Advanced Photonics, Volume. 3, Issue 3, 034001(2021)
Optical trapping with structured light: a review Article Video , EIC Choice Award
Fig. 1. Schematic diagram of optical tweezers: (a) when the particle is away from the center of the beam focus, (b) when the particle is slightly above the center of the beam focus, and (c) net force acting on the dielectric sphere.
Fig. 2. Experimental configuration of conventional optical tweezers. A simple telescope is used to expand the laser beam to overfill the back aperture of the objective. The expanded laser beam, reflected by a dichroic mirror (
Fig. 3. Optical trapping of birefringent microparticles that show the transfer of OAM and SAM. (a) The trapped particle is spinning counterclockwise about its own axis (left column) and orbiting clockwise about the beam’s axis (right column) separately. Adapted from Ref. 58. (b) The particle rotates around its own axis (left column) and the beam’s axis (right column) simultaneously. Adapted from Ref. 59.
Fig. 4. Transverse intensity profiles of LG modes with (a)
Fig. 5. Transverse intensity profiles of Bessel beams and its Fourier transform with (a)
Fig. 6. Transverse intensity distribution of perfect vortex beams with topological charge
Fig. 7. Transverse intensity pattern of a truncated zeroth-order Mathieu beam with (a) even and (b) odd modes. The color represents the normalized intensity distribution.
Fig. 8. Airy beam profiles. (a) Parabolic trajectory and (b) transverse intensity profile of an Airy beam with infinite energy compared with those of a finite energy Airy beam in (c) and (d). The color represents the normalized intensity distribution.
Fig. 9. Transverse intensity distribution of low-order (a) even and (b) odd IG modes with
Fig. 10. Intensity distribution of an HC beam from numerical simulations. (a), (c) The near-field intensity distribution; (b), (d) the far-field. (a), (b)
Fig. 11. Intensity and polarization distribution of the fundamental cylindrical vector beams. (a) Radial, (b) hybrid odd, (c) azimuthal, and (d) hybrid even modes. The color represents the normalized intensity distribution, while the lines are associated with the polarization orientation of the electric field.
Fig. 12. Optical trapping and control of 3D structures using superpositions of
Fig. 13. Optical trapping and rotations in counterpropagating circularly polarized LG beams of silicon nanowires aligned (a) parallel and (b) perpendicular to the beam propagation axis, where orbiting and orbiting-reorientation are shown, respectively. The simultaneous spinning and orbiting of a shorter nanowire is shown in (c) and (d). Adapted from Ref. 111.
Fig. 14. Anomalous motion of a particle trapped in strongly focused high-order LG beams. (a) The intensity profile of the LG beam with topological charge 3. (b) The plot of the distribution of the radiation force exerted on the trapped particle for different center-of-mass radii. (c) The radial (blue line) and azimuthal (red broken line) components of the radiation force for different radii of the trapped particles. Adapted from Ref. 113.
Fig. 15. Rotation of a polystyrene bead and a glass sliver trapped with an LG mode of
Fig. 17. (a) Schematic representation of optical trapping with frozen waves in multiple parallel planes. Sequence of (a1)–(d1) one and (a2)–(d2) two microparticles (orange circle) trapped at different transverse planes along the propagation direction. Adapted from Ref. 120.
Fig. 18. Effect of the size of the trapped particle on optical trapping with vortex beams. (a)–(c) Optical forces of a particle with different sizes compared to the radius of the bright rings of Bessel vortex beams. The blue circle and blue dot denote the edge and the center of the trapped particle. The cyan contour denotes the zero force azimuthal directions. The magenta lines represent the deterministic trajectory of a particle. (d) Illustration of a rotation of a single silver nanowire trapped by an LG vortex beam. (a)–(c) Adapted from Ref. 121. (d) Adapted from Ref. 122.
Fig. 19. (a) A perfect vortex beam with
Fig. 20. Optical trapping of nonspherical particles. (a) Mathieu beam with
Fig. 21. Optical manipulation with Airy beams. (a) Schematic representation of a microparticle being transported along a parabolic trajectory. Adapted from Ref. 128. Transporting particles (b) from quadrant two (green) to quadrant three (purple) and (c) from quadrant three to quadrant two. Adapted from Ref. 129. (d) The
Fig. 22. Micromanipulation with IG beams. The top row shows the transverse intensity patterns of the beams, while the bottom row shows trapped microparticles with the corresponding beams. (a)
Fig. 23. Optical manipulation with HC beams. (a) Schematic representation of the setup required for beam generation. (b) Time-lapse images of a microbead trapped and guided along with the maximum intensity of the beam, as illustrated on the left. Adapted from Ref. 133.
Fig. 24. Optical tweezer arrays using computer-generated holograms. (a) Schematic representation of the fields at the input hologram and output Fourier planes, where
Fig. 25. Optical trapping with complex optical patterns. (a) Experimentally generated beam patterns with different modes. (b) Two particles being guided along the trajectory shown by the dotted line. Adapted from Ref. 142
Fig. 26. Optical trapping with a parabolic phase gradient. Two silica beads (
Fig. 27. Optical manipulation with 3D solenoid beams propagating parallel to the
Fig. 28. Optical trapping and transporting of microparticles along 3D parametrized trajectories. (a) Particles trapped along a single ring in 3D. (b) Schematic representation of (a). (c) Experimental intensity distribution of two tilted ring traps with opposite inclination. (d) Colloidal silica spheres trapped in the two rings of (c). (e) Schematic 3D representation of the knotted rings of (c) and (d). Adapted from Ref. 147.
