Scientists develop new technique for bespoke optical tweezers

Scientists develop new technique for bespoke optical tweezers

Scientists have developed a new way to trap small particles with light. Building on the Nobel Prize winning technique of optical tweezers (Arthur Ashkin, 2018), a team of physicists, led by Dr. David Phillips at the University of Exeter, has advanced the possibilities of optical trapping.

The research paper, published in the journal Science Advances, is titled “Photon-efficient optical tweezers via wavefront shaping.”

Conventional optical tweezers, developed in the 1980s, are a tightly focused laser beam which can attract and trap certain micro-sized particles or organisms, akin to grabbing something with a pair of tweezers.

“In optical tweezers, though, a particle is not completely immobilized,” explained first author Dr. Une Butaite. “It is experiencing thermal motion of the molecules surrounding it. A bit like a boat in a lake rocked about by the wind and the waves but prevented from drifting away by the anchor, a particle in optical tweezers is constantly jiggling about but its motion is confined to a certain volume.”

Generally speaking, the smaller this confinement volume is, the more useful the optical trap.

For optical tweezers to work, the laser light has to be tightly focused on a very small region, which can be significantly smaller than the particle being trapped. Herein lies the issue: If the particle is large, most of the light will sit near its center, but light interacts with the particle more strongly at its surface.

In other words, larger particles are not able to make the most out of the available light, decreasing the level of confinement.

“This is where our research kicks in,” explained Dr. Phillips. “We hypothesized that if instead of being concentrated in the middle of the particle, the light enveloped it, that would confine the particle more strongly, giving it a sort of a tight hug.”

Determining the exact shape of light that would yield the strongest confinement is not straightforward, though.

“There is no one-size-fits-all solution here. For best performance, every different particle requires a custom suit-of-light, if you will,” said Dr. Butaite.

Realizing this in practice meant that various mathematical and numerical methods, as well as rigorous experimental techniques, had to be developed and perfected—all achieved in collaboration with researchers at the University of Glasgow led by Dr. Jonathan Taylor (Scotland), and the Vienna University of Technology led by Prof Stefan Rotter (Austria).

More information:
Unė G. Būtaitė et al, Photon-efficient optical tweezers via wavefront shaping, Science Advances (2024). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adi7792

Provided by
University of Exeter

Citation:
Scientists develop new technique for bespoke optical tweezers (2024, July 8)

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