fbpx
Wikipedia

Optical tweezers

Optical tweezers (originally called single-beam gradient force trap) are scientific instruments that use a highly focused laser beam to hold and move microscopic and sub-microscopic objects like atoms, nanoparticles and droplets, in a manner similar to tweezers. If the object is held in air or vacuum without additional support, it can be called optical levitation.

A photograph of a nanoparticle (diameter 103 nm) trapped by an optical tweezer. The nanoparticle can be seen as the tiny bright spot in the middle. For additional control two copper electrodes are placed above and below the particle.

The laser light provides an attractive or repulsive force (typically on the order of piconewtons), depending on the relative refractive index between particle and surrounding medium. Levitation is possible if the force of the light counters the force of gravity. The trapped particles are usually micron-sized, or even smaller. Dielectric and absorbing particles can be trapped, too.

Optical tweezers are used in biology and medicine (for example to grab and hold a single bacterium, a cell like a sperm cell or a blood cell, or a molecule like DNA), nanoengineering and nanochemistry (to study and build materials from single molecules), quantum optics and quantum optomechanics (to study the interaction of single particles with light). The development of optical tweezing by Arthur Ashkin was lauded with the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics.

History and development edit

The detection of optical scattering and the gradient forces on micron sized particles was first reported in 1970 by Arthur Ashkin, a scientist working at Bell Labs.[1] Years later, Ashkin and colleagues reported the first observation of what is now commonly referred to as an optical tweezer: a tightly focused beam of light capable of holding microscopic particles stable in three dimensions.[2] In 2018, Ashkin was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for this development.

One author of this seminal 1986 paper, Steven Chu, would go on to use optical tweezing in his work on cooling and trapping neutral atoms.[3] This research earned Chu the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics along with Claude Cohen-Tannoudji and William D. Phillips.[4] In an interview, Steven Chu described how Ashkin had first envisioned optical tweezing as a method for trapping atoms.[5] Ashkin was able to trap larger particles (10 to 10,000 nanometers in diameter) but it fell to Chu to extend these techniques to the trapping of neutral atoms (0.1 nanometers in diameter) using resonant laser light and a magnetic gradient trap (cf. Magneto-optical trap).

In the late 1980s, Arthur Ashkin and Joseph M. Dziedzic demonstrated the first application of the technology to the biological sciences, using it to trap an individual tobacco mosaic virus and Escherichia coli bacterium.[6] Throughout the 1990s and afterwards, researchers like Carlos Bustamante, James Spudich, and Steven Block pioneered the use of optical trap force spectroscopy to characterize molecular-scale biological motors. These molecular motors are ubiquitous in biology, and are responsible for locomotion and mechanical action within the cell. Optical traps allowed these biophysicists to observe the forces and dynamics of nanoscale motors at the single-molecule level; optical trap force-spectroscopy has since led to greater understanding of the stochastic nature of these force-generating molecules.

Optical tweezers have proven useful in other areas of biology as well. They are used in synthetic biology to construct tissue-like networks of artificial cells,[7] and to fuse synthetic membranes together[8] to initiate biochemical reactions.[7] They are also widely employed in genetic studies [9] and research on chromosome structure and dynamics.[10] In 2003 the techniques of optical tweezers were applied in the field of cell sorting; by creating a large optical intensity pattern over the sample area, cells can be sorted by their intrinsic optical characteristics.[11][12] Optical tweezers have also been used to probe the cytoskeleton, measure the visco-elastic properties of biopolymers,[13] and study cell motility. A bio-molecular assay in which clusters of ligand coated nano-particles are both optically trapped and optically detected after target molecule induced clustering was proposed in 2011[14] and experimentally demonstrated in 2013.[15]

Optical tweezers are also used to trap laser-cooled atoms in vacuum, mainly for applications in quantum science. Some achievements in this area include trapping of a single atom in 2001,[16] trapping of 2D arrays of atoms in 2002,[17] trapping of strongly interacting entangled pairs in 2010,[18][19][20] trapping precisely assembled 2-dimensional arrays of atoms in 2016[21][22] and 3-dimensional arrays in 2018.[23][24] These techniques have been used in quantum simulators to obtain programmable arrays of 196 and 256 atoms in 2021[25][26][27] and represent a promising platform for quantum computing.[17][28]

Researchers have worked to convert optical tweezers from large, complex instruments to smaller, simpler ones, for use by those with smaller research budgets.[3][29]

Physics edit

 
Dielectric objects are attracted to the center of the beam, slightly above the beam waist, as described in the text. The force applied on the object depends linearly on its displacement from the trap center just as with a simple spring system. It is a restoring force and thus equal to  .

General description edit

Optical tweezers are capable of manipulating nanometer and micron-sized dielectric particles, and even individual atoms, by exerting extremely small forces via a highly focused laser beam. The beam is typically focused by sending it through a microscope objective. Near the narrowest point of the focused beam, known as the beam waist, the amplitude of the oscillating electric field varies rapidly in space. Dielectric particles are attracted along the gradient to the region of strongest electric field, which is the center of the beam. The laser light also tends to apply a force on particles in the beam along the direction of beam propagation. This is due to conservation of momentum: photons that are absorbed or scattered by the tiny dielectric particle impart momentum to the dielectric particle. This is known as the scattering force and results in the particle being displaced slightly downstream from the exact position of the beam waist, as seen in the figure.

Optical traps are very sensitive instruments and are capable of the manipulation and detection of sub-nanometer displacements for sub-micron dielectric particles.[30] For this reason, they are often used to manipulate and study single molecules by interacting with a bead that has been attached to that molecule. DNA and the proteins[31] and enzymes that interact with it are commonly studied in this way.

For quantitative scientific measurements, most optical traps are operated in such a way that the dielectric particle rarely moves far from the trap center. The reason for this is that the force applied to the particle is linear with respect to its displacement from the center of the trap as long as the displacement is small. In this way, an optical trap can be compared to a simple spring, which follows Hooke's law.

Detailed view edit

Proper explanation of optical trapping behavior depends upon the size of the trapped particle relative to the wavelength of light used to trap it. In cases where the dimensions of the particle are much greater than the wavelength, a simple ray optics treatment is sufficient. If the wavelength of light far exceeds the particle dimensions, the particles can be treated as electric dipoles in an electric field. For optical trapping of dielectric objects of dimensions within an order of magnitude of the trapping beam wavelength, the only accurate models involve the treatment of either time dependent or time harmonic Maxwell equations using appropriate boundary conditions.

Ray optics edit

 
Ray optics explanation (unfocused laser). When the bead is displaced from the beam center (right image), the larger momentum change of the more intense rays cause a net force to be applied back toward the center of the laser. When the bead is laterally centered on the beam (left image), the resulting lateral force is zero. But an unfocused laser still causes a force pointing away from the laser.
 
Ray optics explanation (focused laser). In addition to keeping the bead in the center of the laser, a focused laser also keeps the bead in a fixed axial position: The momentum change of the focused rays causes a force towards the laser focus, both when the bead is in front (left image) or behind (right image) the laser focus. So, the bead will stay slightly behind the focus, where this force compensates the scattering force.

In cases where the diameter of a trapped particle is significantly greater than the wavelength of light, the trapping phenomenon can be explained using ray optics. As shown in the figure, individual rays of light emitted from the laser will be refracted as it enters and exits the dielectric bead. As a result, the ray will exit in a direction different from which it originated. Since light has a momentum associated with it, this change in direction indicates that its momentum has changed. Due to Newton's third law, there should be an equal and opposite momentum change on the particle.

Most optical traps operate with a Gaussian beam (TEM00 mode) profile intensity. In this case, if the particle is displaced from the center of the beam, as in the right part of the figure, the particle has a net force returning it to the center of the trap because more intense beams impart a larger momentum change towards the center of the trap than less intense beams, which impart a smaller momentum change away from the trap center. The net momentum change, or force, returns the particle to the trap center.

If the particle is located at the center of the beam, then individual rays of light are refracting through the particle symmetrically, resulting in no net lateral force. The net force in this case is along the axial direction of the trap, which cancels out the scattering force of the laser light. The cancellation of this axial gradient force with the scattering force is what causes the bead to be stably trapped slightly downstream of the beam waist.

The standard tweezers works with the trapping laser propagated in the direction of gravity[32] and the inverted tweezers works against gravity.

Electric dipole approximation edit

In cases where the diameter of a trapped particle is significantly smaller than the wavelength of light, the conditions for Rayleigh scattering are satisfied and the particle can be treated as a point dipole in an inhomogeneous electromagnetic field. The force applied on a single charge in an electromagnetic field is known as the Lorentz force,

 

The force on the dipole can be calculated by substituting two terms for the electric field in the equation above, one for each charge. The polarization of a dipole is   where   is the distance between the two charges. For a point dipole, the distance is infinitesimal,   Taking into account that the two charges have opposite signs, the force takes the form

 

Notice that the   cancel out. Multiplying through by the charge,  , converts position,  , into polarization,  ,

 

where in the second equality, it has been assumed that the dielectric particle is linear (i.e.  ).

In the final steps, two equalities will be used: (1) a vector analysis equality, (2) Faraday's law of induction.

  1.  
  2.  

First, the vector equality will be inserted for the first term in the force equation above. Maxwell's equation will be substituted in for the second term in the vector equality. Then the two terms which contain time derivatives can be combined into a single term.[33]

 

The second term in the last equality is the time derivative of a quantity that is related through a multiplicative constant to the Poynting vector, which describes the power per unit area passing through a surface. Since the power of the laser is constant when sampling over frequencies much longer than the frequency of the laser's light ~1014 Hz, the derivative of this term averages to zero and the force can be written as[34]

 

where in the second part we have included the induced dipole moment (in MKS units) of a spherical dielectric particle:  , where   is the particle radius,   is the index of refraction of the particle and   is the relative refractive index between the particle and the medium. The square of the magnitude of the electric field is equal to the intensity of the beam as a function of position. Therefore, the result indicates that the force on the dielectric particle, when treated as a point dipole, is proportional to the gradient along the intensity of the beam. In other words, the gradient force described here tends to attract the particle to the region of highest intensity. In reality, the scattering force of the light works against the gradient force in the axial direction of the trap, resulting in an equilibrium position that is displaced slightly downstream of the intensity maximum. Under the Rayleigh approximation, we can also write the scattering force as

 

Since the scattering is isotropic, the net momentum is transferred in the forward direction. On the quantum level, we picture the gradient force as forward Rayleigh scattering in which identical photons are created and annihilated concurrently, while in the scattering (radiation) force the incident photons travel in the same direction and ‘scatter’ isotropically. By conservation of momentum, the particle must accumulate the photons' original momenta, causing a forward force in the latter.[35]

Harmonic potential approximation edit

A useful way to study the interaction of an atom in a Gaussian beam is to look at the harmonic potential approximation of the intensity profile the atom experiences. In the case of the two-level atom, the potential experienced is related to its AC Stark Shift,

 

where   is the natural line width of the excited state,   is the electric dipole coupling,   is the frequency of the transition, and   is the detuning or difference between the laser frequency and the transition frequency.

The intensity of a gaussian beam profile is characterized by the wavelength  , minimum waist  , and power of the beam  . The following formulas define the beam profile:

 
 
 
 

To approximate this Gaussian potential in both the radial and axial directions of the beam, the intensity profile must be expanded to second order in   and   for   and   respectively and equated to the harmonic potential  . These expansions are evaluated assuming fixed power.

 
 

This means that when solving for the harmonic frequencies (or trap frequencies when considering optical traps for atoms), the frequencies are given as:

 
 

so that the relative trap frequencies for the radial and axial directions as a function of only beam waist scale as:

 

Optical levitation edit

In order to levitate the particle in air, the downward force of gravity must be countered by the forces stemming from photon momentum transfer. Typically photon radiation pressure of a focused laser beam of enough intensity counters the downward force of gravity while also preventing lateral (side to side) and vertical instabilities to allow for a stable optical trap capable of holding small particles in suspension.

Micrometer sized (from several to 50 micrometers in diameter) transparent dielectric spheres such as fused silica spheres, oil or water droplets, are used in this type of experiment. The laser radiation can be fixed in wavelength such as that of an argon ion laser or that of a tunable dye laser. Laser power required is of the order of 1 Watt focused to a spot size of several tens of micrometers. Phenomena related to morphology-dependent resonances in a spherical optical cavity have been studied by several research groups.

For a shiny object, such as a metallic micro-sphere, stable optical levitation has not been achieved. Optical levitation of a macroscopic object is also theoretically possible,[36] and can be enhanced with nano-structuring.[37]

Materials that have been successfully levitated include Black liquor, aluminum oxide, tungsten, and nickel.[38]

Optothermal tweezers edit

In the last two decades, optical forces are combined with thermophoretic forces to enable trapping at reduced laser powers, thus resulting in minimized photon damage. By introducing light-absorbing elements (either particles or substrates), microscale temperature gradients are created, resulting in thermophoresis.[39] Typically, particles (including biological objects such as cells, bacteria, DNA/RNA) drift towards the cold - resulting in particle repulsion using optical tweezers. Overcoming this limitation, different techniques such as beam shaping and solution modification with electrolytes and surfactants[40] were used to successfully trap the objects. Laser cooling was also achieved with Ytterbium-doped yttrium lithium fluoride crystals to generate cold spots using lasers to achieve trapping with reduced photobleaching.[41] The sample temperature has also been reduced to achieve optical trapping for a significantly increased selection of particles using optothermal tweezers for drug delivery applications.[42]

Setups edit

 
A generic optical tweezer diagram with only the most basic components.

