randomly purchased from stores and online, were
accurately measured and their hazard level
determined. At the present time, there is no
regulation of the sale or importation of laser devices
in Thailand. In this work, the hazard level of laser
pointers were determined according to the The US
Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR, 2012) which
limits commercial class IIIa/3R lasers to 5 milliwatts
(mW) and no more than 1 mW for dangerous IR.
1.1 Laser Class and Safety
The American Standard for the Safe Use of Lasers
(ANSI 136.1-2007) classifies lasers into 4 classes,
according to their hazard level. Table 1 illustrates
the laser hazardous level.
Table 1: Laser classification under ANSI Z136.1-2007.
Class Hazard level
Class 1 Non-hazardous level under normal use
Class 2
Non-hazardous level under normal use,
for visible laser only, laser power < 1
mw
Class 3R
Potentially hazardous level if viewing
for extend period of time, includes both
visible and non-visible lasers, laser
power < 5mW
Class 3B
Hazardous to skin and eyes, , includes
both visible and non-visible lasers,
laser power < 500mW
Class 4
Very hazardous, laser power >500 mW,
can burn skin
1.2 Laser Pointer Technology
Recent advance in laser technology made laser
pointer in the markets become cheaper, smaller, and
more powerful. Modern red laser pointers are
constructed from vertical-cavity surface-emitting
laser (VCSEL) diodes technology, emitting deep red
light near 650 nm, which are the least expensive red
laser pointers. Newer version red laser pointers (but
slightly more expensive ones) emit red-orange light
at 635 nm, which is more visible to human eyes.
Green laser pointers, are now the most popular since
human eyes are most sensitive to the green region
of the spectrum at low power. Green lasers are
DPSS lasers (or so called DPSSFD for "diode
pumped solid state frequency-doubled"). The green
light is indirectly generated from
using infrared AlGaAs laser diode operating at
808 nm to pumps a Nd:YVO4 or Nd:YAG crystal.
The crystal then emits laser light in the IR region at
1064 nm. Second harmonic generation at the KTP
crystal generate the green laser light at 532 nm. All
of the light with 3 different wavelengths are then
focused and emitted the green color. Since the
emitting light includes both IR and VIS, high quality
green laser pointer must be equipped with a filter
that can block or allow IR wavelength (both 808 nm
and 1064 nm) to transmit with lowest level of power
as possible (less than 0.63 mW at 808 nm and 1.92
mW at 1064 nm), referred to ANSI (ANZI, 2007)
and IEC (IEC, 2007).
Violet lasers emitting a violet light at 405 nm are
constructed from GaN (gallium nitride)
semiconductors. This type of laser directly emits
405 nm without frequency doubling as the DPSS
green laser, thus emitting none of the dangerous IR
emission but can emit high power in excess of the
CFR limit.
2 EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
The goal of the research is to conveniently, safely,
and accurately measure the laser power output of the
laser pointers without expensive parts. The apparatus
must be able to measure all of the power emitting
from red, green and violet laser pointers, both in
visible and IR regions.
2.1 Measurement Apparatus
The apparatus is built concerning the safety of
operation with accurate and repeatable measurement
results. The design is inspired from Joshua’s
prototype (Joshua and Marla, 2013), which is
composed of a power meter, a selectable filter
wheel, a lens tube, an iris, self-centering lens
mounts, and laser pointer under tested, as shown in
figure 1.
Figure 1: Measurement apparatus. A laser pointer (A) is
mounted using 2 self-centering lens mounts (B) for hand
free, and repeatable measurement. The adjustable iris (C)
closed around the laser pointer and the lens tube (D) cover
the laser path to protect operator from laser light.
Bandpass filters are mounted in a selectable filter wheel
(E). A power meter (F) reads the power output of the laser
at the other end of the filter.