Optical trapping and binding of particles in an optofluidic stable Fabry–Pérot resonator with single-sided injection
Author(s) -
Noha Gaber,
Maurine Malak,
Frédéric Marty,
Dan Angelescu,
Elodie Richalot,
Tarik Bourouina
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
lab on a chip
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.064
H-Index - 210
eISSN - 1473-0197
pISSN - 1473-0189
DOI - 10.1039/c3lc51438b
Subject(s) - resonator , trapping , optical cavity , optical tweezers , materials science , optical power , particle (ecology) , fabry–pérot interferometer , optics , standing wave , physics , molecular physics , optoelectronics , laser , ecology , oceanography , biology , geology
In this article, microparticles are manipulated inside an optofluidic Fabry-Pérot cylindrical cavity embedding a fluidic capillary tube, taking advantage of field enhancement and multiple reflections within the optically-resonant cavity. This enables trapping of suspended particles with single-side injection of light and with low optical power. A Hermite-Gaussian standing wave is developed inside the cavity, forming trapping spots at the locations of the electromagnetic field maxima with a strong intensity gradient. The particles get arranged in a pattern related to the mechanism affecting them: either optical trapping or optical binding. This is proven to eventually translate into either an axial one dimensional (1D) particle array or a cluster of particles. Numerical simulations are performed to model the field distributions inside the cavity allowing a behavioral understanding of the phenomena involved in each case.
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