The most basic optical tweezer setup will likely include the following components: a laser (usually Nd:YAG), a beam expander, some optics used to steer the beam location in the sample plane, a microscope objective and condenser to create the trap in the sample plane, a position detector (e.g. quadrant photodiode) to measure beam displacements and a microscope illumination source coupled to a CCD camera.

An Nd:YAG laser (1064 nm wavelength) is a common choice of laser for working with biological specimens. This is because such specimens (being mostly water) have a low absorption coefficient at this wavelength.[43] A low absorption is advisable so as to minimise damage to the biological material, sometimes referred to as opticution. Perhaps the most important consideration in optical tweezer design is the choice of the objective. A stable trap requires that the gradient force, which is dependent upon the numerical aperture (NA) of the objective, be greater than the scattering force. Suitable objectives typically have an NA between 1.2 and 1.4.[44]

While alternatives are available, perhaps the simplest method for position detection involves imaging the trapping laser exiting the sample chamber onto a quadrant photodiode. Lateral deflections of the beam are measured similarly to how it is done using atomic force microscopy (AFM).

Expanding the beam emitted from the laser to fill the aperture of the objective will result in a tighter, diffraction-limited spot.[45] While lateral translation of the trap relative to the sample can be accomplished by translation of the microscope slide, most tweezer setups have additional optics designed to translate the beam to give an extra degree of translational freedom. This can be done by translating the first of the two lenses labelled as "Beam Steering" in the figure. For example, translation of that lens in the lateral plane will result in a laterally deflected beam from what is drawn in the figure. If the distance between the beam steering lenses and the objective is chosen properly, this will correspond to a similar deflection before entering the objective and a resulting lateral translation in the sample plane. The position of the beam waist, that is the focus of the optical trap, can be adjusted by an axial displacement of the initial lens. Such an axial displacement causes the beam to diverge or converge slightly, the result of which is an axially displaced position of the beam waist in the sample chamber.[46]

Visualization of the sample plane is usually accomplished through illumination via a separate light source coupled into the optical path in the opposite direction using dichroic mirrors. This light is incident on a CCD camera and can be viewed on an external monitor or used for tracking the trapped particle position via video tracking.

Alternative laser beam modes edit

The majority of optical tweezers make use of conventional TEM00 Gaussian beams. However a number of other beam types have been used to trap particles, including high order laser beams i.e. Hermite-Gaussian beams (TEMxy), Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) beams (TEMpl) and Bessel beams.

Optical tweezers based on Laguerre-Gaussian beams have the unique capability of trapping particles that are optically reflective and absorptive.[47][48][49] Laguerre-Gaussian beams also possess a well-defined orbital angular momentum that can rotate particles.[50][51] This is accomplished without external mechanical or electrical steering of the beam.

Both zero and higher order Bessel Beams also possess a unique tweezing ability. They can trap and rotate multiple particles that are millimeters apart and even around obstacles.[52]

Micromachines can be driven by these unique optical beams due to their intrinsic rotating mechanism due to the spin and orbital angular momentum of light. [53]

Multiplexed optical tweezers edit

A typical setup uses one laser to create one or two traps. Commonly, two traps are generated by splitting the laser beam into two orthogonally polarized beams. Optical tweezing operations with more than two traps can be realized either by time-sharing a single laser beam among several optical tweezers,[54] or by diffractively splitting the beam into multiple traps. With acousto-optic deflectors or galvanometer-driven mirrors, a single laser beam can be shared among hundreds of optical tweezers in the focal plane, or else spread into an extended one-dimensional trap. Specially designed diffractive optical elements can divide a single input beam into hundreds of continuously illuminated traps in arbitrary three-dimensional configurations. The trap-forming hologram also can specify the mode structure of each trap individually, thereby creating arrays of optical vortices, optical tweezers, and holographic line traps, for example.[55] When implemented with a spatial light modulator, such holographic optical traps also can move objects in three dimensions.[56] Advanced forms of holographic optical traps with arbitrary spatial profiles, where smoothness of the intensity and the phase are controlled, find applications in many areas of science, from micromanipulation to ultracold atoms.[57] Ultracold atoms could also be used for realization of quantum computers.[58]

Single mode optical fibers edit

The standard fiber optical trap relies on the same principle as the optical trapping, but with the Gaussian laser beam delivered through an optical fiber. If one end of the optical fiber is molded into a lens-like facet, the nearly gaussian beam carried by a single mode standard fiber will be focused at some distance from the fiber tip. The effective Numerical Aperture of such assembly is usually not enough to allow for a full 3D optical trap but only for a 2D trap (optical trapping and manipulation of objects will be possible only when, e.g., they are in contact with a surface ).[59] A true 3D optical trapping based on a single fiber, with a trapping point which is not in nearly contact with the fiber tip, has been realized based on a not-standard annular-core fiber arrangement and a total-internal-reflection geometry.[60]

On the other hand, if the ends of the fiber are not moulded, the laser exiting the fiber will be diverging and thus a stable optical trap can only be realised by balancing the gradient and the scattering force from two opposing ends of the fiber. The gradient force will trap the particles in the transverse direction, while the axial optical force comes from the scattering force of the two counter propagating beams emerging from the two fibers. The equilibrium z-position of such a trapped bead is where the two scattering forces equal each other. This work was pioneered by A. Constable et al., Opt. Lett. 18,1867 (1993), and followed by J.Guck et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 5451 (2000), who made use of this technique to stretch microparticles. By manipulating the input power into the two ends of the fiber, there will be an increase of an "optical stretching" that can be used to measure viscoelastic properties of cells, with sensitivity sufficient to distinguish between different individual cytoskeletal phenotypes. i.e. human erythrocytes and mouse fibroblasts. A recent test has seen great success in differentiating cancerous cells from non-cancerous ones from the two opposed, non-focused laser beams.[61]

Multimode fiber-based traps edit

 
The Optical Cell Rotator is a fiber based laser trap that can hold and precisely orient living cells for tomographic microscopy.

While earlier version of fiber-based laser traps exclusively used single mode beams, M. Kreysing and colleagues recently showed that the careful excitation of further optical modes in a short piece of optical fiber allows the realization of non-trivial trapping geometries. By this the researchers were able to orient various human cell types (individual cells and clusters) on a microscope. The main advantage of the so-called "optical cell rotator" technology over standard optical tweezers is the decoupling of trapping from imaging optics. This, its modular design, and the high compatibility of divergent laser traps with biological material indicates the great potential of this new generation of laser traps in medical research and life science.[62] Recently, the optical cell rotator technology was implemented on the basis of adaptive optics, allowing to dynamically reconfigure the optical trap during operation and adapt it to the sample.[63]

Cell sorting edit

One of the more common cell-sorting systems makes use of flow cytometry through fluorescence imaging. In this method, a suspension of biologic cells is sorted into two or more containers, based upon specific fluorescent characteristics of each cell during an assisted flow. By using an electrical charge that the cell is "trapped" in, the cells are then sorted based on the fluorescence intensity measurements. The sorting process is undertaken by an electrostatic deflection system that diverts cells into containers based upon their charge.

In the optically actuated sorting process, the cells are flowed through into an optical landscape i.e. 2D or 3D optical lattices. Without any induced electrical charge, the cells would sort based on their intrinsic refractive index properties and can be re-configurability for dynamic sorting. An optical lattice can be created using diffractive optics and optical elements.[11]

On the other hand, K. Ladavac et al. used a spatial light modulator to project an intensity pattern to enable the optical sorting process.[64] K. Xiao and D. G. Grier applied holographic video microscopy to demonstrate that this technique can sort colloidal spheres with part-per-thousand resolution for size and refractive index.[65]

The main mechanism for sorting is the arrangement of the optical lattice points. As the cell flow through the optical lattice, there are forces due to the particles drag force that is competing directly with the optical gradient force (See Physics of optical tweezers) from the optical lattice point. By shifting the arrangement of the optical lattice point, there is a preferred optical path where the optical forces are dominant and biased. With the aid of the flow of the cells, there is a resultant force that is directed along that preferred optical path. Hence, there is a relationship of the flow rate with the optical gradient force. By adjusting the two forces, one will be able to obtain a good optical sorting efficiency.

Competition of the forces in the sorting environment need fine tuning to succeed in high efficient optical sorting. The need is mainly with regards to the balance of the forces; drag force due to fluid flow and optical gradient force due to arrangement of intensity spot.

Scientists at the University of St. Andrews have received considerable funding from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) for an optical sorting machine. This new technology could rival the conventional fluorescence-activated cell sorting.[66]

Evanescent fields edit

An evanescent field[67] is a residue optical field that "leaks" during total internal reflection. This "leaking" of light fades off at an exponential rate. The evanescent field has found a number of applications in nanometer resolution imaging (microscopy); optical micromanipulation (optical tweezers) are becoming ever more relevant in research.

In optical tweezers, a continuous evanescent field can be created when light is propagating through an optical waveguide (multiple total internal reflection). The resulting evanescent field has a directional sense and will propel microparticles along its propagating path. This work was first pioneered by S. Kawata and T. Sugiura, in 1992, who showed that the field can be coupled to the particles in proximity on the order of 100 nanometers.[68] This direct coupling of the field is treated as a type of photon tunnelling across the gap from prism to microparticles. The result is a directional optical propelling force.

A recent updated version of the evanescent field optical tweezers makes use of extended optical landscape patterns to simultaneously guide a large number of particles into a preferred direction without using a waveguide. It is termed as Lensless Optical Trapping ("LOT"). The orderly movement of the particles is aided by the introduction of Ronchi Ruling that creates well-defined optical potential wells (replacing the waveguide). This means that particles are propelled by the evanescent field while being trapped by the linear bright fringes. At the moment, there are scientists working on focused evanescent fields as well.

In recent studies, the evanescent field generated by mid-infrared laser has been used to sort particles by molecular vibrational resonance selectively. Mid-infrared light is commonly used to identify molecular structures of materials because the vibrational modes exist in the mid-infrared region. A study by Statsenko et al. described optical force enhancement by molecular vibrational resonance by exciting the stretching mode of Si-O-Si bond at 9.3 μm.[69] It is shown that silica microspheres containing significant Si-O-Si bond move up to ten times faster than polystyrene microspheres due to molecular vibrational resonance. Moreover, this same group also investigated the possibility of optical force chromatography based on molecular vibrational resonance.[70]

Another approach that has been recently proposed makes use of surface plasmons, which is an enhanced evanescent wave localized at a metal/dielectric interface. The enhanced force field experienced by colloidal particles exposed to surface plasmons at a flat metal/dielectric interface has been for the first time measured using a photonic force microscope, the total force magnitude being found 40 times stronger compared to a normal evanescent wave.[71] By patterning the surface with gold microscopic islands it is possible to have selective and parallel trapping in these islands. The forces of the latter optical tweezers lie in the femtonewton range.[72]

The evanescent field can also be used to trap cold atoms and molecules near the surface of an optical waveguide or optical nanofiber.[73][74]

Indirect approach edit

Ming Wu, a UC Berkeley Professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences invented the new optoelectronic tweezers.

Wu transformed the optical energy from low powered light emitting diodes (LED) into electrical energy via a photoconductive surface. The idea is to allow the LED to switch on and off the photoconductive material via its fine projection. As the optical pattern can be easily transformable through optical projection, this method allows a high flexibility of switching different optical landscapes.

The manipulation/tweezing process is done by the variations between the electric field actuated by the light pattern. The particles will be either attracted or repelled from the actuated point due to its induced electrical dipole. Particles suspended in a liquid will be susceptible to the electrical field gradient, this is known as dielectrophoresis.

One clear advantage is that the electrical conductivity is different between different kinds of cells. Living cells have a lower conductive medium while the dead ones have minimum or no conductive medium. The system may be able to manipulate roughly 10,000 cells or particles at the same time.

See comments by Professor Kishan Dholakia on this new technique, K. Dholakia, Nature Materials 4, 579–580 (01 Aug 2005) News and Views.

"The system was able to move live E. coli bacteria and 20-micrometre-wide particles, using an optical power output of less than 10 microwatts. This is one-hundred-thousandth of the power needed for [direct] optical tweezers".[75]

Another notably new type of optical tweezers is optothermal tweezers invented by Yuebing Zheng at The University of Texas at Austin. The strategy is to use light to create a temperature gradient and exploit the thermophoretic migration of matter for optical trapping.[76] The team further integrated thermophoresis with laser cooling to develop opto-refrigerative tweezers to avoid thermal damages for noninvasive optical trapping and manipulation.[77]

Optical binding edit

When a cluster of microparticles are trapped within a monochromatic laser beam, the organization of the microparticles within the optical trapping is heavily dependent on the redistributing of the optical trapping forces amongst the microparticles. This redistribution of light forces amongst the cluster of microparticles provides a new force equilibrium on the cluster as a whole. As such we can say that the cluster of microparticles are somewhat bound together by light. One of the first experimental evidence of optical binding was reported by Michael M. Burns, Jean-Marc Fournier, and Jene A. Golovchenko,[78] though it was originally predicted by T. Thirunamachandran.[79] One of the many recent studies on optical binding has shown that for a system of chiral nanoparticles, the magnitude of the binding forces are dependent on the polarisation of the laser beam and the handedness of interacting particles themselves,[80] with potential applications in areas such as enantiomeric separation and optical nanomanipulation.

