Focused plasmonic trapping of metallic particles
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2013 papers
Abstract
Scattering forces in focused light beams push away metallic particles. Thus, trapping metallic particles with conventional optical tweezers, especially those of Mie particle size, is difficult. Here we investigate a mechanism by which metallic particles are attracted and trapped by plasmonic tweezers when surface plasmons are excited and focused by a radially polarized beam in a high-numerical-aperture microscopic configuration. This contrasts the repulsion exerted in optical tweezers with the same configuration. We believe that different types of forces exerted on particles are responsible for this contrary trapping behaviour. Further, trapping with plasmonic tweezers is found not to be due to a gradient force balancing an opposing scattering force but results from the sum of both gradient and scattering forces acting in the same direction established by the strong coupling between the metallic particle and the highly focused plasmonic field. Theoretical analysis and simulations yield good agreement with experimental results.
Related Papers
- → Optical gradient force on chiral particles(2022)41 cited
- → Kerker‐Type Intensity‐Gradient Force of Light(2020)40 cited
- → Direct measurement of optical trapping force gradient on polystyrene microspheres using a carbon nanotube mechanical resonator(2017)9 cited
- → Numerical analysis of enhanced optical trapping force based on centripetal evanescent waves(2005)1 cited
- → Optical gradient force on Chiral nanoparticles(2020)