack vs. BNC single-vendor stack.
Stack AttributeTypical Two-Box Setup
(Keysight 81160A + Avtech AVR-EHV5)
BNC
(686 + HV pulse generator)
Sub-ns shaped-pulse sourceKeysight 81160ABNC 686 — 5 Vpp / 50 Ω, sub-ns Gaussian
High-current diode driveAvtech AVR-EHV5BNC HV pulse generator — 50 V / 1 A square
Sub-ns current pulse capabilitySeparate amplifier requiredUp to 100 mA, sub-ns — integrated
Vendors / support pathsTwoOne
Trigger and timingManual external sync between boxesIntegrated across the stack

Where This Is Being Used

Photonics research groups, semiconductor and Photonics device makers,  is currently running the Berkeley Nucleonics pulsed laser diode test stack in production.

 

Questions, or would you like to test Model 686? Fill out the form below

Contact Us

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name(Required)