Fluorescence optical tweezers edit

In order to simultaneously manipulate and image samples that exhibit fluorescence, optical tweezers can be built alongside a fluorescence microscope.[81] Such instruments are particularly useful when it comes to studying single or small numbers of biological molecules that have been fluorescently labelled, or in applications in which fluorescence is used to track and visualize objects that are to be trapped.

This approach has been extended for simultaneous sensing and imaging of dynamic protein complexes using long and strong tethers generated by a highly efficient multi-step enzymatic approach[82] and applied to investigations of disaggregation machines in action.[83]

Tweezers combined with other imaging techniques edit

Other than 'standard' fluorescence optical tweezers are now being built with multiple color Confocal, Widefield, STED, FRET, TIRF or IRM.

This allows applications such as measuring: protein/DNA localization binding, protein folding, condensation, motor protein force generation, visualization of cytoskeletal filaments and motor dynamics, microtubule dynamics, manipulating liquid droplet (rheology) or fusion. These setups are difficult to build and traditionally are found in non correlated 'academic' setups. In the recent years even home builders (both biophysics and general biologists) are converting to the alternative and are acquiring total correlated solution with easy data acquisition and data analysis.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ashkin, A. (1970). "Acceleration and Trapping of Particles by Radiation Pressure". Physical Review Letters. 24 (4): 156–159. Bibcode:1970PhRvL..24..156A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.24.156.
  2. ^ Ashkin A, Dziedzic JM, Bjorkholm JE, Chu S (1986). "Observation of a single-beam gradient force optical trap for dielectric particles". Optics Letters. 11 (5): 288–290. Bibcode:1986OptL...11..288A. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.205.4729. doi:10.1364/OL.11.000288. PMID 19730608.
  3. ^ a b Matthews J.N.A. (2009). "Commercial optical traps emerge from biophysics labs". Physics Today. 62 (2): 26–28. Bibcode:2009PhT....62b..26M. doi:10.1063/1.3086092.
  4. ^ Hill, Murray (November 1987). "". Retrieved June 25, 2005.
    Interview conducted for internal newsletter at Bell Labs. Contains confirmation of Ashkin as the inventor of optical trapping and provides information on the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics.
  5. ^ "Conversations with History: An Interview with Steven Chu" (2004), Institute of International Studies, UC Berkeley. Last accessed on September 2, 2006.
  6. ^ Ashkin A, Dziedzic JM (1987). "Optical trapping and manipulation of viruses and bacteria". Science. 235 (4795): 1517–1520. doi:10.1126/science.3547653. PMID 3547653.
  7. ^ a b Bolognesi, Guido; Friddin, Mark S.; Salehi-Reyhani, Ali; Barlow, Nathan E.; Brooks, Nicholas J.; Ces, Oscar; Elani, Yuval (2018-05-14). "Sculpting and fusing biomimetic vesicle networks using optical tweezers". Nature Communications. 9 (1): 1882. Bibcode:2018NatCo...9.1882B. doi:10.1038/s41467-018-04282-w. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 5951844. PMID 29760422.
  8. ^ Rørvig-Lund, Andreas; Bahadori, Azra; Semsey, Szabolcs; Bendix, Poul Martin; Oddershede, Lene B. (2015-05-29). "Vesicle Fusion Triggered by Optically Heated Gold Nanoparticles". Nano Letters. 15 (6): 4183–4188. Bibcode:2015NanoL..15.4183R. doi:10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b01366. ISSN 1530-6984. PMID 26010468. S2CID 206726159.
  9. ^ Blázquez-Castro A.; Fernández-Piqueras J.; Santos J. (2020). "Genetic Material Manipulation and Modification by Optical Trapping and Nanosurgery-A Perspective". Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology. 8: 580937_1–25. doi:10.3389/fbioe.2020.580937. PMC 7530750. PMID 33072730. S2CID 221765039.
  10. ^ Berns M. W. (2020). "Laser Scissors and Tweezers to Study Chromosomes: A Review". Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology. 8: 721_1–16. doi:10.3389/fbioe.2020.00721. PMC 7401452. PMID 32850689.
  11. ^ a b MacDonald MP, Spalding GC, Dholakia K (2003). "Microfluidic sorting in an optical lattice". Nature. 426 (6965): 421–424. Bibcode:2003Natur.426..421M. doi:10.1038/nature02144. PMID 14647376. S2CID 4424652.
  12. ^ Koss BA, Grier DG, "Optical Peristalsis" 2006-09-02 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Murugesapillai, D.; et al. (2016). "Single-molecule studies of high-mobility group B architectural DNA bending proteins". Biophysical Reviews. 9 (1): 17–40. doi:10.1007/s12551-016-0236-4. PMC 5331113. PMID 28303166.
  14. ^ Witzens, J., Hochberg, M. (2011). "Optical detection of target molecule induced aggregation of nanoparticles by means of high-Q resonators". Optics Express. 19 (8): 7034–7061. Bibcode:2011OExpr..19.7034W. doi:10.1364/OE.19.007034. PMID 21503017.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Lin S.; K. B. Crozier (2013). "Trapping-Assisted Sensing of Particles and Proteins Using On-Chip Optical Microcavities". ACS Nano. 7 (2): 1725–1730. doi:10.1021/nn305826j. PMID 23311448.
  16. ^ Schlosser, Nicolas; Reymond, Georges; Protsenko, Igor; Grangier, Philippe (28 June 2001). "Sub-poissonian loading of single atoms in a microscopic dipole trap". Nature. 411 (6841): 1024–1027. Bibcode:2001Natur.411.1024S. doi:10.1038/35082512. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 11429597. S2CID 4386843.
  17. ^ a b Dumke, R.; Volk, M.; Müther, T.; Buchkremer, F. B. J; Birkl, G.; Ertmer, W. (August 8, 2002). "Micro-optical Realization of Arrays of Selectively Addressable Dipole Traps: A Scalable Configuration for Quantum Computation with Atomic Qubits". Phys. Rev. Lett. 89: 097903. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.89.097903.
  18. ^ Thomas, Jessica; Grondalski, Sonja (2010-01-19). "Opening the gate to quantum computation". Physics. 3. Bibcode:2010PhyOJ...3S...9.. doi:10.1103/Physics.3.s9.
  19. ^ Wilk, T.; Gaëtan, A.; Evellin, C.; Wolters, J.; Miroshnychenko, Y.; Grangier, P.; Browaeys, A. (2010-01-08). "Entanglement of Two Individual Neutral Atoms Using Rydberg Blockade". Physical Review Letters. 104 (1): 010502. arXiv:0908.0454. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.104a0502W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.010502. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 20366354. S2CID 16384272.
  20. ^ Isenhower, L.; Urban, E.; Zhang, X. L.; Gill, A. T.; Henage, T.; Johnson, T. A.; Walker, T. G.; Saffman, M. (2010-01-08). "Demonstration of a Neutral Atom Controlled-NOT Quantum Gate". Physical Review Letters. 104 (1): 010503. arXiv:0907.5552. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.104a0503I. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.010503. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 20366355. S2CID 2091127.
  21. ^ "Atom assembler makes defect-free arrays". Physics World. 2016-11-07. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  22. ^ Barredo, Daniel; de Léséleuc, Sylvain; Lienhard, Vincent; Lahaye, Thierry; Browaeys, Antoine (2016-11-25). "An atom-by-atom assembler of defect-free arbitrary two-dimensional atomic arrays". Science. 354 (6315): 1021–1023. arXiv:1607.03042. Bibcode:2016Sci...354.1021B. doi:10.1126/science.aah3778. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 27811285. S2CID 25496096.
  23. ^ Extance, Andy. "Atomic Eiffel tower looms over quantum computing landscape". Chemistry World. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  24. ^ Barredo, Daniel; Lienhard, Vincent; de Léséleuc, Sylvain; Lahaye, Thierry; Browaeys, Antoine (5 September 2018). "Synthetic three-dimensional atomic structures assembled atom by atom". Nature. 561 (7721): 79–82. arXiv:1712.02727. Bibcode:2018Natur.561...79B. doi:10.1038/s41586-018-0450-2. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 30185955. S2CID 52158666.
  25. ^ "Highly programmable quantum simulator operates with up to 256 qubits". Physics World. 2021-07-22. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  26. ^ Ebadi, Sepehr; Wang, Tout T.; Levine, Harry; Keesling, Alexander; Semeghini, Giulia; Omran, Ahmed; Bluvstein, Dolev; Samajdar, Rhine; Pichler, Hannes; Ho, Wen Wei; Choi, Soonwon (2021-07-08). "Quantum phases of matter on a 256-atom programmable quantum simulator". Nature. 595 (7866): 227–232. arXiv:2012.12281. Bibcode:2021Natur.595..227E. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-03582-4. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 34234334. S2CID 229363764.
  27. ^ Scholl, Pascal; Schuler, Michael; Williams, Hannah J.; Eberharter, Alexander A.; Barredo, Daniel; Schymik, Kai-Niklas; Lienhard, Vincent; Henry, Louis-Paul; Lang, Thomas C.; Lahaye, Thierry; Läuchli, Andreas M. (2021-07-08). "Quantum simulation of 2D antiferromagnets with hundreds of Rydberg atoms". Nature. 595 (7866): 233–238. arXiv:2012.12268. Bibcode:2021Natur.595..233S. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-03585-1. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 34234335. S2CID 229363462.
  28. ^ Bluvstein, Dolev; Evered, Simon J.; Geim, Alexandra A.; Li, Sophie H.; Zhou, Hengyun; Manovitz, Tom; Ebadi, Sepehr; Cain, Madelyn; Kalinowski, Marcin; Hangleiter, Dominik; Ataides, J. Pablo Bonilla; Maskara, Nishad; Cong, Iris; Gao, Xun; Rodriguez, Pedro Sales (2023-12-06). "Logical quantum processor based on reconfigurable atom arrays". Nature: 1–3. arXiv:2312.03982. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06927-3. ISSN 1476-4687.
  29. ^ Applegate, Jr. R. W.; Vestad, Tor; et al. (2004). "Optical trapping, manipulation, and sorting of cells and colloids in microfluidic systems with diode laser bars". Optics Express. 12 (19): 4390–8. Bibcode:2004OExpr..12.4390A. doi:10.1364/OPEX.12.004390. PMID 19483988. S2CID 8424168.
  30. ^ Moffitt JR, Chemla YR, Izhaky D, Bustamante C (2006). "Differential detection of dual traps improves the spatial resolution of optical tweezers". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103 (24): 9006–9011. Bibcode:2006PNAS..103.9006M. doi:10.1073/pnas.0603342103. PMC 1482556. PMID 16751267.
  31. ^ Jagannathan, B; Marqusee, S (2013). "Protein folding and unfolding under force". Biopolymers. 99 (11): 860–869. doi:10.1002/bip.22321. PMC 4065244. PMID 23784721.
  32. ^ Lynn Paterson , (2003)
  33. ^ Gordon, J. P. (1973). "Radiation Forces and Momenta in Dielectric Media". Physical Review A. 8 (1): 14–21. Bibcode:1973PhRvA...8...14G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.8.14.
  34. ^ Harada Y, Asakura T (1996). "Radiation Forces on a dielectric sphere in the Rayleigh Scattering Regime". Optics Communications. 124 (5–6): 529–541. Bibcode:1996OptCo.124..529H. doi:10.1016/0030-4018(95)00753-9.
  35. ^ Bradshaw DS, Andrews DL (2017). "Manipulating particles with light: radiation and gradient forces". European Journal of Physics. 38 (3): 034008. Bibcode:2017EJPh...38c4008B. doi:10.1088/1361-6404/aa6050.
  36. ^ Guccione, G.; M. Hosseini; S. Adlong; M. T. Johnsson; J. Hope; B. C. Buchler; P. K. Lam (July 2013). "Scattering-Free Optical Levitation of a Cavity Mirror". Physical Review Letters. 111 (18): 183001. arXiv:1307.1175. Bibcode:2013PhRvL.111r3001G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.183001. PMID 24237512. S2CID 36954822.
  37. ^ Ilic, Ognjen; Atwater, Harry, A. (April 2019). "Self-stabilizing photonic levitation and propulsion of nanostructured macroscopic objects" (PDF). Nature Photonics. 13 (4): 289–295. Bibcode:2019NaPho..13..289I. doi:10.1038/s41566-019-0373-y. ISSN 1749-4893. S2CID 127470391.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  38. ^ Smalley, D. E.; Nygaard, E.; Squire, K.; Van Wagoner, J.; Rasmussen, J.; Gneiting, S.; Qaderi, K.; Goodsell, J.; Rogers, W.; Lindsey, M.; Costner, K. (January 2018). "A photophoretic-trap volumetric display". Nature. 553 (7689): 486–490. Bibcode:2018Natur.553..486S. doi:10.1038/nature25176. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 29368704.