Fig. 29. Optical trapping with arbitrary 3D parametrized curves of the beam. (a) Phase profile of a ring trap with topological charge
Fig. 30. Optical trapping with 3D toroidal-spiral beams. (a) Time-lapse images of trapped microparticles moving along the beam over 7 s, which results in (b) a decagon trajectory. (c) 3D schematic representation of the toroidal-spiral curve, where the color scheme indicates the axial
Fig. 31. Example of a Beziér parametric curve and its application to reconfigure in real-time the trajectory of microparticles. (a) Construction of a parametric curve using (left) Beziér splines, (middle) intensity, and (left) phase of a laser beam following this parametric curve. (b) Example of real-time reconfiguration of the curve shown in (a) and its application in a real-time reconfigurable optical trap (middle). Adapted from Ref. 151.
Fig. 32. (a) Schematic representation of cylindrical vector beams under tight focusing conditions. Tightly focused vector beams with (b) radial polarization and (c) azimuthal polarization. Adapted from Ref. 159.
Fig. 33. Generation of vector beam arrays. (a) Experimental intensity profiles and (b) polarization distribution of nine vector beams generated from a single hologram. (c) Schematic representation of the experimental setup to generate multiple vector beams. Insets on the right illustrate the multiplexed hologram pair for the generation of two scalar beams traveling along two separate optical paths. Inset 2 shows the generated four vector beams in the trapping plane. Adapted from the University of the Witwatersrand.175
Fig. 34. (a) A conceptual representation of a tractor beam generated from the superposition of two waves propagating along the wave vectors
Fig. 35. Demonstration of optical tractor beams. (a) Experimental setup showing the beam convertor and the particle dispenser. Half-wave plates (
Fig. 36. Optical trapping of metal particles using structured beams. (a) The confinement and manipulation of gold nanoparticles by LG vortex beams. The insets indicate the locations of these two particles for different moments. Adapted from Ref. 185. (b) Fast orbital rotation of metal nanoparticles using circularly polarized vortex beam. Left: the image of the
Fig. 37. 2D optical trap of metal particles using a structured beam with a phase gradient. (a) Schematic diagram of generating a structured beam with a phase gradient for the optical line trap. Left: the intensity profile and designed phase masks for the optical traps of type I (top) and type II (bottom), respectively; right: the intensity profiles and the corresponding phase profiles of the structured beams with phase gradients for the two different types of line traps. (b) Trajectory images of a single silver nanoparticle in the optical traps of type I (top) and type II (bottom), respectively. The white dots denote the silver nanoparticles. (c) Intensity and phase profiles of a vortex beam with a uniform phase gradient (top) and the corresponding trajectories of an optically transported gold nanoparticle around the optical ring traps (bottom). (d) Same as those in (c) but for tailored nonuniform phase gradients. (a), (b) Adapted from Ref. 187. (c), (d) Adapted from Ref. 188.
Fig. 38. 3D trapping and transporting of metal nanoparticles. (a) Left: ring trap with uniform phase gradient. The inset shows that the location of the trap is
Fig. 39. Particle trajectories of a silica microparticle levitated in LG beams with different topological charges. (a)–(c) Numerical simulations for
Fig. 40. Perfect vortex traps in vacuum. (a) Particle trajectories with different topological charges
Fig. 41. Trapping of nanodiamonds with linearly polarized
Fig. 42. Testing Kramers turnover with a double-well potential. (a) Two focused infrared beams forming two potential wells (A and C) linked by a saddle point B. (b) Potential profile in the transverse (
Fig. 43. Optical binding between two rotating microparticles in vacuum. (a) Two vaterite birefringent microparticles optically levitated and rotated in vacuum with a scale bar of
Fig. 44. Trapping of biological cells with structured beams. (a) Trapping of yeast cell in IR trap. (b) Division of yeast cell in single trap. (c)–(f) Patterning of multiple cell types using HOTs. (c), (d) Mouse embryonic and mesenchymal (arrow) stem cells. (e), (f) Mouse primary calvarae cells (arrow) and embryonic stem cells. Scale bar is
Fig. 45. Optical trapping of the red blood cells
Fig. 46. Strategies for stable optical trapping of rod-shaped bacteria. Schematics for (a) holographic dual-trap optical tweezers and (b) conventional single-trap optical tweezers. (c) The T-cell under single beam optical tweezers experiences rotation in the presence of stage motion. (d) The locations of a single cell (black) and a standard polymer sphere (red) in single optical tweezers and the positional traces (right). (e) The combination of
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Yuanjie Yang, Yu-Xuan Ren, Mingzhou Chen, Yoshihiko Arita, Carmelo Rosales-Guzmán, "Optical trapping with structured light: a review," Adv. Photon. 3, 034001 (2021)
Category: Reviews
Received: Dec. 1, 2020
Accepted: Mar. 25, 2021
Published Online: Jun. 3, 2021
The Author Email: Yang Yuanjie (dr.yang2003@uestc.edu.cn), Ren Yu-Xuan (yxren@ustc.edu.cn), Chen Mingzhou (mingzhou.chen@st-andrews.ac.uk), Rosales-Guzmán Carmelo (carmelorosalesg@cio.mx)