  39. ^ Chen, Zhihan; Li, Jingang; Zheng, Yuebing (2022-02-09). "Heat-Mediated Optical Manipulation". Chemical Reviews. 122 (3): 3122–3179. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrev.1c00626. ISSN 0009-2665. PMC 9833329. PMID 34797041.
  40. ^ Lin, Linhan; Wang, Mingsong; Peng, Xiaolei; Lissek, Emanuel N.; Mao, Zhangming; Scarabelli, Leonardo; Adkins, Emily; Coskun, Sahin; Unalan, Husnu Emrah; Korgel, Brian A.; Liz-Marzán, Luis M.; Florin, Ernst-Ludwig; Zheng, Yuebing (April 2018). "Opto-thermoelectric nanotweezers". Nature Photonics. 12 (4): 195–201. doi:10.1038/s41566-018-0134-3. ISSN 1749-4893. PMC 5958900.
  41. ^ Li, Jingang; Chen, Zhihan; Liu, Yaoran; Kollipara, Pavana Siddhartha; Feng, Yichao; Zhang, Zhenglong; Zheng, Yuebing (2021-06-25). "Opto-refrigerative tweezers". Science Advances. 7 (26). doi:10.1126/sciadv.abh1101. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 8232904. PMID 34172454.
  42. ^ Kollipara, Pavana Siddhartha; Li, Xiuying; Li, Jingang; Chen, Zhihan; Ding, Hongru; Kim, Youngsun; Huang, Suichu; Qin, Zhenpeng; Zheng, Yuebing (2023-08-23). "Hypothermal opto-thermophoretic tweezers". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 5133. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-40865-y. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10447564.
  43. ^ D. J. Stevenson; T. K. Lake; B. Agate; V. Gárcés-Chávez; K. Dholakia; F. Gunn-Moore (2006-10-16). "Optically guided neuronal growth at near infrared wavelengths". Optics Express. 14 (21): 9786–93. Bibcode:2006OExpr..14.9786S. doi:10.1364/OE.14.009786. PMC 2869025. PMID 19529370.
  44. ^ Neuman KC, Block SM (2004). "Optical trapping". Review of Scientific Instruments. 75 (9): 2787–809. Bibcode:2004RScI...75.2787N. doi:10.1063/1.1785844. PMC 1523313. PMID 16878180.
  45. ^ Svoboda K, Block SM (1994). "Biological Application of Optical Forces". Annual Review of Biophysics and Biomolecular Structure. 23: 247–285. doi:10.1146/annurev.bb.23.060194.001335. PMID 7919782. S2CID 8197447.
  46. ^ Shaevitz JW, "A Practical Guide to Optical Trapping" (August 22, 2006). Last accessed on September 12, 2006.
  47. ^ Swartzlander, G. A.; Gahagan, K. T. (1996-06-01). "Optical vortex trapping of particles". Optics Letters. 21 (11): 827–829. Bibcode:1996OptL...21..827G. doi:10.1364/OL.21.000827. ISSN 1539-4794. PMID 19876172. S2CID 8647456.
  48. ^ He, H.; Friese, M. E. J.; Heckenberg, N. R.; Rubinsztein-Dunlop, H. (1995-07-31). "Direct Observation of Transfer of Angular Momentum to Absorptive Particles from a Laser Beam with a Phase Singularity" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 75 (5): 826–829. Bibcode:1995PhRvL..75..826H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.75.826. PMID 10060128.
  49. ^ Friese, M. E. J.; Heckenberg, N. R.; Rubinsztein-Dunlop, H. (1998). "Optical alignment and spinning of laser-trapped microscopic particles" (PDF). Nature. 394 (6691): 348–350. arXiv:physics/0308113. Bibcode:1998Natur.394..348F. doi:10.1038/28566. S2CID 4404320.
  50. ^ Curtis JE, Grier DG, "Structure of Optical Vortices" 2006-09-02 at the Wayback Machine (2003). Last accessed on September 3, 2006.
  51. ^ Padgett M, . Last accessed on September 3, 2006.
  52. ^ McGloin D, Garces-Chavez V, Paterson L, Carruthers T, Melvil H, Dholakia K, . Last accessed on September 3, 2006.
  53. ^ Ladavac K, Grier DG (2004). "Microoptomechanical pump assembled and driven by holographic optical vortex arrays". Optics Express. 12 (6): 1144–9. arXiv:cond-mat/0402634. Bibcode:2004OExpr..12.1144L. doi:10.1364/OPEX.12.001144. PMID 19474932. S2CID 18255607.
  54. ^ Noom, Maarten C; van den Broek, Bram; van Mameren, Joost; Wuite, Gijs J L (11 November 2007). "Visualizing single DNA-bound proteins using DNA as a scanning probe". Nature Methods. 4 (12): 1031–1036. doi:10.1038/nmeth1126. PMID 17994031. S2CID 7007569.
  55. ^ A.D. Chandra & A. Banerjee (2020). "Rapid phase calibration of a spatial light modulator using novel phase masks and optimization of its efficiency using an iterative algorithm". Journal of Modern Optics. 67 (7): 628–637. arXiv:1811.03297. Bibcode:2020JMOp...67..628C. doi:10.1080/09500340.2020.1760954. S2CID 219646821.
  56. ^ Rodrigo, José A.; Alieva, Tatiana (2015-09-20). "Freestyle 3D laser traps: tools for studying light-driven particle dynamics and beyond". Optica. 2 (9): 812. Bibcode:2015Optic...2..812R. doi:10.1364/OPTICA.2.000812. ISSN 2334-2536.
  57. ^ Bowman, D.; Harte, T. L.; Chardonnet, V.; Groot, C. De; Denny, S. J.; Goc, G. Le; Anderson, M.; Ireland, P.; Cassettari, D. (1169). "High-fidelity phase and amplitude control of phase-only computer generated holograms using conjugate gradient minimisation". Optics Express. 25 (10): 11692–11700. arXiv:1701.08620. Bibcode:2017OExpr..2511692B. doi:10.1364/OE.25.011692. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 28788742. S2CID 46763848.
  58. ^ Nemirovsky, Jonathan; Sagi, Yoav (2021). "Fast universal two-qubit gate for neutral fermionic atoms in optical tweezers". Physical Review Research. 3 (1): 013113. arXiv:2008.09819. Bibcode:2021PhRvR...3a3113N. doi:10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.013113.
  59. ^ Hu Z, Wang J, Liang J (2004). "Manipulation and arrangement of biological and dielectric particles by a lensed fiber probe". Optics Express. 12 (17): 4123–8. Bibcode:2004OExpr..12.4123H. doi:10.1364/OPEX.12.004123. PMID 19483954. S2CID 31640506.
  60. ^ Liberale C, Minzioni P, Bragheri F, De Angelis F, Di Fabrizio E, Cristiani I (2007). "Miniaturized all-fibre probe for three-dimensional optical trapping and manipulation". Nature Photonics. 1 (12): 723–727. Bibcode:2007NaPho...1..723L. doi:10.1038/nphoton.2007.230.
  61. ^ Jochen Guck; Stefan Schinkinger; Bryan Lincoln; Falk Wottawah; Susanne Ebert; Maren Romeyke; Dominik Lenz; Harold M. Erickson; Revathi Ananthakrishnan; Daniel Mitchell; Josef Käs; Sydney Ulvick; Curt Bilby (2005). . Biophysical Journal. 88 (5): 3689–3698. Bibcode:2005BpJ....88.3689G. doi:10.1529/biophysj.104.045476. PMC 1305515. PMID 15722433. Archived from the original on November 9, 2007.
  62. ^ Moritz Kreysing; Tobias Kießling; Anatol Fritsch; Christian Dietrich; Jochen Guck; Josef Käs (2008). "The optical cell rotator". Optics Express. 16 (21): 16984–92. Bibcode:2008OExpr..1616984K. doi:10.1364/OE.16.016984. PMID 18852807. S2CID 23912816.
  63. ^ Kreysing, M.; Ott, D.; Schmidberger, M. J.; Otto, O.; Schürmann, M.; Martín-Badosa, E.; Whyte, G.; Guck, J. (2014). "Dynamic operation of optical fibres beyond the single-mode regime facilitates the orientation of biological cells". Nature Communications. 5: 5481. Bibcode:2014NatCo...5.5481K. doi:10.1038/ncomms6481. PMC 4263128. PMID 25410595.
  64. ^ Ladavac, K.; Kasza, K.; Grier, D. (2004). "Sorting mesoscopic objects with periodic potential landscapes: Optical fractionation". Physical Review E. 70 (1): 010901. Bibcode:2004PhRvE..70a0901L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.70.010901. PMID 15324034. S2CID 14608670.
  65. ^ Xiao, Ke; Grier, David G. (2010). "Multidimensional Optical Fractionation of Colloidal Particles with Holographic Verification". Physical Review Letters. 104 (2): 028302. arXiv:0912.4754. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.104b8302X. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.028302. PMID 20366628. S2CID 21476119.
  66. ^ "Optical fractionation and sorting.", IRC Scotland. Last accessed on September 3, 2006.
  67. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-07-21. Retrieved 2005-11-15.
  68. ^ Kawata, S; Sugiura, T (1992). "Movement of micrometer-sized particles in the evanescent field of a laser beam". Optics Letters. 17 (11): 772–4. Bibcode:1992OptL...17..772K. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.462.4424. doi:10.1364/OL.17.000772. PMID 19794626.
  69. ^ Statsenko, Anna; Darmawan, Yoshua Albert; Fuji, Takao; Kudo, Tetsuhiro (2022-11-15). "Midinfrared Optical Manipulation Based on Molecular Vibrational Resonance". Physical Review Applied. 18 (5): 054041. doi:10.1103/PhysRevApplied.18.054041.
  70. ^ Darmawan, Yoshua Albert; Goto, Takuma; Yanagishima, Taiki; Fuji, Takao; Kudo, Tetsuhiro (2023-08-17). "Mid-Infrared Optical Force Chromatography of Microspheres Containing Siloxane Bonds". The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. 14 (32): 7306–7312. doi:10.1021/acs.jpclett.3c01679. ISSN 1948-7185. PMID 37561048.
  71. ^ Volpe G, Quidant R, Badenes G, Petrov D (2006). "Surface Plasmon Radiation Forces". Physical Review Letters. 96 (23): 238101. Bibcode:2006PhRvL..96w8101V. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.238101. hdl:11693/53564. PMID 16803408. S2CID 26221345.
  72. ^ Righini M, Volpe G, Girard C, Petrov D, Quidant R (2008). "Surface Plasmon Optical Tweezers: Tunable Optical Manipulation in the Femtonewton Range". Physical Review Letters. 100 (18): 186804. Bibcode:2008PhRvL.100r6804R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.100.186804. PMID 18518404. S2CID 38405168.
  73. ^ "Cold-Atom Physics Using Optical Nanofibres". Applied quantum physics. Vienna University of Technology. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  74. ^ "Quantum Networking with Atomic Ensembles". Caltech quantum optics. California Institute of Technology. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  75. ^ Invention: Soldiers obeying odours[dead link], New Scientist, 8 November 2005
  76. ^ Linhan Lin, ...; Yuebing Zheng (2018). "Opto-thermoelectric nanotweezers". Nature Photonics. 12 (4): 195–201. Bibcode:2018NaPho..12..195L. doi:10.1038/s41566-018-0134-3. PMC 5958900. PMID 29785202.
  77. ^ Jingang Li; Z. Chen; Y. Liu; P. S. Kollipara; Y. Feng; Z. Zhang; Yuebing Zheng (2021). "Opto-Refrigerative Tweezers". Science Advances. 7 (26): eabh1101. Bibcode:2021SciA....7.1101L. doi:10.1126/sciadv.abh1101. PMC 8232904. PMID 34172454.
  78. ^ Burns M.M.; Golovchenko J-M.; Golovchenko J.A. (1989). "Optical binding". Physical Review Letters. 63 (12): 1233–1236. Bibcode:1989PhRvL..63.1233B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.63.1233. PMID 10040510.
  79. ^ Thirunamachandran, T. (1980-06-10). "Intermolecular interactions in the presence of an intense radiation field". Molecular Physics. 40 (2): 393–399. Bibcode:1980MolPh..40..393T. doi:10.1080/00268978000101561. ISSN 0026-8976.
  80. ^ Forbes, Kayn A.; Andrews, David L. (2015-05-14). "Chiral discrimination in optical binding" (PDF). Physical Review A. 91 (5): 053824. Bibcode:2015PhRvA..91e3824F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.91.053824.
  81. ^ Whitley, Kevin D.; Comstock, Matthew J.; Chemla, Yann R. (2017). High-Resolution "Fleezers": Dual-Trap Optical Tweezers Combined with Single-Molecule Fluorescence Detection. Methods in Molecular Biology. Vol. 1486. pp. 183–256. doi:10.1007/978-1-4939-6421-5_8. ISBN 978-1-4939-6419-2. PMC 5541766. PMID 27844430.
  82. ^ Avellaneda MJ, Koers EJ, Minde DP, Sunderlikova V, Tans SJ (2020). "Simultaneous sensing and imaging of individual biomolecular complexes enabled by modular DNA–protein coupling". Communications Chemistry. 3 (1): 1–7. doi:10.1038/s42004-020-0267-4. PMC 9814868. PMID 36703465.
  83. ^ Avellaneda MJ, Franke KB, Sunderlikova V, Bukau B, Mogk A, Tans SJ (2020). "Processive extrusion of polypeptide loops by a Hsp100 disaggregase". Nature. 578 (7794): 317–320. Bibcode:2020Natur.578..317A. doi:10.1038/s41586-020-1964-y. PMID 31996849. S2CID 210949475.

External links edit

  • Video: Levitating DIAMONDS with a laser beam

optical, tweezers, originally, called, single, beam, gradient, force, trap, scientific, instruments, that, highly, focused, laser, beam, hold, move, microscopic, microscopic, objects, like, atoms, nanoparticles, droplets, manner, similar, tweezers, object, hel. Optical tweezers originally called single beam gradient force trap are scientific instruments that use a highly focused laser beam to hold and move microscopic and sub microscopic objects like atoms nanoparticles and droplets in a manner similar to tweezers If the object is held in air or vacuum without additional support it can be called optical levitation A photograph of a nanoparticle diameter 103 nm trapped by an optical tweezer The nanoparticle can be seen as the tiny bright spot in the middle For additional control two copper electrodes are placed above and below the particle The laser light provides an attractive or repulsive force typically on the order of piconewtons depending on the relative refractive index between particle and surrounding medium Levitation is possible if the force of the light counters the force of gravity The trapped particles are usually micron sized or even smaller Dielectric and absorbing particles can be trapped too Optical tweezers are used in biology and medicine for example to grab and hold a single bacterium a cell like a sperm cell or a blood cell or a molecule like DNA nanoengineering and nanochemistry to study and build materials from single molecules quantum optics and quantum optomechanics to study the interaction of single particles with light The development of optical tweezing by Arthur Ashkin was lauded with the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics Contents 1 History and development 2 Physics 2 1 General description 2 2 Detailed view 2 2 1 Ray optics 2 2 2 Electric dipole approximation 2 2 3 Harmonic potential approximation 2 3 Optical levitation 2 4 Optothermal tweezers 3 Setups 3 1 Alternative laser beam modes 3 2 Multiplexed optical tweezers 3 3 Single mode optical fibers 3 4 Multimode fiber based traps 3 5 Cell sorting 3 6 Evanescent fields 3 7 Indirect approach 3 8 Optical binding 3 9 Fluorescence optical tweezers 3 10 Tweezers combined with other imaging techniques 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory and development editThe detection of optical scattering and the gradient forces on micron sized particles was first reported in 1970 by Arthur Ashkin a scientist working at Bell Labs 1 Years later Ashkin and colleagues reported the first observation of what is now commonly referred to as an optical tweezer a tightly focused beam of light capable of holding microscopic particles stable in three dimensions 2 In 2018 Ashkin was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for this development One author of this seminal 1986 paper Steven Chu would go on to use optical tweezing in his work on cooling and trapping neutral atoms 3 This research earned Chu the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics along with Claude Cohen Tannoudji and William D Phillips 4 In an interview Steven Chu described how Ashkin had first envisioned optical tweezing as a method for trapping atoms 5 Ashkin was able to trap larger particles 10 to 10 000 nanometers in diameter but it fell to Chu to extend these techniques to the trapping of neutral atoms 0 1 nanometers in diameter using resonant laser light and a magnetic gradient trap cf Magneto optical trap In the late 1980s Arthur Ashkin and Joseph M Dziedzic demonstrated the first application of the technology to the biological sciences using it to trap an individual tobacco mosaic virus and Escherichia coli bacterium 6 Throughout the 1990s and afterwards researchers like Carlos Bustamante James Spudich and Steven Block pioneered the use of optical trap force spectroscopy to characterize molecular scale biological motors These molecular motors are ubiquitous in biology and are responsible for locomotion and mechanical action within the cell Optical traps allowed these biophysicists to observe the forces and dynamics of nanoscale motors at the single molecule level optical trap force spectroscopy has since led to greater understanding of the stochastic nature of these force generating molecules Optical tweezers have proven useful in other areas of biology as well They are used in synthetic biology to construct tissue like networks of artificial cells 7 and to fuse synthetic membranes together 8 to initiate biochemical reactions 7 They are also widely employed in genetic studies 9 and research on chromosome structure and dynamics 10 In 2003 the techniques of optical tweezers were applied in the field of cell sorting by creating a large optical intensity pattern over the sample area cells can be sorted by their intrinsic optical characteristics 11 12 Optical tweezers have also been used to probe the cytoskeleton measure the visco elastic properties of biopolymers 13 and study cell motility A bio molecular assay in which clusters of ligand coated nano particles are both optically trapped and optically detected after target molecule induced clustering was proposed in 2011 14 and experimentally demonstrated in 2013 15 Optical tweezers are also used to trap laser cooled atoms in vacuum mainly for applications in quantum science Some achievements in this area include trapping of a single atom in 2001 16 trapping of 2D arrays of atoms in 2002 17 trapping of strongly interacting entangled pairs in 2010 18 19 20 trapping precisely assembled 2 dimensional arrays of atoms in 2016 21 22 and 3 dimensional arrays in 2018 23 24 These techniques have been used in quantum simulators to obtain programmable arrays of 196 and 256 atoms in 2021 25 26 27 and represent a promising platform for quantum computing 17 28 Researchers have worked to convert optical tweezers from large complex instruments to smaller simpler ones for use by those with smaller research budgets 3 29 Physics edit nbsp Dielectric objects are attracted to the center of the beam slightly above the beam waist as described in the text The force applied on the object depends linearly on its displacement from the trap center just as with a simple spring system It is a restoring force and thus equal to ktrapx displaystyle k mathrm trap x nbsp General description edit Optical tweezers are capable of manipulating nanometer and micron sized dielectric particles and even individual atoms by exerting extremely small forces via a highly focused laser beam The beam is typically focused by sending it through a microscope objective Near the narrowest point of the focused beam known as the beam waist the amplitude of the oscillating electric field varies rapidly in space Dielectric particles are attracted along the gradient to the region of strongest electric field which is the center of the beam The laser light also tends to apply a force on particles in the beam along the direction of beam propagation This is due to conservation of momentum photons that are absorbed or scattered by the tiny dielectric particle impart momentum to the dielectric particle This is known as the scattering force and results in the particle being displaced slightly downstream from the exact position of the beam waist as seen in the figure Optical traps are very sensitive instruments and are capable of the manipulation and detection of sub nanometer displacements for sub micron dielectric particles 30 For this reason they are often used to manipulate and study single molecules by interacting with a bead that has been attached to that molecule DNA and the proteins 31 and enzymes that interact with it are commonly studied in this way For quantitative scientific measurements most optical traps are operated in such a way that the dielectric particle rarely moves far from the trap center The reason for this is that the force applied to the particle is linear with respect to its displacement from the center of the trap as long as the displacement is small In this way an optical trap can be compared to a simple spring which follows Hooke s law Further information on the light scattering force Radiation pressure Detailed view edit Proper explanation of optical trapping behavior depends upon the size of the trapped particle relative to the wavelength of light used to trap it In cases where the dimensions of the particle are much greater than the wavelength a simple ray optics treatment is sufficient If the wavelength of light far exceeds the particle dimensions the particles can be treated as electric dipoles in an electric field For optical trapping of dielectric objects of dimensions within an order of magnitude of the trapping beam wavelength the only accurate models involve the treatment of either time dependent or time harmonic Maxwell equations using appropriate boundary conditions Ray optics edit nbsp Ray optics explanation unfocused laser When the bead is displaced from the beam center right image the larger momentum change of the more intense rays cause a net force to be applied back toward the center of the laser When the bead is laterally centered on the beam left image the resulting lateral force is zero But an unfocused laser still causes a force pointing away from the laser nbsp Ray optics explanation focused laser In addition to keeping the bead in the center of the laser a focused laser also keeps the bead in a fixed axial position The momentum change of the focused rays causes a force towards the laser focus both when the bead is in front left image or behind right image the laser focus So the bead will stay slightly behind the focus where this force compensates the scattering force In cases where the diameter of a trapped particle is significantly greater than the wavelength of light the trapping phenomenon can be explained using ray optics As shown in the figure individual rays of light emitted from the laser will be refracted as it enters and exits the dielectric bead As a result the ray will exit in a direction different from which it originated Since light has a momentum associated with it this change in direction indicates that its momentum has changed Due to Newton s third law there should be an equal and opposite momentum change on the particle Most optical traps operate with a Gaussian beam TEM00 mode profile intensity In this case if the particle is displaced from the center of the beam as in the right part of the figure the particle has a net force returning it to the center of the trap because more intense beams impart a larger momentum change towards the center of the trap than less intense beams which impart a smaller momentum change away from the trap center The net momentum change or force returns the particle to the trap center If the particle is located at the center of the beam then individual rays of light are refracting through the particle symmetrically resulting in no net lateral force The net force in this case is along the axial direction of the trap which cancels out the scattering force of the laser light The cancellation of this axial gradient force with the scattering force is what causes the bead to be stably trapped slightly downstream of the beam waist The standard tweezers works with the trapping laser propagated in the direction of gravity 32 and the inverted tweezers works against gravity Electric dipole approximation edit In cases where the diameter of a trapped particle is significantly smaller than the wavelength of light the conditions for Rayleigh scattering are satisfied and the particle can be treated as a point dipole in an inhomogeneous electromagnetic field The force applied on a single charge in an electromagnetic field is known as the Lorentz force F1 q E x1 dx1dt B displaystyle mathbf F 1 q left mathbf E mathbf x 1 frac d mathbf x 1 dt times mathbf B right nbsp dd The force on the dipole can be calculated by substituting two terms for the electric field in the equation above one for each charge The polarization of a dipole is p qd displaystyle mathbf p q mathbf d nbsp where d displaystyle mathbf d nbsp is the distance between the two charges For a point dipole the distance is infinitesimal x1 x2 displaystyle mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 nbsp Taking into account that the two charges have opposite signs the force takes the form F q E x1 E x2 d x1 x2 dt B q E x1 x1 x2 E E x1 d x1 x2 dt B displaystyle begin aligned mathbf F amp q left mathbf E mathbf x 1 mathbf E mathbf x 2 frac d mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 dt times mathbf B right amp q left mathbf E mathbf x 1 left mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 cdot nabla right mathbf E mathbf E mathbf x 1 frac d mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 dt times mathbf B right end aligned nbsp dd Notice that the E1 displaystyle mathbf E 1 nbsp cancel out Multiplying through by the charge q displaystyle q nbsp converts position x displaystyle mathbf x nbsp into polarization p displaystyle mathbf p nbsp F p E dpdt B a E E dEdt B displaystyle begin aligned mathbf F amp left mathbf p cdot nabla right mathbf E frac d mathbf p dt times mathbf B amp alpha left left mathbf E cdot nabla right mathbf E frac d mathbf E dt times mathbf B right end aligned nbsp dd where in the second equality it has been assumed that the dielectric particle is linear i e p aE displaystyle mathbf p alpha mathbf E nbsp In the final steps two equalities will be used 1 a vector analysis equality 2 Faraday s law of induction E E 12E2 E E displaystyle left mathbf E cdot nabla right mathbf E nabla left frac 1 2 E 2 right mathbf E times left nabla times mathbf E right nbsp E B t displaystyle nabla times mathbf E frac partial mathbf B partial t nbsp First the vector equality will be inserted for the first term in the force equation above Maxwell s equation will be substituted in for the second term in the vector equality Then the two terms which contain time derivatives can be combined into a single term 33 F a 12 E2 E E dEdt B a 12 E2 E dBdt dEdt B a 12 E2 ddt E B displaystyle begin aligned mathbf F amp alpha left frac 1 2 nabla E 2 mathbf E times left nabla times mathbf E right frac d mathbf E dt times mathbf B right amp alpha left frac 1 2 nabla E 2 mathbf E times left frac d mathbf B dt right frac d mathbf E dt times mathbf B right amp alpha left frac 1 2 nabla E 2 frac d dt left mathbf E times mathbf B right right end aligned nbsp dd The second term in the last equality is the time derivative of a quantity that is related through a multiplicative constant to the Poynting vector which describes the power per unit area passing through a surface Since the power of the laser is constant when sampling over frequencies much longer than the frequency of the laser s light 1014 Hz the derivative of this term averages to zero and the force can be written as 34 F 12a E2 2pn0a3c m2 1m2 2 I r displaystyle mathbf F frac 1 2 alpha nabla E 2 frac 2 pi n 0 a 3 c left frac m 2 1 m 2 2 right nabla I mathbf r nbsp dd where in the second part we have included the induced dipole moment in MKS units of a spherical dielectric particle p aE r t 4pn12ϵ0a3 m2 1 m2 2 E r t displaystyle mathbf p alpha mathbf E mathbf r t 4 pi n 1 2 epsilon 0 a 3 m 2 1 m 2 2 mathbf E mathbf r t nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp is the particle radius n0 displaystyle n 0 nbsp is the index of refraction of the particle and m n0 n1 displaystyle m n 0 n 1 nbsp is the relative refractive index between the particle and the medium The square of the magnitude of the electric field is equal to the intensity of the beam as a function of position Therefore the result indicates that the force on the dielectric particle when treated as a point dipole is proportional to the gradient along the intensity of the beam In other words the gradient force described here tends to attract the particle to the region of highest intensity In reality the scattering force of the light works against the gradient force in the axial direction of the trap resulting in an equilibrium position that is displaced slightly downstream of the intensity maximum Under the Rayleigh approximation we can also write the scattering force as Fscat r k4a26pcn03ϵ02I r z 8pn0k4a63c m2 1m2 2 2I r z displaystyle mathbf F text scat mathbf r frac k 4 alpha 2 6 pi cn 0 3 epsilon 0 2 I mathbf r hat z frac 8 pi n 0 k 4 a 6 3c left frac m 2 1 m 2 2 right 2 I mathbf r hat z nbsp dd Since the scattering is isotropic the net momentum is transferred in the forward direction On the quantum level we picture the gradient force as forward Rayleigh scattering in which identical photons are created and annihilated concurrently while in the scattering radiation force the incident photons travel in the same direction and scatter isotropically By conservation of momentum the particle must accumulate the photons original momenta causing a forward force in the latter 35 Harmonic potential approximation edit A useful way to study the interaction of an atom in a Gaussian beam is to look at the harmonic potential approximation of the intensity profile the atom experiences In the case of the two level atom the potential experienced is related to its AC Stark Shift DEAC Stark 3pc2Gm2w03dI r z displaystyle mathbf Delta E text AC Stark frac 3 pi c 2 Gamma mu 2 omega 0 3 delta mathbf I r z nbsp dd where G displaystyle Gamma nbsp is the natural line width of the excited state m displaystyle mu nbsp is the electric dipole coupling wo displaystyle omega o nbsp is the frequency of the transition and d displaystyle delta nbsp is the detuning or difference between the laser frequency and the transition frequency The intensity of a gaussian beam profile is characterized by the wavelength l displaystyle lambda nbsp minimum waist wo displaystyle w o nbsp and power of the beam Po displaystyle P o nbsp The following formulas define the beam profile I r z I0 w0w z 2e 2r2w2 z displaystyle I r z I 0 left frac w 0 w z right 2 e frac 2r 2 w 2 z nbsp dd w z w01 zzR 2 displaystyle w z w 0 sqrt 1 left frac z z R right 2 nbsp dd zR pw02l displaystyle z R frac pi w 0 2 lambda nbsp dd P0 12pI0w02 displaystyle P 0 frac 1 2 pi I 0 w 0 2 nbsp dd To approximate this Gaussian potential in both the radial and axial directions of the beam the intensity profile must be expanded to second order in z displaystyle z nbsp and r displaystyle r nbsp for r 0 displaystyle r 0 nbsp and z 0 displaystyle z 0 nbsp respectively and equated to the harmonic potential 12m wz2z2 wr2r2 displaystyle frac 1 2 m omega z 2 z 2 omega r 2 r 2 nbsp These expansions are evaluated assuming fixed power 12 2I z2 r z 0z2 2P0l2p3w06z2 12mwz2z2 displaystyle frac 1 2 frac partial 2 I partial z 2 Biggr r z 0 z 2 frac 2P 0 lambda 2 pi 3 w 0 6 z 2 frac 1 2 m omega z 2 z 2 nbsp dd 12 2I r2 r z 0r2 4P0pw04r2 12mwr2r2 displaystyle frac 1 2 frac partial 2 I partial r 2 Biggr r z 0 r 2 frac 4P 0 pi w 0 4 r 2 frac 1 2 m omega r 2 r 2 nbsp dd This means that when solving for the harmonic frequencies or trap frequencies when considering optical traps for atoms the frequencies are given as wr 8P0pmw04 displaystyle omega r sqrt frac 8P 0 pi mw 0 4 nbsp dd wz 4P0l2mp3w06 displaystyle omega z sqrt frac 4P 0 lambda 2 m pi 3 w 0 6 nbsp dd so that the relative trap frequencies for the radial and axial directions as a function of only beam waist scale as wrwz 2w0pl displaystyle frac omega r omega z sqrt 2 frac w 0 pi lambda nbsp dd Optical levitation edit In order to levitate the particle in air the downward force of gravity must be countered by the forces stemming from photon momentum transfer Typically photon radiation pressure of a focused laser beam of enough intensity counters the downward force of gravity while also preventing lateral side to side and vertical instabilities to allow for a stable optical trap capable of holding small particles in suspension Micrometer sized from several to 50 micrometers in diameter transparent dielectric spheres such as fused silica spheres oil or water droplets are used in this type of experiment The laser radiation can be fixed in wavelength such as that of an argon ion laser or that of a tunable dye laser Laser power required is of the order of 1 Watt focused to a spot size of several tens of micrometers Phenomena related to morphology dependent resonances in a spherical optical cavity have been studied by several research groups For a shiny object such as a metallic micro sphere stable optical levitation has not been achieved Optical levitation of a macroscopic object is also theoretically possible 36 and can be enhanced with nano structuring 37 Materials that have been successfully levitated include Black liquor aluminum oxide tungsten and nickel 38 Optothermal tweezers edit In the last two decades optical forces are combined with thermophoretic forces to enable trapping at reduced laser powers thus resulting in minimized photon damage By introducing light absorbing elements either particles or substrates microscale temperature gradients are created resulting in thermophoresis 39 Typically particles including biological objects such as cells bacteria DNA RNA drift towards the cold resulting in particle repulsion using optical tweezers Overcoming this limitation different techniques such as beam shaping and solution modification with electrolytes and surfactants 40 were used to successfully trap the objects Laser cooling was also achieved with Ytterbium doped yttrium lithium fluoride crystals to generate cold spots using lasers to achieve trapping with reduced photobleaching 41 The sample temperature has also been reduced to achieve optical trapping for a significantly increased selection of particles using optothermal tweezers for drug delivery applications 42 Setups edit nbsp A generic optical tweezer diagram with only the most basic components The most basic optical tweezer setup will likely include the following components a laser usually Nd YAG a beam expander some optics used to steer the beam location in the sample plane a microscope objective and condenser to create the trap in the sample plane a position detector e g quadrant photodiode to measure beam displacements and a microscope illumination source coupled to a CCD camera An Nd YAG laser 1064 nm wavelength is a common choice of laser for working with biological specimens This is because such specimens being mostly water have a low absorption coefficient at this wavelength 43 A low absorption is advisable so as to minimise damage to the biological material sometimes referred to as opticution Perhaps the most important consideration in optical tweezer design is the choice of the objective A stable trap requires that the gradient force which is dependent upon the numerical aperture NA of the objective be greater than the scattering force Suitable objectives typically have an NA between 1 2 and 1 4 44 While alternatives are available perhaps the simplest method for position detection involves imaging the trapping laser exiting the sample chamber onto a quadrant photodiode Lateral deflections of the beam are measured similarly to how it is done using atomic force microscopy AFM Expanding the beam emitted from the laser to fill the aperture of the objective will result in a tighter diffraction limited spot 45 While lateral translation of the trap relative to the sample can be accomplished by translation of the microscope slide most tweezer setups have additional optics designed to translate the beam to give an extra degree of translational freedom This can be done by translating the first of the two lenses labelled as Beam Steering in the figure For example translation of that lens in the lateral plane will result in a laterally deflected beam from what is drawn in the figure If the distance between the beam steering lenses and the objective is chosen properly this will correspond to a similar deflection before entering the objective and a resulting lateral translation in the sample plane The position of the beam waist that is the focus of the optical trap can be adjusted by an axial displacement of the initial lens Such an axial displacement causes the beam to diverge or converge slightly the result of which is an axially displaced position of the beam waist in the sample chamber 46 Visualization of the sample plane is usually accomplished through illumination via a separate light source coupled into the optical path in the opposite direction using dichroic mirrors This light is incident on a CCD camera and can be viewed on an external monitor or used for tracking the trapped particle position via video tracking Alternative laser beam modes edit The majority of optical tweezers make use of conventional TEM00 Gaussian beams However a number of other beam types have been used to trap particles including high order laser beams i e Hermite Gaussian beams TEMxy Laguerre Gaussian LG beams TEMpl and Bessel beams Optical tweezers based on Laguerre Gaussian beams have the unique capability of trapping particles that are optically reflective and absorptive 47 48 49 Laguerre Gaussian beams also possess a well defined orbital angular momentum that can rotate particles 50 51 This is accomplished without external mechanical or electrical steering of the beam Both zero and higher order Bessel Beams also possess a unique tweezing ability They can trap and rotate multiple particles that are millimeters apart and even around obstacles 52 Micromachines can be driven by these unique optical beams due to their intrinsic rotating mechanism due to the spin and orbital angular momentum of light 53 Multiplexed optical tweezers edit A typical setup uses one laser to create one or two traps Commonly two traps are generated by splitting the laser beam into two orthogonally polarized beams Optical tweezing operations with more than two traps can be realized either by time sharing a single laser beam among several optical tweezers 54 or by diffractively splitting the beam into multiple traps With acousto optic deflectors or galvanometer driven mirrors a single laser beam can be shared among hundreds of optical tweezers in the focal plane or else spread into an extended one dimensional trap Specially designed diffractive optical elements can divide a single input beam into hundreds of continuously illuminated traps in arbitrary three dimensional configurations The trap forming hologram also can specify the mode structure of each trap individually thereby creating arrays of optical vortices optical tweezers and holographic line traps for example 55 When implemented with a spatial light modulator such holographic optical traps also can move objects in three dimensions 56 Advanced forms of holographic optical traps with arbitrary spatial profiles where smoothness of the intensity and the phase are controlled find applications in many areas of science from micromanipulation to ultracold atoms 57 Ultracold atoms could also be used for realization of quantum computers 58 Single mode optical fibers edit The standard fiber optical trap relies on the same principle as the optical trapping but with the Gaussian laser beam delivered through an optical fiber If one end of the optical fiber is molded into a lens like facet the nearly gaussian beam carried by a single mode standard fiber will be focused at some distance from the fiber tip The effective Numerical Aperture of such assembly is usually not enough to allow for a full 3D optical trap but only for a 2D trap optical trapping and manipulation of objects will be possible only when e g they are in contact with a surface 59 A true 3D optical trapping based on a single fiber with a trapping point which is not in nearly contact with the fiber tip has been realized based on a not standard annular core fiber arrangement and a total internal reflection geometry 60 On the other hand if the ends of the fiber are not moulded the laser exiting the fiber will be diverging and thus a stable optical trap can only be realised by balancing the gradient and the scattering force from two opposing ends of the fiber The gradient force will trap the particles in the transverse direction while the axial optical force comes from the scattering force of the two counter propagating beams emerging from the two fibers The equilibrium z position of such a trapped bead is where the two scattering forces equal each other This work was pioneered by A Constable et al Opt Lett 18 1867 1993 and followed by J Guck et al Phys Rev Lett 84 5451 2000 who made use of this technique to stretch microparticles By manipulating the input power into the two ends of the fiber there will be an increase of an optical stretching that can be used to measure viscoelastic properties of cells with sensitivity sufficient to distinguish between different individual cytoskeletal phenotypes i e human erythrocytes and mouse fibroblasts A recent test has seen great success in differentiating cancerous cells from non cancerous ones from the two opposed non focused laser beams 61 Multimode fiber based traps edit nbsp The Optical Cell Rotator is a fiber based laser trap that can hold and precisely orient living cells for tomographic microscopy While earlier version of fiber based laser traps exclusively used single mode beams M Kreysing and colleagues recently showed that the careful excitation of further optical modes in a short piece of optical fiber allows the realization of non trivial trapping geometries By this the researchers were able to orient various human cell types individual cells and clusters on a microscope The main advantage of the so called optical cell rotator technology over standard optical tweezers is the decoupling of trapping from imaging optics This its modular design and the high compatibility of divergent laser traps with biological material indicates the great potential of this new generation of laser traps in medical research and life science 62 Recently the optical cell rotator technology was implemented on the basis of adaptive optics allowing to dynamically reconfigure the optical trap during operation and adapt it to the sample 63 Cell sorting edit One of the more common cell sorting systems makes use of flow cytometry through fluorescence imaging In this method a suspension of biologic cells is sorted into two or more containers based upon specific fluorescent characteristics of each cell during an assisted flow By using an electrical charge that the cell is trapped in the cells are then sorted based on the fluorescence intensity measurements The sorting process is undertaken by an electrostatic deflection system that diverts cells into containers based upon their charge In the optically actuated sorting process the cells are flowed through into an optical landscape i e 2D or 3D optical lattices Without any induced electrical charge the cells would sort based on their intrinsic refractive index properties and can be re configurability for dynamic sorting An optical lattice can be created using diffractive optics and optical elements 11 On the other hand K Ladavac et al used a spatial light modulator to project an intensity pattern to enable the optical sorting process 64 K Xiao and D G Grier applied holographic video microscopy to demonstrate that this technique can sort colloidal spheres with part per thousand resolution for size and refractive index 65 The main mechanism for sorting is the arrangement of the optical lattice points As the cell flow through the optical lattice there are forces due to the particles drag force that is competing directly with the optical gradient force See Physics of optical tweezers from the optical lattice point By shifting the arrangement of the optical lattice point there is a preferred optical path where the optical forces are dominant and biased With the aid of the flow of the cells there is a resultant force that is directed along that preferred optical path Hence there is a relationship of the flow rate with the optical gradient force By adjusting the two forces one will be able to obtain a good optical sorting efficiency Competition of the forces in the sorting environment need fine tuning to succeed in high efficient optical sorting The need is mainly with regards to the balance of the forces drag force due to fluid flow and optical gradient force due to arrangement of intensity spot Scientists at the University of St Andrews have received considerable funding from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council EPSRC for an optical sorting machine This new technology could rival the conventional fluorescence activated cell sorting 66 Evanescent fields edit An evanescent field 67 is a residue optical field that leaks during total internal reflection This leaking of light fades off at an exponential rate The evanescent field has found a number of applications in nanometer resolution imaging microscopy optical micromanipulation optical tweezers are becoming ever more relevant in research In optical tweezers a continuous evanescent field can be created when light is propagating through an optical waveguide multiple total internal reflection The resulting evanescent field has a directional sense and will propel microparticles along its propagating path This work was first pioneered by S Kawata and T Sugiura in 1992 who showed that the field can be coupled to the particles in proximity on the order of 100 nanometers 68 This direct coupling of the field is treated as a type of photon tunnelling across the gap from prism to microparticles The result is a directional optical propelling force A recent updated version of the evanescent field optical tweezers makes use of extended optical landscape patterns to simultaneously guide a large number of particles into a preferred direction without using a waveguide It is termed as Lensless Optical Trapping LOT The orderly movement of the particles is aided by the introduction of Ronchi Ruling that creates well defined optical potential wells replacing the waveguide This means that particles are propelled by the evanescent field while being trapped by the linear bright fringes At the moment there are scientists working on focused evanescent fields as well In recent studies the evanescent field generated by mid infrared laser has been used to sort particles by molecular vibrational resonance selectively Mid infrared light is commonly used to identify molecular structures of materials because the vibrational modes exist in the mid infrared region A study by Statsenko et al described optical force enhancement by molecular vibrational resonance by exciting the stretching mode of Si O Si bond at 9 3 mm 69 It is shown that silica microspheres containing significant Si O Si bond move up to ten times faster than polystyrene microspheres due to molecular vibrational resonance Moreover this same group also investigated the possibility of optical force chromatography based on molecular vibrational resonance 70 Another approach that has been recently proposed makes use of surface plasmons which is an enhanced evanescent wave localized at a metal dielectric interface The enhanced force field experienced by colloidal particles exposed to surface plasmons at a flat metal dielectric interface has been for the first time measured using a photonic force microscope the total force magnitude being found 40 times stronger compared to a normal evanescent wave 71 By patterning the surface with gold microscopic islands it is possible to have selective and parallel trapping in these islands The forces of the latter optical tweezers lie in the femtonewton range 72 The evanescent field can also be used to trap cold atoms and molecules near the surface of an optical waveguide or optical nanofiber 73 74 Indirect approach edit Ming Wu a UC Berkeley Professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences invented the new optoelectronic tweezers Wu transformed the optical energy from low powered light emitting diodes LED into electrical energy via a photoconductive surface The idea is to allow the LED to switch on and off the photoconductive material via its fine projection As the optical pattern can be easily transformable through optical projection this method allows a high flexibility of switching different optical landscapes The manipulation tweezing process is done by the variations between the electric field actuated by the light pattern The particles will be either attracted or repelled from the actuated point due to its induced electrical dipole Particles suspended in a liquid will be susceptible to the electrical field gradient this is known as dielectrophoresis One clear advantage is that the electrical conductivity is different between different kinds of cells Living cells have a lower conductive medium while the dead ones have minimum or no conductive medium The system may be able to manipulate roughly 10 000 cells or particles at the same time See comments by Professor Kishan Dholakia on this new technique K Dholakia Nature Materials 4 579 580 01 Aug 2005 News and Views The system was able to move live E coli bacteria and 20 micrometre wide particles using an optical power output of less than 10 microwatts This is one hundred thousandth of the power needed for direct optical tweezers 75 Another notably new type of optical tweezers is optothermal tweezers invented by Yuebing Zheng at The University of Texas at Austin The strategy is to use light to create a temperature gradient and exploit the thermophoretic migration of matter for optical trapping 76 The team further integrated thermophoresis with laser cooling to develop opto refrigerative tweezers to avoid thermal damages for noninvasive optical trapping and manipulation 77 Optical binding edit When a cluster of microparticles are trapped within a monochromatic laser beam the organization of the microparticles within the optical trapping is heavily dependent on the redistributing of the optical trapping forces amongst the microparticles This redistribution of light forces amongst the cluster of microparticles provides a new force equilibrium on the cluster as a whole As such we can say that the cluster of microparticles are somewhat bound together by light One of the first experimental evidence of optical binding was reported by Michael M Burns Jean Marc Fournier and Jene A Golovchenko 78 though it was originally predicted by T Thirunamachandran 79 One of the many recent studies on optical binding has shown that for a system of chiral nanoparticles the magnitude of the binding forces are dependent on the polarisation of the laser beam and the handedness of interacting particles themselves 80 with potential applications in areas such as enantiomeric separation and optical nanomanipulation Fluorescence optical tweezers edit In order to simultaneously manipulate and image samples that exhibit fluorescence optical tweezers can be built alongside a fluorescence microscope 81 Such instruments are particularly useful when it comes to studying single or small numbers of biological molecules that have been fluorescently labelled or in applications in which fluorescence is used to track and visualize objects that are to be trapped This approach has been extended for simultaneous sensing and imaging of dynamic protein complexes using long and strong tethers generated by a highly efficient multi step enzymatic approach 82 and applied to investigations of disaggregation machines in action 83 Tweezers combined with other imaging techniques edit Other than standard fluorescence optical tweezers are now being built with multiple color Confocal Widefield STED FRET TIRF or IRM This allows applications such as measuring protein DNA localization binding protein folding condensation motor protein force generation visualization of cytoskeletal filaments and motor dynamics microtubule dynamics manipulating liquid droplet rheology or fusion These setups are difficult to build and traditionally are found in non correlated academic setups In the recent years even home builders both biophysics and general biologists are converting to the alternative and are acquiring total correlated solution with easy data acquisition and data analysis See also editAtom optics Levitation List of laser articles Quantum control Quantum opticsReferences edit Ashkin A 1970 Acceleration and Trapping of Particles by Radiation Pressure Physical Review Letters 24 4 156 159 Bibcode 1970PhRvL 24 156A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 24 156 Ashkin A Dziedzic JM Bjorkholm JE Chu S 1986 Observation of a single beam gradient force optical trap for dielectric particles Optics Letters 11 5 288 290 Bibcode 1986OptL 11 288A CiteSeerX 10 1 1 205 4729 doi 10 1364 OL 11 000288 PMID 19730608 a b Matthews J N A 2009 Commercial optical traps emerge from biophysics labs Physics Today 62 2 26 28 Bibcode 2009PhT 62b 26M doi 10 1063 1 3086092 Hill Murray November 1987 He wrote the book on atom trapping Retrieved June 25 2005 Interview conducted for internal newsletter at Bell Labs Contains confirmation of Ashkin as the inventor of optical trapping and provides information on the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics Conversations with History An Interview with Steven Chu 2004 Institute of International Studies UC Berkeley Last accessed on September 2 2006 Ashkin A Dziedzic JM 1987 Optical trapping and manipulation of viruses and bacteria Science 235 4795 1517 1520 doi 10 1126 science 3547653 PMID 3547653 a b Bolognesi Guido Friddin Mark S Salehi Reyhani Ali Barlow Nathan E Brooks Nicholas J Ces Oscar Elani Yuval 2018 05 14 Sculpting and fusing biomimetic vesicle networks using optical tweezers Nature Communications 9 1 1882 Bibcode 2018NatCo 9 1882B doi 10 1038 s41467 018 04282 w ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 5951844 PMID 29760422 Rorvig Lund Andreas Bahadori Azra Semsey Szabolcs Bendix Poul Martin Oddershede Lene B 2015 05 29 Vesicle Fusion Triggered by Optically Heated Gold Nanoparticles Nano Letters 15 6 4183 4188 Bibcode 2015NanoL 15 4183R doi 10 1021 acs nanolett 5b01366 ISSN 1530 6984 PMID 26010468 S2CID 206726159 Blazquez Castro A Fernandez Piqueras J Santos J 2020 Genetic Material Manipulation and Modification by Optical Trapping and Nanosurgery A Perspective Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology 8 580937 1 25 doi 10 3389 fbioe 2020 580937 PMC 7530750 PMID 33072730 S2CID 221765039 Berns M W 2020 Laser Scissors and Tweezers to Study Chromosomes A Review Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology 8 721 1 16 doi 10 3389 fbioe 2020 00721 PMC 7401452 PMID 32850689 a b MacDonald MP Spalding GC Dholakia K 2003 Microfluidic sorting in an optical lattice Nature 426 6965 421 424 Bibcode 2003Natur 426 421M doi 10 1038 nature02144 PMID 14647376 S2CID 4424652 Koss BA Grier DG Optical Peristalsis Archived 2006 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Murugesapillai D et al 2016 Single molecule studies of high mobility group B architectural DNA bending proteins Biophysical Reviews 9 1 17 40 doi 10 1007 s12551 016 0236 4 PMC 5331113 PMID 28303166 Witzens J Hochberg M 2011 Optical detection of target molecule induced aggregation of nanoparticles by means of high Q resonators Optics Express 19 8 7034 7061 Bibcode 2011OExpr 19 7034W doi 10 1364 OE 19 007034 PMID 21503017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lin S K B Crozier 2013 Trapping Assisted Sensing of Particles and Proteins Using On Chip Optical Microcavities ACS Nano 7 2 1725 1730 doi 10 1021 nn305826j PMID 23311448 Schlosser Nicolas Reymond Georges Protsenko Igor Grangier Philippe 28 June 2001 Sub poissonian loading of single atoms in a microscopic dipole trap Nature 411 6841 1024 1027 Bibcode 2001Natur 411 1024S doi 10 1038 35082512 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 11429597 S2CID 4386843 a b Dumke R Volk M Muther T Buchkremer F B J Birkl G Ertmer W August 8 2002 Micro optical Realization of Arrays of Selectively Addressable Dipole Traps A Scalable Configuration for Quantum Computation with Atomic Qubits Phys Rev Lett 89 097903 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 89 097903 Thomas Jessica Grondalski Sonja 2010 01 19 Opening the gate to quantum computation Physics 3 Bibcode 2010PhyOJ 3S 9 doi 10 1103 Physics 3 s9 Wilk T Gaetan A Evellin C Wolters J Miroshnychenko Y Grangier P Browaeys A 2010 01 08 Entanglement of Two Individual Neutral Atoms Using Rydberg Blockade Physical Review Letters 104 1 010502 arXiv 0908 0454 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104a0502W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 010502 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 20366354 S2CID 16384272 Isenhower L Urban E Zhang X L Gill A T Henage T Johnson T A Walker T G Saffman M 2010 01 08 Demonstration of a Neutral Atom Controlled NOT Quantum Gate Physical Review Letters 104 1 010503 arXiv 0907 5552 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104a0503I doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 010503 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 20366355 S2CID 2091127 Atom assembler makes defect free arrays Physics World 2016 11 07 Retrieved 2021 12 04 Barredo Daniel de Leseleuc Sylvain Lienhard Vincent Lahaye Thierry Browaeys Antoine 2016 11 25 An atom by atom assembler of defect free arbitrary two dimensional atomic arrays Science 354 6315 1021 1023 arXiv 1607 03042 Bibcode 2016Sci 354 1021B doi 10 1126 science aah3778 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 27811285 S2CID 25496096 Extance Andy Atomic Eiffel tower looms over quantum computing landscape Chemistry World Retrieved 2021 12 04 Barredo Daniel Lienhard Vincent de Leseleuc Sylvain Lahaye Thierry Browaeys Antoine 5 September 2018 Synthetic three dimensional atomic structures assembled atom by atom Nature 561 7721 79 82 arXiv 1712 02727 Bibcode 2018Natur 561 79B doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0450 2 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 30185955 S2CID 52158666 Highly programmable quantum simulator operates with up to 256 qubits Physics World 2021 07 22 Retrieved 2021 12 04 Ebadi Sepehr Wang Tout T Levine Harry Keesling Alexander Semeghini Giulia Omran Ahmed Bluvstein Dolev Samajdar Rhine Pichler Hannes Ho Wen Wei Choi Soonwon 2021 07 08 Quantum phases of matter on a 256 atom programmable quantum simulator Nature 595 7866 227 232 arXiv 2012 12281 Bibcode 2021Natur 595 227E doi 10 1038 s41586 021 03582 4 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 34234334 S2CID 229363764 Scholl Pascal Schuler Michael Williams Hannah J Eberharter Alexander A Barredo Daniel Schymik Kai Niklas Lienhard Vincent Henry Louis Paul Lang Thomas C Lahaye Thierry Lauchli Andreas M 2021 07 08 Quantum simulation of 2D antiferromagnets with hundreds of Rydberg atoms Nature 595 7866 233 238 arXiv 2012 12268 Bibcode 2021Natur 595 233S doi 10 1038 s41586 021 03585 1 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 34234335 S2CID 229363462 Bluvstein Dolev Evered Simon J Geim Alexandra A Li Sophie H Zhou Hengyun Manovitz Tom Ebadi Sepehr Cain Madelyn Kalinowski Marcin Hangleiter Dominik Ataides J Pablo Bonilla Maskara Nishad Cong Iris Gao Xun Rodriguez Pedro Sales 2023 12 06 Logical quantum processor based on reconfigurable atom arrays Nature 1 3 arXiv 2312 03982 doi 10 1038 s41586 023 06927 3 ISSN 1476 4687 Applegate Jr R W Vestad Tor et al 2004 Optical trapping manipulation and sorting of cells and colloids in microfluidic systems with diode laser bars Optics Express 12 19 4390 8 Bibcode 2004OExpr 12 4390A doi 10 1364 OPEX 12 004390 PMID 19483988 S2CID 8424168 Moffitt JR Chemla YR Izhaky D Bustamante C 2006 Differential detection of dual traps improves the spatial resolution of optical tweezers Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 24 9006 9011 Bibcode 2006PNAS 103 9006M doi 10 1073 pnas 0603342103 PMC 1482556 PMID 16751267 Jagannathan B Marqusee S 2013 Protein folding and unfolding under force Biopolymers 99 11 860 869 doi 10 1002 bip 22321 PMC 4065244 PMID 23784721 Lynn Paterson Novel micromanipulation techniques in optical tweezers 2003 Gordon J P 1973 Radiation Forces and Momenta in Dielectric Media Physical Review A 8 1 14 21 Bibcode 1973PhRvA 8 14G doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 8 14 Harada Y Asakura T 1996 Radiation Forces on a dielectric sphere in the Rayleigh Scattering Regime Optics Communications 124 5 6 529 541 Bibcode 1996OptCo 124 529H doi 10 1016 0030 4018 95 00753 9 Bradshaw DS Andrews DL 2017 Manipulating particles with light radiation and gradient forces European Journal of Physics 38 3 034008 Bibcode 2017EJPh 38c4008B doi 10 1088 1361 6404 aa6050 Guccione G M Hosseini S Adlong M T Johnsson J Hope B C Buchler P K Lam July 2013 Scattering Free Optical Levitation of a Cavity Mirror Physical Review Letters 111 18 183001 arXiv 1307 1175 Bibcode 2013PhRvL 111r3001G doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 111 183001 PMID 24237512 S2CID 36954822 Ilic Ognjen Atwater Harry A April 2019 Self stabilizing photonic levitation and propulsion of nanostructured macroscopic objects PDF Nature Photonics 13 4 289 295 Bibcode 2019NaPho 13 289I doi 10 1038 s41566 019 0373 y ISSN 1749 4893 S2CID 127470391 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Smalley D E Nygaard E Squire K Van Wagoner J Rasmussen J Gneiting S Qaderi K Goodsell J Rogers W Lindsey M Costner K January 2018 A photophoretic trap volumetric display Nature 553 7689 486 490 Bibcode 2018Natur 553 486S doi 10 1038 nature25176 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 29368704 Chen Zhihan Li Jingang Zheng Yuebing 2022 02 09 Heat Mediated Optical Manipulation Chemical Reviews 122 3 3122 3179 doi 10 1021 acs chemrev 1c00626 ISSN 0009 2665 PMC 9833329 PMID 34797041 Lin Linhan Wang Mingsong Peng Xiaolei Lissek Emanuel N Mao Zhangming Scarabelli Leonardo Adkins Emily Coskun Sahin Unalan Husnu Emrah Korgel Brian A Liz Marzan Luis M Florin Ernst Ludwig Zheng Yuebing April 2018 Opto thermoelectric nanotweezers Nature Photonics 12 4 195 201 doi 10 1038 s41566 018 0134 3 ISSN 1749 4893 PMC 5958900 Li Jingang Chen Zhihan Liu Yaoran Kollipara Pavana Siddhartha Feng Yichao Zhang Zhenglong Zheng Yuebing 2021 06 25 Opto refrigerative tweezers Science Advances 7 26 doi 10 1126 sciadv abh1101 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 8232904 PMID 34172454 Kollipara Pavana Siddhartha Li Xiuying Li Jingang Chen Zhihan Ding Hongru Kim Youngsun Huang Suichu Qin Zhenpeng Zheng Yuebing 2023 08 23 Hypothermal opto thermophoretic tweezers Nature Communications 14 1 5133 doi 10 1038 s41467 023 40865 y ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 10447564 D J Stevenson T K Lake B Agate V Garces Chavez K Dholakia F Gunn Moore 2006 10 16 Optically guided neuronal growth at near infrared wavelengths Optics Express 14 21 9786 93 Bibcode 2006OExpr 14 9786S doi 10 1364 OE 14 009786 PMC 2869025 PMID 19529370 Neuman KC Block SM 2004 Optical trapping Review of Scientific Instruments 75 9 2787 809 Bibcode 2004RScI 75 2787N doi 10 1063 1 1785844 PMC 1523313 PMID 16878180 Svoboda K Block SM 1994 Biological Application of Optical Forces Annual Review of Biophysics and Biomolecular Structure 23 247 285 doi 10 1146 annurev bb 23 060194 001335 PMID 7919782 S2CID 8197447 Shaevitz JW A Practical Guide to Optical Trapping August 22 2006 Last accessed on September 12 2006 Swartzlander G A Gahagan K T 1996 06 01 Optical vortex trapping of particles Optics Letters 21 11 827 829 Bibcode 1996OptL 21 827G doi 10 1364 OL 21 000827 ISSN 1539 4794 PMID 19876172 S2CID 8647456 He H Friese M E J Heckenberg N R Rubinsztein Dunlop H 1995 07 31 Direct Observation of Transfer of Angular Momentum to Absorptive Particles from a Laser Beam with a Phase Singularity PDF Physical Review Letters 75 5 826 829 Bibcode 1995PhRvL 75 826H doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 75 826 PMID 10060128 Friese M E J Heckenberg N R Rubinsztein Dunlop H 1998 Optical alignment and spinning of laser trapped microscopic particles PDF Nature 394 6691 348 350 arXiv physics 0308113 Bibcode 1998Natur 394 348F doi 10 1038 28566 S2CID 4404320 Curtis JE Grier DG Structure of Optical Vortices Archived 2006 09 02 at the Wayback Machine 2003 Last accessed on September 3 2006 Padgett M Optical Spanners Last accessed on September 3 2006 McGloin D Garces Chavez V Paterson L Carruthers T Melvil H Dholakia K Bessel Beams Last accessed on September 3 2006 Ladavac K Grier DG 2004 Microoptomechanical pump assembled and driven by holographic optical vortex arrays Optics Express 12 6 1144 9 arXiv cond mat 0402634 Bibcode 2004OExpr 12 1144L doi 10 1364 OPEX 12 001144 PMID 19474932 S2CID 18255607 Noom Maarten C van den Broek Bram van Mameren Joost Wuite Gijs J L 11 November 2007 Visualizing single DNA bound proteins using DNA as a scanning probe Nature Methods 4 12 1031 1036 doi 10 1038 nmeth1126 PMID 17994031 S2CID 7007569 A D Chandra amp A Banerjee 2020 Rapid phase calibration of a spatial light modulator using novel phase masks and optimization of its efficiency using an iterative algorithm Journal of Modern Optics 67 7 628 637 arXiv 1811 03297 Bibcode 2020JMOp 67 628C doi 10 1080 09500340 2020 1760954 S2CID 219646821 Rodrigo Jose A Alieva Tatiana 2015 09 20 Freestyle 3D laser traps tools for studying light driven particle dynamics and beyond Optica 2 9 812 Bibcode 2015Optic 2 812R doi 10 1364 OPTICA 2 000812 ISSN 2334 2536 Bowman D Harte T L Chardonnet V Groot C De Denny S J Goc G Le Anderson M Ireland P Cassettari D 1169 High fidelity phase and amplitude control of phase only computer generated holograms using conjugate gradient minimisation Optics Express 25 10 11692 11700 arXiv 1701 08620 Bibcode 2017OExpr 2511692B doi 10 1364 OE 25 011692 ISSN 1094 4087 PMID 28788742 S2CID 46763848 Nemirovsky Jonathan Sagi Yoav 2021 Fast universal two qubit gate for neutral fermionic atoms in optical tweezers Physical Review Research 3 1 013113 arXiv 2008 09819 Bibcode 2021PhRvR 3a3113N doi 10 1103 PhysRevResearch 3 013113 Hu Z Wang J Liang J 2004 Manipulation and arrangement of biological and dielectric particles by a lensed fiber probe Optics Express 12 17 4123 8 Bibcode 2004OExpr 12 4123H doi 10 1364 OPEX 12 004123 PMID 19483954 S2CID 31640506 Liberale C Minzioni P Bragheri F De Angelis F Di Fabrizio E Cristiani I 2007 Miniaturized all fibre probe for three dimensional optical trapping and manipulation Nature Photonics 1 12 723 727 Bibcode 2007NaPho 1 723L doi 10 1038 nphoton 2007 230 Jochen Guck Stefan Schinkinger Bryan Lincoln Falk Wottawah Susanne Ebert Maren Romeyke Dominik Lenz Harold M Erickson Revathi Ananthakrishnan Daniel Mitchell Josef Kas Sydney Ulvick Curt Bilby 2005 Optical Deformability as an Inherent Cell Marker for Testing Malignant Transformation and Metastatic Competence Biophysical Journal 88 5 3689 3698 Bibcode 2005BpJ 88 3689G doi 10 1529 biophysj 104 045476 PMC 1305515 PMID 15722433 Archived from the original on November 9 2007 Moritz Kreysing Tobias Kiessling Anatol Fritsch Christian Dietrich Jochen Guck Josef Kas 2008 The optical cell rotator Optics Express 16 21 16984 92 Bibcode 2008OExpr 1616984K doi 10 1364 OE 16 016984 PMID 18852807 S2CID 23912816 Kreysing M Ott D Schmidberger M J Otto O Schurmann M Martin Badosa E Whyte G Guck J 2014 Dynamic operation of optical fibres beyond the single mode regime facilitates the orientation of biological cells Nature Communications 5 5481 Bibcode 2014NatCo 5 5481K doi 10 1038 ncomms6481 PMC 4263128 PMID 25410595 Ladavac K Kasza K Grier D 2004 Sorting mesoscopic objects with periodic potential landscapes Optical fractionation Physical Review E 70 1 010901 Bibcode 2004PhRvE 70a0901L doi 10 1103 PhysRevE 70 010901 PMID 15324034 S2CID 14608670 Xiao Ke Grier David G 2010 Multidimensional Optical Fractionation of Colloidal Particles with Holographic Verification Physical Review Letters 104 2 028302 arXiv 0912 4754 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104b8302X doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 028302 PMID 20366628 S2CID 21476119 Optical fractionation and sorting IRC Scotland Last accessed on September 3 2006 Evanescent Field Polarization and Intensity Profiles Archived from the original on 2006 07 21 Retrieved 2005 11 15 Kawata S Sugiura T 1992 Movement of micrometer sized particles in the evanescent field of a laser beam Optics Letters 17 11 772 4 Bibcode 1992OptL 17 772K CiteSeerX 10 1 1 462 4424 doi 10 1364 OL 17 000772 PMID 19794626 Statsenko Anna Darmawan Yoshua Albert Fuji Takao Kudo Tetsuhiro 2022 11 15 Midinfrared Optical Manipulation Based on Molecular Vibrational Resonance Physical Review Applied 18 5 054041 doi 10 1103 PhysRevApplied 18 054041 Darmawan Yoshua Albert Goto Takuma Yanagishima Taiki Fuji Takao Kudo Tetsuhiro 2023 08 17 Mid Infrared Optical Force Chromatography of Microspheres Containing Siloxane Bonds The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 14 32 7306 7312 doi 10 1021 acs jpclett 3c01679 ISSN 1948 7185 PMID 37561048 Volpe G Quidant R Badenes G Petrov D 2006 Surface Plasmon Radiation Forces Physical Review Letters 96 23 238101 Bibcode 2006PhRvL 96w8101V doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 96 238101 hdl 11693 53564 PMID 16803408 S2CID 26221345 Righini M Volpe G Girard C Petrov D Quidant R 2008 Surface Plasmon Optical Tweezers Tunable Optical Manipulation in the Femtonewton Range Physical Review Letters 100 18 186804 Bibcode 2008PhRvL 100r6804R doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 100 186804 PMID 18518404 S2CID 38405168 Cold Atom Physics Using Optical Nanofibres Applied quantum physics Vienna University of Technology Retrieved September 10 2012 Quantum Networking with Atomic Ensembles Caltech quantum optics California Institute of Technology Retrieved September 10 2012 Invention Soldiers obeying odours dead link New Scientist 8 November 2005 Linhan Lin Yuebing Zheng 2018 Opto thermoelectric nanotweezers Nature Photonics 12 4 195 201 Bibcode 2018NaPho 12 195L doi 10 1038 s41566 018 0134 3 PMC 5958900 PMID 29785202 Jingang Li Z Chen Y Liu P S Kollipara Y Feng Z Zhang Yuebing Zheng 2021 Opto Refrigerative Tweezers Science Advances 7 26 eabh1101 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 1101L doi 10 1126 sciadv abh1101 PMC 8232904 PMID 34172454 Burns M M Golovchenko J M Golovchenko J A 1989 Optical binding Physical Review Letters 63 12 1233 1236 Bibcode 1989PhRvL 63 1233B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 63 1233 PMID 10040510 Thirunamachandran T 1980 06 10 Intermolecular interactions in the presence of an intense radiation field Molecular Physics 40 2 393 399 Bibcode 1980MolPh 40 393T doi 10 1080 00268978000101561 ISSN 0026 8976 Forbes Kayn A Andrews David L 2015 05 14 Chiral discrimination in optical binding PDF Physical Review A 91 5 053824 Bibcode 2015PhRvA 91e3824F doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 91 053824 Whitley Kevin D Comstock Matthew J Chemla Yann R 2017 High Resolution Fleezers Dual Trap Optical Tweezers Combined with Single Molecule Fluorescence Detection Methods in Molecular Biology Vol 1486 pp 183 256 doi 10 1007 978 1 4939 6421 5 8 ISBN 978 1 4939 6419 2 PMC 5541766 PMID 27844430 Avellaneda MJ Koers EJ Minde DP Sunderlikova V Tans SJ 2020 Simultaneous sensing and imaging of individual biomolecular complexes enabled by modular DNA protein coupling Communications Chemistry 3 1 1 7 doi 10 1038 s42004 020 0267 4 PMC 9814868 PMID 36703465 Avellaneda MJ Franke KB Sunderlikova V Bukau B Mogk A Tans SJ 2020 Processive extrusion of polypeptide loops by a Hsp100 disaggregase Nature 578 7794 317 320 Bibcode 2020Natur 578 317A doi 10 1038 s41586 020 1964 y PMID 31996849 S2CID 210949475 External links editVideo Levitating DIAMONDS with a laser beam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Optical tweezers amp oldid 1218955364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.